The Browns’ defense has quietly rebuilt into a fast, aggressive unit under coordinator Jim Schwartz. Cleveland has leaned on young, instinctive linebackers to plug gaps and set the tone. That youth movement now has a clear leader, a rookie who’s drawn rare praise from a veteran Hall of Famer’s coach.
Browns defensive coordinator Jim Schwartz didn’t mince words Monday when he singled out rookie linebacker Carson Schwesinger. Schwartz said the type of command Schwesinger already displays is rare, the kind that usually takes time to grow.
“I told Carson on Monday that the command he’s shown as a rookie took Ray Lewis three seasons to develop,” Schwartz said (reported Monday via Cam I. Justice on X).
#Browns DC Jim Schwartz said that he gave Carson Schwesinger a compliment on Monday, telling him that the command Carson has shown as a rookie took Ray Lewis, the Hall of Famer who Schwartz worked with early in his career, three seasons to develop.
— Camryn Justice (@camijustice) November 20, 2025
Carson Schwesinger Emerging As the Browns’ Unexpected Defensive Catalyst
UCLA Bruins, Carson Schwesinger
Feb 26, 2025; Indianapolis, IN, USA; UCLA linebacker Carson Schwesinger (LB25) during the 2025 NFL Scouting Combine at the Indiana Convention Center. Mandatory Credit: Kirby Lee-Imagn Images
Ray Lewis is a Hall of Famer. He’s the gold standard at middle linebacker. For Jim Schwartz, who coached alongside Lewis early in his career, to draw that comparison sets an expectation, not a headline-grabber. The point: Carson Schwesinger, the rookie linebacker, is doing things on the field that generally show up after years of starts and film study.
Schwesinger isn’t just making tackles. He’s commanding the front. He’s communicating pre-snap. He’s sliding protections and rallying teammates. Those are leadership traits. They’re also the exact traits Lewis famously grew into during his first three NFL seasons. Schwartz framed it bluntly and with clear context.
Schwartz’s quote matters because it ties Schwesinger’s rapid rise to a measurable timeline. It also gives coaches and opponents something to watch: a rookie who reads formations like a second-year pro. For the Browns, this accelerates what they can ask of him. It means fewer schematic crutches. It means more complex looks and trust in the middle of the defense.
Opposing offenses will now game-plan for Schwesinger’s range and voice. Strategically, the Browns can scheme more aggressively, knowing the rookie linebacker can align teammates and make adjustments. And culturally, having a true on-field leader this early lifts the whole room. It’s a coach’s evaluation, anchored to a Hall of Famer’s development arc. Carson Schwesinger impressed Jim Schwartz quickly.
If the comparison is maintained throughout the season, the Browns not only manage to locate a starting linebacker but also find a defensive fulcrum. Schwesinger should receive additional reps, increased responsibility, and increased spotlight. Keep an eye on how the 2025 rookie answers this early vote of confidence.