CINCINNATI — The rumor mill is spinning faster than a Joe Burrow spiral, but Orlando Brown Jr. just slammed the door shut on the Joe Burrow trade rumors. For months, talking heads suggested the franchise quarterback wanted out after the Bengals staggered to a 6-11 finish in 2025. Instead of letting the speculation fester, Cincinnati’s star left tackle took over the microphone to cut through the noise immediately.
Frustration Does Not Equal Friction
Burrow endured a brutal 2025 campaign. A Week 2 turf toe injury robbed him of nine games, instantly derailing the team’s momentum. You could almost feel the tension in the air at Paycor Stadium as the medical staff rushed the field that Sunday. Without him, the offense stalled. With him, he still produced top-tier football. In just eight appearances, Burrow threw for 1,809 yards and maintained a razor-sharp 17-to-5 touchdown-to-interception ratio.
The scoreboard told a different story. In the season finale against the Cleveland Browns, the chilly wind didn’t deter the die-hards who turned the stands into a sea of orange and black. Burrow scrapped for every inch on a frozen Ohio afternoon. He completed 29-of-39 passes for 236 yards and three touchdowns, yet Cincinnati fell 20-18 as the clock hit zero. That marked the third consecutive year the Bengals watched the playoffs from the couch. Fans hit the panic button. Pundits assumed Burrow had packed his bags.
Playoff Implications / What’s Next
Brown understands the brutal business of professional football better than anyone. He recently bypassed the traditional route and negotiated his own contract extension directly with the Bengals brass. He sees the trade buzz as a simple byproduct of losing—a media creation designed to draw clicks rather than a reflection of actual locker room turmoil.
The mission for the 2026 season requires no translation: get back to January football. The front office must address glaring roster holes, particularly finding a defense that can hold a lead and solidifying the backup quarterback position. If Cincinnati opens the season fast and Burrow stays healthy behind Brown’s blindside blocking, the trade chatter will evaporate. A return to Super Bowl contention instantly silences the critics. If they stumble out of the gate again, the noise will only get louder.

