CINCINNATI — The 2026 NFL offseason hasn’t even officially started, and the alarm bells are already ringing. With the Bengals looking to retool around Joe Burrow, NFL insider Adam Schefter just poured cold water on the league-wide excitement for March. His latest intel suggests the free agent pool is shallow, the draft class is weak, and teams are hoarding their talent. For Cincinnati, the path forward isn’t shopping—it’s dealing.
Schefter’s grim forecast: “Not a great class”
Speaking on his podcast this week, Schefter didn’t mince words. The veteran insider revealed that front office executives are looking at the 2026 free agency landscape with a collective shrug.
“I’ve had GMs, scouts who have been looking at this free agent class and saying ‘not a great class,'” Schefter reported. “These teams have done a great job at tying up their own players long term… So we got a free agent class that’s not real deep. We’ve got a draft that is not considered real deep.”
This scarcity creates a pressure cooker. When the supply of talent drops, the cost of acquisition skyrockets. But Schefter sees a different trend emerging from the chaos: the trade market is about to explode.
The Trade Market Explosion
If you can’t sign them, trade for them. That appears to be the league’s new mantra. Schefter predicts an aggressive “wheeling and dealing” season, noting that general managers have shed their fear of the blockbuster swap.
“It wouldn’t surprise me if we saw an uptick in trade activity,” Schefter said, citing the recent trend of bold deadline moves. This shifts the spotlight directly to Duke Tobin and the Bengals’ front office. Cincinnati has already shown they can play this game trading for running back Khalil Herbert in 2024 and then stunning the AFC North by acquiring veteran QB Joe Flacco from the Browns this past season.
The $36.2 Million Chip: The Trey Hendrickson Dilemma
This volatility plays right into Cincinnati’s hands regarding one specific asset: Trey Hendrickson. The star pass rusher is set to hit the open market in March, but letting an elite edge defender walk for nothing in a “subpar” market would be malpractice.
The solution? A tag-and-trade.
The Bengals can place the franchise tag on Hendrickson starting February 17 through March 3. While the sticker shock of a $36.2 million cap hit is real, the logic holds up. In a market starved for talent, Hendrickson becomes the premium option. Securing him via the tag buys Cincinnati time to negotiate a trade that brings back draft capital likely a mid-round pick while allowing Hendrickson to secure the long-term payday he has chased for seasons.
“Teams are unafraid about making a big deal… With this free agent class, in the eyes of some, considered to be a little bit subpar… It wouldn’t surprise me if we saw an uptick in trade activity.” — Adam Schefter, NFL Insider
What’s Next: The Clock Starts Now
The first domino falls on February 17. If Cincinnati applies the tag, the clock starts ticking toward a trade. If they hesitate, they risk losing their best defensive asset to the highest bidder in a market desperate for pass rushers. With Schefter confirming the draft offers no easy replacements, the Bengals’ creativity isn’t just a luxury—it’s a necessity for survival in the AFC North.

