CINCINNATI, OH — The silence at Paycor Stadium is deafening. After a 6-11 campaign that saw the defense freefall to dead last (32nd) in the league, the Cincinnati Bengals aren’t just licking wounds—they’re staring at open surgery. The Super Bowl confetti has settled, but for the Who Dey nation, the real pressure cooker starts now.
While fans fire up mock draft simulators to fix the “Defensive Disaster” of 2025, the front office faces a more immediate, wallet-draining decision: Trey Hendrickson.
Forget the draft for a second. The biggest domino falls in February. Trey Hendrickson is officially an Unrestricted Free Agent (UFA), and the leverage game has flipped. Unlike his previous deal, reports confirm his expired contract did not include a “no-tag” clause.
This gives the Bengals a nuclear option: the Franchise Tag. For a defensive end in 2026, that tag is projected to cost a staggering $34.8 million fully guaranteed. It’s a massive price for a 31-year-old pass rusher coming off an injury-shortened season where he logged just 4 sacks in 7 games. But with the defense already in shambles, can Cincinnati afford to let their only proven edge threat walk for nothing?
“It’s a sickening feeling. You can’t question the fight… but at some point it’s going to pay off for us. We just came up short.” — Zac Taylor, Bengals Head Coach (following the late-season skid)
The path to redemption—and the 2026 NFL Draft in Pittsburgh—is paved with these critical checkpoints. Bookmark this:
The defensive struggles weren’t just about personnel; they were systemic. Under Defensive Coordinator Al Golden, the unit allowed points at a historic rate. With Joe Burrow returning from the turf toe injury that derailed his 2025 season, the offense should stabilize, but the defense needs an injection of youth and violence. Expect the Bengals to be aggressive buyers in the second wave of free agency if they don’t blow their entire budget retaining Hendrickson.