The Cincinnati Bengals just signaled to the rest of the league that their playoff drought ends now. In a massive pre-draft move, Cincinnati acquired star defensive tackle Dexter Lawrence from the New York Giants in exchange for the No. 10 overall pick in Thursday’s draft. This Dexter Lawrence Bengals trade includes a one-year, $28 million contract extension for the 28-year-old defender, keeping him in the Queen City through the 2026 season.
The news broke late Saturday night and sent shockwaves through the league. While the Giants lose a fan favorite, the move provides first-year head coach John Harbaugh with the draft capital needed to reshape the roster around sophomore quarterback Jaxson Dart. New York now holds two top-ten selections: their original No. 5 pick and the newly acquired No. 10 slot.
A New Anchor for the Jungle
Cincinnati is tired of losing. After a three-year postseason skid, the front office is abandoning its typical cautious approach. By trading for Lawrence, they are handing Joe Burrow a defense that can actually get off the field. Bengals head coach Zac Taylor was blunt about the addition in a team statement, calling Lawrence a “tremendous presence” for a locker room that needs a spark.
Lawrence didn’t just fall into Cincinnati’s lap. The relationship between “Sexy Dexy” and Big Blue soured when contract talks hit a wall earlier this month. Lawrence requested a trade on April 6, and by mid-April, insiders reported the situation was at a total impasse. The Bengals took advantage, pouncing on the opportunity to pair Lawrence with B.J. Hill on the interior.
Blockers will have to choose their poison. You can’t double both of them without leaving a massive lane for our edge rushers.
— Anonymous AFC North Scout
By The Numbers: The Double-Team King
While Lawrence’s sack numbers dipped to 0.5 in 2025, the tape tells a different story. He remains the most difficult individual to block in the NFL. Since 2021, Lawrence has faced a double-team on 53.2% of his snaps. That is the highest mark in the league for any player with at least 750 snaps. Opposing coordinators have thrown two bodies at him 1,103 times over the past five years—the only player to crack the quadruple-digit mark.
| Metric (Past 5 Seasons) | Dexter Lawrence | NFL Rank |
|---|---|---|
| Double-Team Percentage | 53.2% | 1st |
| Total Double Teams | 1,103 | 1st |
| 2024 Sack Total | 9.0 | Career High |
The Giants’ High-Stakes Gamble
In East Rutherford, the vibe is shifting toward a total rebuild. John Harbaugh is clearly comfortable with a “tear it down to build it up” philosophy. Losing Lawrence hurts the locker room—star edge rusher Brian Burns even noted that the defense “isn’t the Giants” without him—but the flexibility of two top-ten picks is hard to ignore.
With Jaxson Dart coming off a promising rookie year where he threw for 2,272 yards despite injuries to Malik Nabers, the Giants are in a prime position. They can now add a blue-chip protector or another elite weapon to ensure Dart has everything he needs to thrive in year two. The stadium energy in New York has been tense since the trade went final, but the potential of Thursday night is keeping the hope alive.
For Cincinnati, the window is wide open. They are paying a premium, but for a player who forces 1,103 double teams, $28 million might just be the price of a championship run.

