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Bengals pass on Caleb Downs for Rueben Bain Jr. in Todd McShay’s first 2026 NFL Mock Draft

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Outside of Myles Murphy, the Cincinnati Bengals don’t have a ton of security at pass rusher.

For that reason, Todd McShay has the Bengals selecting Rueben Bain Jr. out of Miami in the first round of his 2026 NFL Mock Draft.

Here is what the Draft analyst wrote:

Bain’s production dipped for a few games in the middle of the year, but watching him over the past month (especially in the first two rounds of the CFP) has reminded NFL teams of how impactful this dude could be at the next level.

Yes, he has short arms. And yes, some scouts have mentioned a 3-technique role as an option in the NFL. But there aren’t many more disruptive and impactful defensive players in the country. His 8.5 sacks this season ranks tied for 23rd in the FBS, so we’re not talking about marginal sack production. Furthermore, he ranks third (minimum 100 pass-rush snaps) among P4 edge rushers with a 23.7 pass-rush win rate.

While Murphy showed a lot of promise this season, there’s no one else the Bengals can confidently rely on as the second starting edge rusher. There’s a chance the team will place the franchise tag on Trey Hendrickson, but that would be just a one-year deal.

Does the team actually believe in Shemar Stewart, Cedric Johnson, and impending free agent Joseph Ossai if he’s brought back?

The real concern, for now, is at safety, where both spots could use a significant upgrade. That’s why it’s a bit surprising to see McShay pass on Ohio State All-American Caleb Downs, who’s been a popular mock draft target for the Bengals when he’s not selected higher.

You can check out the pass rush specialist’s highlights below:

What say you? If the Bengals’ current roster were what they had heading into the draft, would you select Caleb Downs or Rueben Bain Jr.? Sound off in the comments section!

Source: https://www.cincyjungle.com/cincinn...-mcshay-first-2026-nfl-mock-draft-caleb-downs
 
Possible Bengals draft target Caleb Downs enters 2026 NFL Draft

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As it currently stands, the Cincinnati Bengals hold the No. 10 overall pick in the NFL Draft. The 2026 season was a major disappointment for the team and they have a lot of roster holes to fill in the months of March and April.

One very intriguing prospect in an offseason wherein the Bengals’ defense needs major retooling is Ohio State safety Caleb Downs. He is projected to be a top-10 pick in this class, and one of the best overall talents.

On Wednesday, the star Buckeyes defender officially declared for the 2026 NFL Draft.

PT. 3 Loading ‼️ pic.twitter.com/Dj6DoXSH9m

— Caleb Downs (@caleb_downs2) January 7, 2026

Downs started his collegiate career at Alabama, and racked up two interceptions, 107 total tackles (70 solo), four passes, and 3.5 tackles for loss. He received SEC Freshman of the year, First-Team All-SEC and Second-Team All-American honors for his great season.

After transferring to Ohio State in 2024 and into this season, Downs received back-to-back unanimous All-American designations, as well as two Big Ten Defensive Back of the Year nods to go with a Buckeyes National Championship. The awards really came rolling in this year, as he was the winner of the Jim Thorpe Award, the Lott Trophy, and was tabbed as the Big Ten Defensive Player of the Year. Downs had four total interceptions, 12.5 total tackles for loss and 94 tackles in 2024 and 2025.

Downs is currently ranked as Pro Football Focus’ top overall prospect in the class, while he’s sixth on ESPN’s big board and No. 9 via CBS Sports. It’s possible that Downs will be available at No. 10 for the Bengals because of the league’s preference of other positions, but his overall talent regardless of where he plays could see him go before Cincinnati goes on the clock.

The Bengals could use an upgrade in their defensive backfield this offseason. Since coming over in free agency, Geno Stone has struggled overall with the Bengals, despite recent open support from defensive coordinator Al Golden.

Cincinnati’s defense has seen a steep decline because of roster attrition, including the departure of Jessie Bates III at safety. Bates was known as a great communicator and helped to align the players in front of him successfully.

Downs would no doubt be a game-changer for the Bengals and comes from a great football lineage (his father played and is a coach, while his uncle is former Pro Bowl defensive back Dre Bly). However, the Bengals have only used two first-round picks on the safety position since 1992—Dax Hill in 2022 (who is now a cornerback) and Darryl Williams in 1992. Both were selected towards the end of the first round.

Source: https://www.cincyjungle.com/cincinn...-targets-safety-ohio-state-buckeyes-prospects
 
The Trey Hendrickson era with the Cincinnati Bengals is coming to an end

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For the past two summers, star defensive end Trey Hendrickson and the Cincinnati Bengals have been at odds with a long-term extension. Hendrickson had a brief holdout of early 2024 workouts, but put it aside, only to have a historic season.

In 2025, Hendrickson’s contract impasse was more pronounced and received much more national attention after his 17.5-sack campaign. After sitting out training camp, Hendrickson returned shortly before the regular season after a pay bump for 2025. Unfortunately, he was injured in Week 6 and didn’t appear in another game after Week 8 versus the Jets.

As the Bengals enter offseason mode, Hendrickson is the biggest question to tackle. Zac Taylor recently spoke of “a path” for Hendrickson to remain a Bengal, but more and more reports are surfacing that the odds of Hendrickson returning to Cincinnati in 2026 seems to be almost laughable.

Paul Dehner, Jr. of The Athletic recently shared some thoughts about the relationship status of the two sides, and, spoiler alert: it isn’t pretty.

Zac Taylor was asked about there being a path to Hendrickson coming back this week and said, “There’s always a path.” He said that because he had to, because there is no path here. It’s actually kind of funny envisioning what the real-life version of that path would be. My best answer would be to Google the Darien Gap. Bridges have been set on fire here, so there’s no realistic return to Cincinnati for 2026 in the plans. When they let him walk, the team would likely receive a 2027 third-round compensatory pick.

Chance of return: 1 percent

Even if the 2024 mini-holdout was water-under-the-bridge for Hendrickson, the 2025 holdout bore obvious frustrations. He saw other offensive stars get big paydays (deservedly so), believed he was also due for a big raise, and got only a fraction of what he deserved this year.

From the Bengals’ side of things, this screams of a scenario wherein the brain trust will likely feel they were justified in not giving him a long-term extension due to Hendrickson’s 2025 injury. Their hesitancy in doling out another big deal to Hendrickson was largely attributed to his age (he’ll be 32 in December).

Other national insiders are also noting the gap between the parties, so it appears that the big question is around the franchise tag. Will the Bengals continue to frustrate Hendrickson and place it on him in an effort to recoup some capital, or will they allow him to enter the open market without protecting themselves?

Even if it irks Hendrickson, Cincinnati engaging in a tag-and-trade scenario is the wisest and most likely “path,” given the reports. They could keep him on the tag and give him another solid pay raise for 2026, but with Hendrickson lobbying for a long-term deal, we could see another holdout should this be the chosen route.

Source: https://www.cincyjungle.com/cincinn...hendrickson-era-end-nfl-free-agents-edge-2026
 
Bengals News (1/8): Dan Pitcher Watch

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AFC North rival shows interest in messing up Zac Taylor’s plan for Bengals coaching continuity

Pitcher has been Cincinnati’s OC since 2024. He was promoted from quarterbacks coach, the job he held from 2020-23, after former OC Brian Callahan left to become the HC of the Tennessee Titans. Callahan was fired by Tennessee during the 2025 season.

The Envelope Please: Bengals.com 2025 Awards

The best player in the NFL. Hands down. Hands up. One hand. Two hands. Doesn’t matter. With 125 catches and 1,412 yards in this season of three quarterbacks, an array of gadget defenses and a new captain’s C, he kept churning gold-jacket numbers with blue-collar efficiency.

Joe Burrow Shares Classy Postgame Message With Shedeur Sanders After Bengals’ Loss to Browns

“You’re fun to watch,” Burrow said after shaking Sanders’ hand on the field following the loss. “You’re fun to watch. Look forward to watching you next year.”

Mel Kiper gets it right for Bengals in first mock draft

Enter Caleb Downs, the extremely talented Ohio State safety, who possesses the skills to potentially be an elite deep safety. He’s an ideal fit for the Bengals defense and is already one of the most-popular picks for the team in mock drafts across the media landscape.

Source: https://www.cincyjungle.com/cincinnati-bengals-news/184588/bengals-news-1-8-dan-pitcher-watch
 
Cincinnati Bengals 2026 NFL Draft prospects to watch in the Miami vs. Ole Miss playoff game

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The Miami Hurricanes pulled off the upset against the Ohio State Buckeyes in the quarterfinal round of the playoffs. They dominated in the trenches. It is not a coincidence that is where some of the best prospects in this game reside.

Rueben Bain Jr. has been flat-out dominant in the first two games of the playoffs. He has 16 total pressures and 4 sacks in those two games. Bain isn’t just a pass rush specialist either. At 277 pounds, he is a monster against the run. There is a lot of discourse about his short arms for the next level, the tape says don’t overthink this one. Bain is a top 5 talent in this upcoming class.

If he falls to pick 10, the Bengals should absolutely sprint to the podium to make the selection.

Allow me to walk you through Rueben Bain Jr’s dominant performance from New Year’s Eve ⬇️ pic.twitter.com/UEtHzaEtJN

— LandonTengwall (@LandonTengwall) January 3, 2026

Bain’s teammate Akheem Mesidor has been just as dominant through two games. Mesidor is unlikely to be a first round draft selection though for a couple of reasons. One being is that he has an extensive injury history. The majority of those issues have been recurring problems with his feet. Due to those injuries, Mesidor is going to be a 25-year-old rookie. He is still a tremendous prospect based on his flat-out dominance in the trenches this season. The age and injuries will likely drop him to being a day two draft selection. Someone will end up with a dominant pass rusher.

Teams may be scared off by the age and medicals, but Akheem Mesidor has consistently produced since his true freshman year. When he’s healthy, he’s one of the better pass rushers in this class. If he stays healthy, the team that takes a chance on him will walk away with a steal pic.twitter.com/tzV6tfFadv

— Steve Letizia (@CFCBears) December 16, 2025

The Bengals could use some help on the interior defensive line when it comes to getting pressure on the quarterback. This game should feature a player for each team who can do so. Ahmad Moten Sr. left the game versus Ohio State injured this week.

Hopefully, he will be healthy enough to play on Thursday night. Moten has been one of the better interior pass rushers this season. He has over a 20% win rate on true pass sets during the season with 4.5 sacks from the interior defensive line.

Ahmad Moten Sr. is a defensive tackle for Miami with 4.5 sacks on the season, a 25.4% win rate on true pass sets (among the highest in the country at DT), and a 74.3 run defense grade in 2025. pic.twitter.com/WpRrEoRU8X

— Bengals & Brews (@BengalsBrews) December 20, 2025

For Ole Miss, they have the mammoth Zxavian Harris at defensive tackle. Harris is listed at around 6’8” and 330 pounds. He uses that size to clog rushing lanes, bat down field goals and extra points, and has some surprising juice as a pass rusher at that size. Harris is a player that should be on the Bengals’ radar for the mid-rounds in the 2026 NFL Draft.

Zxavian Harris is a very very interesting DL prospect at 6’8, 330lbs pic.twitter.com/NzMXuiRj9b

— NFL Draft Files (@NFL_DF) November 13, 2025

Miami’s Keionte Scott would be an excellent addition to play slot cornerback for the Bengals. He has versatility to play in several spots, is a physical tackler in run support, and had the play of the game interception against the Buckeyes. Scott has been critical in both of Miami’s playoff wins so far, and I expect that to continue for them on Thursday.

Keionte Scott is a fun nickel to study.

Extremely disruptive at the LOS due to his speed, balance and competitive toughness. Has been playing at this level all season for Miami. pic.twitter.com/W2ac3OBYSi

— Dane Brugler (@dpbrugler) December 22, 2025

Source: https://www.cincyjungle.com/cincinn...pects-to-watch-miami-vs-ole-miss-playoff-game
 
Duke Tobin: “We still have a championship team in my mind”

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Duke Tobin spoke to the press today and addressed questions about a roster that most believe is nowhere near being a contender.

The de facto GM disagreed.

“We still have a championship team in my mind,” he said. “We have elite world-class players.”

So then what went wrong?

“We had a lot of challenges this year,” Tobin explained. “We navigated some of them as effectively as you could, and then we had challenges elsewhere.”

Tobin then went on to say that the offense was built for Joe Burrow, implying that losing him to injury was a big reason the team finished with a losing record. “When you lose your quarterback… we have a quarterback that we have taken great pains in building an offense around and for,” Tobin said.

He then pivoted to talking about the great strides that the offense took without Burrow, from the running game to Joe Flacco’s ability to play effectively on short notice. Of course, Tobin took the blame for the defense’s failures. “Other parts of the team then decided it wasn’t going to give us a chance, and that’s on me,” Tobin said.

Overall, Tobin sees the Flacco run as something that shows the Bengals have the right coaches. “But there are things that worked and things that show me, hey, we’ve got the right people in this building, because [Flacco’s success in the offense] doesn’t happen,” Tobin said. “That is a rare, rare thing that you can create something out of nothing and then have the success that that had. So I’m proud of that. I really am.”

Flacco had a 13 to 4 TD to INT ratio and completed over 61% of his passes but only went 1-5 as a starter in Cincinnati.

You can watch the clip of Tobin below:

Duke Tobin said he "absolutely" thought he had a championship team going into this season, and said "we still have a championship team in my mind."

"When you lose your QB, we have a QB that we have taken great pains in building an offense around and for."#Bengals pic.twitter.com/QvnfTm2oO1

— Chatterbox Sports (@CBoxSports) January 9, 2026

Source: https://www.cincyjungle.com/cincinn...in-we-still-have-championship-team-in-my-mind
 
Bengals will not expand NFL’s smallest scouting department, according to Duke Tobin

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One constant criticism the Cincinnati Bengals have endured is the tiniest scouting department in the entire NFL. While some teams employ dozens of scouts to keep an eye on players to draft and already on NFL Rosters, the Bengals’ scouting department barely reaches double digits.

They even added two new scouts last season, which still keeps it as well below the league average of roughly 20.

When asked if they would be expanding that department again, Director of Player Personnel Duke Tobin said there were no such plans.

Asked Duke Tobin if there’s a plan to expand the Bengals scouting department this offseason.

He said they will not be expanding it this offseason, and complimented the skill of the staff currently intact.#Bengals @WCPO pic.twitter.com/e0L33WzLgW

— Caleb Noe (@CalebNoeTV) January 9, 2026

Tobin has often pointed to the idea that collaboration is easier when you keep the department smaller. They also will get coaches on the road to go to certain Pro Days and things of that nature.

The problem is they seem to be wrong more often than they are right. It feels more like the “a broken clock is still right twice a day” adage is true here, but the team is using those successes to continue to do this.

When you look at recent reaches for players like Drew Sample or Demetrius Knight Jr., it makes you wonder if maybe someone could have gotten in there to avoid over-drafting those players.

I mean, the track record of the offensive line alone is enough to question it. This past season was the first time the Bengals have had an acceptable offensive line since Andrew Whitworth left. It has been nearly 10 years of spending high draft capital and money to try to build an offensive line that only just finally come together.

The safety position is another glaring example. After letting Jessie Bates walk, the team spent a first round pick on Dax Hill (who has been moved to corner), a third round pick on Jordan Battle (who shouldn’t be penciled in as a starter without competition), spent decent money on Geno Stone (who will likely won’t be on the team next season after struggling) and Nick Scott (who was one-and-done).

A position that was a strength that turned into endless question marks and a big reason for the struggles over the past two seasons.

If this front office is going to hang its hat on drafting players like Joe Burrow, Ja’Marr Chase, and Tee Higgins and be happy, then there is a serious concern over how they view their process. Those weren’t necessarily the hardest picks a front office would ever have to make. When we see them constantly whiffing on Day 2 and early Day 3 picks, then there are some issues that need to be addressed.

Maybe a couple extra hands could help fix that problem, considering this is a billion-dollar organization.

Source: https://www.cincyjungle.com/cincinn...2/nfl-smallest-scouting-department-duke-tobin
 
Duke Tobin discusses the Bengals’ biggest offseason need

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On Friday, Cincinnati Bengals Director of Player Personnel Duke Tobin met with the media earlier than usual. Typically, we don’t hear from Tobin until the NFL Scouting Combine in February, but after a huge letdown in 2025, the organization decided to make Tobin available.

When asked about the Bengals’ biggest need this offseason, “pass rush” was the first thing on Tobin’s mind.

After giving Trey Hendrickson a raise this past offseason, he missed over half of the season with hip and core muscle injuries, which was a major blow to the Bengals’ pass rush rotation. As the season went on, 2023 first-round pick Myles Murphy did start to come along, but there was still much left to be desired from Cincinnati’s pass rush unit.

2025 first-rounder Shemar Stewart was essentially a non-factor. He missed several games with injury as well, but only registered one sack on the season. Hopefully, Stewart is healthy in 2026 and able to contribute more, but Tobin is clearly eyeing more help with getting opposing quarterbacks to the ground.

Tobin was noncommittal about exactly how they plan to attack the offseason, but it would seem that pass rushers will be on his mind in both free agency and the NFL Draft, where the Bengals will select 10th overall in the first round.

"We need pass rush…I'm a guy that believes in the front on both sides of the ball, that is my focus. People might not believe that, but that is my focus."

-Duke Tobin#Bengals pic.twitter.com/4AV7X2bBtz

— Chatterbox Sports (@CBoxSports) January 9, 2026

Source: https://www.cincyjungle.com/cincinnati-bengals-news/184650/biggest-offseason-need-duke-tobin
 
NFL issues fines from Bengals’ finale vs. Browns

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The Cincinnati Bengals closed their 2025 season in a fitting way for how their season went. An ugly loss to the Cleveland Browns wrapped up a season full of late-game collapses and the Bengals not being able to play complementary football for most of the season.

For most of the fans, maybe the sting has started to wear off. Both the Bengals and Browns concluded their disappointing seasons, but they got letters from the NFL that are one last sting of the 2025 season.

Two players from Cleveland were fined for their celebrations after defensive scores. Browns linebacker Devin Bush was fined $10,000 for an obscene gesture. After taking a Joe Burrow interception the other way for a score, Bush grabbed his crotch as he jumped backwards into the end zone. The league took notice and issued the fine to Bush to close out the season.

Webb, a reserve player forced in to action, actually did the same thing as Bush after recovering a Noah Fant fumble and returning it for a touchdown. Web was only fined $6,111, due to his salary being lower than that of Bush.

Bengals defensive end Cedric Johnson was also fined $5,525 for a hit to Shedeur Sanders’ head in the second quarter of the game. The contact didn’t appear to be malicious, but it was deemed enough for the league to take a chunk out of Johnson’s paycheck.

All players do have the right to appeal their fines, should they decide to.

Almost a week later, the NFL handed down one last reminder of a lost season for both teams.

Source: https://www.cincyjungle.com/cincinnati-bengals-news/184679/nfl-fines-browns
 
LOL oh man where do I even start with Duke Tobin here. "We still have a championship team in my mind" - yeah Duke, IN YOUR MIND is doing a LOT of heavy lifting in that sentence buddy.

The delusion is absolutely WILD. You went 7-10 or whatever disaster record it was, your defense was Swiss cheese, and you're sitting there telling us it's a championship roster? Come on man. At least have the self-awareness to admit you've got holes to fill.

And don't even get me started on the scouting department thing. They have the SMALLEST scouting department in the entire NFL and refuse to expand it. This is a BILLION dollar organization! The Bengals ownership is so notoriously cheap it's almost comical at this point. How many mid-round busts do you need before you realize maybe having more eyes on prospects would help?

The pass rush focus makes sense though, I'll give him that. Hendrickson missing half the year killed them and Stewart being a ghost as a first rounder is concerning. If Rueben Bain Jr. somehow falls to pick 10, they better not overthink it. That dude has been an absolute monster in the playoffs.

But seriously Bengals fans, how do you put up with this front office? At least in Buffalo we've got Beane actually building something. Tobin out here acting like everything's fine while the house is on fire. 🔥
 
Cincinnati Bengals roster: Duke Tobin comments on defensive roster, leadership

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The Cincinnati Bengals recently announced that they are running it back with all of the major figureheads in place for 2026. While that may not be music to the ears for some, a couple of those leadership staples addressed the media this week to share thoughts about 2025 and the vision going forward.

The team’s de facto General Manager, Duke Tobin, spoke on Friday about a number of topics, one of which was the status of the roster going forward. Cincinnati’s defense has had struggles in recent years, but some growth was seen from younger players towards the end of this season.

In his press conference, Tobin outlined a few players on defensive coordinator Al Golden’s unit that he holds in high regard in the years ahead.

Duke Tobin speaking confidence publicly in DJ Turner, Dax Hill, Myles Murphy and Jordan Battle.

But…"We need leaders." #Bengals @FOX19

— Jeremy Rauch (@FOX19Jeremy) January 9, 2026

This nugget leaves a lot to unpack. DJ Turner played at a Pro Bowl level this year, racking up two interceptions and a whopping 18 passes defended. Dax Hill stepped up in a variety of ways in 2026, while Jordan Battle led the team with four interceptions.

Myles Murphy also shined with increased playing time this year, leading the team with 5.5 sacks. While the future is uncertain with Trey Hendrickson, Tobin appears to be pleased with who they currently have under contract at defensive end, though mentioned the importance of pass rush in his presser.

Now, the “need leaders” tidbit is another eye-opening quote. After the defense was experiencing historic failures this year, a “players-only” meeting was held. While the unit picked things up at the end of the year, questions lingered on who led this meeting, and Tobin’s comments reinforce those questions.

Regardless, the other facet to the comment stems in where these leaders will be found. It’s possible the Bengals go heavy in outside free agency again this offseason as they did in 2020-2021 (not coincidentally leading to two great consecutive seasons in 2021-2022), but they will undoubtedly be eyeing leadership qualities.

In many draft instances, Tobin and Zac Taylor have opted for players who have had team captain statuses and high character. The team may go back to that path again with more emphasis this offseason.

Regardless, there are valuable, young pieces on the defense, but a big influx of talent and leadership on the defensive side of the ball will be a high priority for the Bengals this offseason.

Source: https://www.cincyjungle.com/cincinnati-bengals-news/184660/duke-tobin-defenders-high-on
 
2026 NFL free agent safeties the Bengals should target

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This will be the fourth offseason since Jessie Bates left, and the search for his replacement continues for the Cincinnati Bengals.

Perhaps one of these players could fit the bill?

Let’s take a look at some of the upcoming free agent safeties for the Bengals to target.

Bryan Cook​


Could it be time for Cincinnati native and UC alum Bryan Cook to return home?

The 26-year-old has started for the Chiefs for three seasons. While he did not have any interceptions this season, he had two a year ago. He also has 163 tackles over the past two seasons.

Cook is just entering his prime, but he has already played at a high level in some big games. His combination of youth and experience makes him a perfect candidate for the Bengals.

Plus, with all of their money woes, the Chiefs are unlikely to be able to pay him to stick around.

Kamren Curl​


Kamren Curl has been a full-time starter since he entered the league six years ago. At age 26, he has 86 starts and 586 tackles to his name.

Curl has the versatility to play both strong and free safety, so acquiring him would not limit the team in the draft.

He started his career in Washington but is coming off an excellent season with the Rams, in which he had 122 tackles and 2 interceptions.

Kevin Byard​


Kevin Byard has been one of the league’s top safeties for years, and at 32, he doesn’t look to be slowing down. He has 36 career interceptions, including a league-leading seven with the Bears this season.

Byard would give the Bengals a seasoned leader in the secondary. He would make sure communication was on point and be an excellent resource for Jordan Battle and, dare I say, Caleb Downs?

Byard’s most recent contract was $15 over two years, and I would imagine he should still be a reasonably affordable option.

Jaylinn Hawkins​


This would be an ironic twist.

Jaylinn Hawkins started 16 games for the Atlanta Falcons in 2022, then in 2023, he was benched in favor of Jessie Bates.

Hawkins bounced around a bit after that, but last year he ended up in New England, where he had a career high 4 interceptions and proved himself to be a sure tackler.

Despite having 47 career starts to his name, Hawkins is only 28 years old.

He would bring experience and dependability to the Bengals’ secondary, as well as a strong leader who can get them lined up properly.

Coby Bryant​


Start with a Bearcat, end with a Bearcat.

Bryant came out of UC in the draft as Sauce Gardner and Cook, though much later in the draft.

He played in the slot early in his career with the Seahawks, but Mike Macdonald moved him to deep safety this season, and it appears to be a good fit.

Bryant had 66 tackles and 4 interceptions this past season.

At 26 and still new to the position, Bryant is a risky acquisition with a lot of upside.

Source: https://www.cincyjungle.com/cincinn...y/184607/nfl-free-agent-safeties-targets-2026
 
Bengals News (1/12): Ja’Marr Chase’s latest honor

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Bengals WR Ja’Marr Chase’s All-Pro honor has another layer of greatness under the surface we haven’t seen in 8 years
Chase is one of seven players to be named First Team All-Pro for the second consecutive year this season.

Duke Tobin Makes It Clear: Bengals Will Address Major Weakness This Offseason
In an effort to uncover any plans for what exact area could see the most attention of the defense this offseason, Tobin was asked what traits he is looking for on defense, and he made it clear right away that it is the ability to pressure the quarterback and insisted that they must address that area.

Amarius Mims Makes Bold Claim About Dalton Risner’s Bengals Future
“I feel like he’s one of the best right guards in the NFL,” Mims said in our 1-on-1 conversation. “He’s helped my game tremendously. As you can see, once we step down beside each other, each week you can see us getting better and better beside each other. I fully stand behind him. I fully support him. I want him back. I want him to be my right guard next year. I won’t rest until he is my right guard next year.”

One thing worth saving from the Bengals’ 2025 season? The offensive line
For the first time in the Taylor era, players and coaches sound excited about the line’s projected continuity. The biggest endorsement came from Burrow, the club’s franchise quarterback, who repeatedly hailed the offensive linemen as the best of his six-year career. The high praise from Burrow, Taylor and others extended all the way through the Week 18 season finale.

NFL fines multiple players from Browns vs. Bengals season finale
Per the NFL, Browns linebacker Devin Bush received a $10,000 fine and Browns cornerback Sam Webb got fined $6,111, each for celebrations they performed while scoring defensive touchdowns.

Bengals’ quiet breakout player gets some All-Pro love already
Turner will need to prove the big jump this year wasn’t a fluke, but it’s hard to scoff at him shadowing an opponent’s best each week and ending up as the 20th-ranked corner out of 114 at PFF.

Source: https://www.cincyjungle.com/cincinnati-bengals-news/184727/jamarr-chase-latest-honor
 
Bengals Tuesday Trenches: Digesting Duke Tobin’s comments

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The Cincinnati Bengals, after three consecutive seasons without a playoff appearance despite having The Big Three on the roster, announced they would be making no changes to either the front office or the coaching staff. While nearly any other franchise would’ve fired at least someone—probably several someones—the most Mike Brown and Katie Blackburn were willing to do was offer up Duke Tobin, the team’s de facto general manager, to the media.

That press conference lasted a little over an hour. Beat reporters asked tough questions. Tobin said nothing—at least nothing that would convince fans that he, or anyone else in the front office, has taken real accountability for the 2024 and 2025 seasons.

I’m not going to go through every question asked and every half-answer given, but I want to focus on one exchange in particular.

The question:
“Joe Burrow was pretty adamant about change. In your mind, what has to change?”

The answer:
“Our record. We need to win games that we should win, instead of finding ways to lose games that we should win. But we change every offseason. They’ll be new faces, they’ll be new players, they’ll be new schematics. Our coaches will spend the whole offseason dialing into what went right, what went wrong, what can we build on? How can we change in what we do? Our personnel staff will spend the entire off-season on what went right, what went wrong. What can we change in who we have. So, we’re working on the who. They’ll work on the what. The players need to work on the how. That’s the technique and the assignments. That’s why it’s the who, the what, and the how; all of that needs to improve. All three phases need to improve. And so there’ll be changes through that process. There’ll be changes in the who, what we’re doing, and how we’re getting it accomplished.”

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In case you’re not fluent in coach-speak, Tobin basically used about 160 words to say nothing more than “we need to get better.”

No sh*t.

We all know Tobin isn’t the owner of the team. The owner is Mike Brown. Tobin can’t say anything publicly that contradicts what the Brown’s or the Blackburn’s want said. He’s an employee—and even if he might have the best job security in America, he can’t exactly walk up to the podium and say, “What needs to change is ownership.”

Expecting Tobin to say the Bengals need to fundamentally change how they operate would be like expecting Ronald McDonald to step out and announce that fast food is bad for you. He’s not going to bite the hand that feeds him, even if that means talking in circles until every last eye in the room is glazed over.

So yes, it’s frustrating to hear nothing. But at the same time, nothing was expected. This press conference was an attempt to look transparent. Instead, it only pushed an already angry fan base one step closer to apathy.

When—and only when—ownership’s bottom line is affected by canceled season tickets or dwindling interest will meaningful changes happen.

Until then, the plan appears to be to make no changes and hope the last three seasons were just a fluke—and that the 2021 and 2022 Bengals are the “real” version of this franchise.

There are only a handful of people in Cincinnati—and in the world—who seem to believe that’s true.

They own the team.

Random thoughts from Wildcard Weekend:​

  • There’s no way a quarterback could get sacked six times and still win a playoff game… right? Justin Herbert was sacked six times by the Patriots on their way to a road loss in Foxborough.
  • Joe Burrow was sacked nine times by the Titans in Nashville in January of 2022—and still led the Bengals to victory.
  • I’ve never really had strong feelings about the Bears. I don’t like them. I don’t dislike them. I kind of nothing them. They’ve always existed in the NFC and never bothered the Bengals much. That changed this weekend. Watching Chicago come back against the Packers was an absolute delight. I won’t be rooting for them in 2026, but if they’re going to keep playing fun, entertaining football right now, I’ll happily enjoy a Chicago Dog (sans sport peppers) and a deep-dish pizza.
  • The Ravens firing John Harbaugh was both surprising and completely unsurprising at the same time. I’m glad he won’t be calling the shots in Baltimore anymore—but I still think the Ravens made a mistake.
  • If the Ravens had beaten the Steelers in Week 18 and Pittsburgh fired Mike Tomlin, I’d say the exact same thing. Personally, I hope the Texans beat them up badly on Monday night (I’m writing this just before kickoff) and Pittsburgh decides to send Tomlin packing anyway.
  • It’s funny when you think about it: if the Steelers do fire Tomlin, every team in the AFC North except the Bengals would have fired their head coach.
  • I think Tomlin, Harbaugh, and Kevin Stefanski are all superior coaches when compared to Zac Taylor.

What were your takeaways from Tobin’s presser, and who will you be rooting for in the divisional round?

Relative Song Lyrics:

Like a dull knife that just ain’t cuttin’
We’re just talkin’ a lot and sayin’ nothing
Just sayin’ nothing, what, sayin’ nothing

Source: https://www.cincyjungle.com/cincinnati-bengals-analysis/184733/duke-tobins-comments
 
Multiple Bengals rookies named NFL All-Rookie Team Honorable Mentions

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The Cincinnati Bengals made it very clear last offseason that the coaching staff was going to invest significant time into their rookies and younger players in the building.

The Bengals ranked 7th in the NFL with total snaps played by rookies, and a large majority of those went to guys like Dylan Fairchild, Demetrius Knight Jr., and Barrett Carter.

Dan Brugler of The Athletic recently shared his 2025 NFL All-Rookie Team for this past season, and those names were mentioned in his article.

Brugler placed Fairchild as a runner-up to the team after posting a 59.1 overall PFF grade this past season on 961 snaps.

“A year ago, Tate Ratledge and Fairchild were starting guards at Georgia. Now, they look like promising building blocks for the Lions and Bengals, respectively,” Brugler wrote. “Ratledge led all offensive rookies in snaps played during the regular season and was one of the NFL’s more consistent run blockers. Fairchild had a few more ups and downs, but he graded out as an above-average player, especially for a mid-third-round pick. The Bengals should feel confident about their left guard moving forward, which they certainly couldn’t say last year.”

Both Knight and Carter earned honorable mentions from Brugler with their play in their rookie season as Bengals.

Knight finished 2025 with a 41.9 PFF grade on 798 snaps, but flashed down the stretch with solid performances against the Cardinals and Browns.

Carter finished the 2025 season with a 39.5 PFF grade on 792 snaps and struggled to really find his footing most of the year.

The Bengals are going to likely go with those two guys next season after showing their faith in that duo by trading away Logan Wilson mid-season.

We will see what their sophomore season brings in 2026!

Source: https://www.cincyjungle.com/cincinn...-named-nfl-all-rookie-team-honorable-mentions
 
10 NFL Draft prospects to know for the Bengals’ 10th overall selection

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The Cincinnati Bengals are officially picking 10th overall this year. Let’s take a look at 10 prospects that could be near the top of their big board for the upcoming NFL Draft.

Caleb Downs​


Downs officially declared for the draft on Wednesday afternoon. The Ohio State safety has been a starter during all three seasons of his collegiate career. He spent his first season at Alabama, followed by his final two with the Buckeyes. The All-American could be the rare safety that gets selected inside the top 10. Downs is considered a coach on the field, a ferocious run defender, and had an 89.6 coverage grade during the 2025 season.

Caleb Downs vs. Wisconsin pic.twitter.com/OVcIncnEHn

— Bengals & Brews (@BengalsBrews) November 11, 2025

Rueben Bain Jr.​


Bain has been on an absolute tear during the college football playoffs this year for Miami. In just two games, the Hurricanes edge rusher has 16 total pressures and 4 sacks. While he doesn’t have the longest arms, he is a stout run defender, a powerful pass rusher, and he won’t even turn 21 years old until September of 2026. Bain has the added versatility at 277 pounds to kick inside at times in obvious passing situations.

Rueben Bain Jr. is a thickly built defensive lineman with a powerful bull-rush, good closing speed, and versatility to move up and down the line. He has a 32.9% pass rush win rate on true pass sets in 2025. pic.twitter.com/zdXNjOi8YZ

— Bengals & Brews (@BengalsBrews) December 20, 2025

Peter Woods​


Woods is another player that is still just 20 years old. The Clemson defensive tackle didn’t have the statistical season that many expected. Even so, he still had a 16.8% win rate on true pass sets in 2025. Combine that with his 10.1% stop rate, this is an impactful 3-tech prospect. Woods spent time playing at edge for Clemson in 2024, even though he weighs around 315 pounds. That is a testament to the quickness of his feet, and ability to marry that with proper usage of his hands.

Peter Woods vs. LSU pic.twitter.com/1SQzMI3qhw

— Bengals & Brews (@BengalsBrews) November 20, 2025

David Bailey​


Bailey had a monster season for Texas Tech in 2025, after transferring from Stanford. He recorded 14.5 sacks and 3 forced fumbles this year. He is an absolute terror for opposing offensive tackles. His quickness off the snap, bend around the edge, and advanced pass rush arsenal are all reasons that Bailey should end up being selected in the top 10 this year.

David Bailey vs. Arizona State pic.twitter.com/vwDhniUfp8

— Bengals & Brews (@BengalsBrews) December 13, 2025

Arvell Reese​


Arvell Reese got off to a hot start the first half of the season for the Ohio State Buckeyes. He ended up with 6.5 sacks on the season, but none of them came in his final six games of the year. Reese is a hybrid linebacker/edge prospect. I could see Al Golden envisioning him as the perfect prospect for his Vyper role. Reese has great athleticism, and should test really well this year. If he ends up dropping down to the 10th pick, I am not ruling out the Bengals making him the selection.

Arvell Reese vs. Wisconsin pic.twitter.com/GtvKMDnq6g

— Bengals & Brews (@BengalsBrews) November 11, 2025

Sonny Styles​


Arvell Reese’s running mate at linebacker for the Buckeyes was Sonny Styles. Styles is a converted safety prospect that has continued improving at linebacker over the last two seasons. Styles ended the season with just a 2.2% missed tackle rate, not having any of them until the final game against Miami. Styles is a 6’5” 240 pound do it all player at linebacker. He is very solid in coverage, as evidenced by his 88.5 coverage grade for the 2025 season. A top 10 selection might be a bit rich for either of the Buckeyes linebackers, but they would drastically improve that unit for the Bengals.

Sonny Styles (#6) is a converted Safety with freak athleticism at 6’4 235 lbs. that put up 100 tackles and 6 sacks in 2024 and should be even better in his second season as a full-time Linebacker. He has excellent pursuit speed, length, range, and good bend around the edge when… pic.twitter.com/bfaxcAWMCo

— Bengals & Brews (@BengalsBrews) July 22, 2025

Mansoor Delane​


While cornerback may not top the list of needs for the Bengals, it shouldn’t be ruled out. With Dax Hill and DJ Turner returning next year at outside corner, things are set for the two starters. However, you can never have enough depth at the position. Both of those players will also need to receive new contracts in the near future. If the Bengals choose to only sign one of them long term, they could look toward the draft for the future replacement, while also getting creative for who they use at slot cornerback in 2026.

Delane had a terrific season after transferring to LSU from Virginia Tech. He had an incredible 91.1 coverage grade, allowing just a 37.1% completion rate against him in 2025. Delane is physical in run support, has played over 2,400 career snaps, and has eight career interceptions.

Mansoor Delane | CB | 6-0 190 LBS

Complete boundary corner, technically sound, fluid hips in transition. Solid run defense. Nice top end speed runs stride for stride with Ryan Williams and KC Concepcion. Great in zone. Some missed tackle issues.

Shades of: Darius Slay pic.twitter.com/W8eBCucxSl

— Price Carter (@priceacarter) January 7, 2026

Jermod McCoy​


Jermod McCoy is the other corner that could be in consideration during the first round for the Bengals. McCoy missed all of the 2025 after tearing his ACL in January of last year. During the 2024 season he was the best cornerback in college football. McCoy had an 89.6 coverage grade that season. He was also extremely reliable as a tackler, having just a 7.0% missed tackle rate during the year. McCoy is a physical corner that is one of the best man-to-man cover guys that will be in this draft class.

This week, our focus player is Jermod McCoy, Cornerback from Tennessee. McCoy is a long, sticky, and feisty M2M CB, who was seen as CB1 before shredding his knee in January of 2025. While he did begin practicing with the team, he failed to appear in any games this season. pic.twitter.com/BFQ2dRCEBl

— FILMISSART (@Filmissartt) December 16, 2025

Keldric Faulk​


Faulk is the prototype for what the Bengals have valued recently at defensive end. Faulk is an edge setting player with great power and size. Faulk is 6’6” and 280 pounds. While he did record 7 sacks during the 2024 season, he had just 2 of them in 2025. He is not a player that gets a consistent pass rush. He had just a 12.7% win rate on true pass sets during the 2024 season. It was a little better in 2025, but still much lower than any of the other top pass rushers in this class, at 16.3% for the season.

Keldric Faulk vs. Baylor pic.twitter.com/sqYmFexRPN

— Bengals & Brews (@BengalsBrews) September 11, 2025

Kadyn Proctor​


I am aware this addition to the list isn’t going to make people very happy. Unless the Bengals have plans to move Amarius Mims, they are not going to be looking at Spencer Fano or Francis Mauigoa. That leaves Kadyn Proctor as the likely highest rated left tackle prospect for the Bengals. With Orlando Brown Jr. entering the final year of his contract, they could look to take a future replacement at the position this year.

Proctor gives me major concerns with his size and lack of lateral foot speed. Proctor is a massive human at 6’7” and 360 pounds. He is a mauler in the running game, has started all three seasons at Alabama, and he ended up with an 83.5 pass blocking grade at the end of the 2025 season. There are concerns for Proctor, but also traits the Bengals will be intrigued by. Don’t shoot the messenger on this one, but I can see Proctor being higher on their board than people will think.

Kadyn Proctor (#74) Alabama

Absolutely monstrous Offensive Tackle at 6’7 360 with great length, mauling mentality as a run blocker, and plus athleticism overall that can get out and block in space. However, I do have concerns about his durability and conditioning at his size and… pic.twitter.com/RMBh067iGq

— Bengals & Brews (@BengalsBrews) July 25, 2025

Source: https://www.cincyjungle.com/cincinn...o-know-for-the-bengals-10th-overall-selection
 
Bengals News (1/14): Franchise record watch

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Bengals News​


By The Numbers: Current Bengals Climbing Up Team Record Books

Now that the Bengals’ Big Three of quarterback Joe Burrow and wide receivers Ja’Marr Chase and Tee Higgins have become the Big Four with running back Chase Brown, here’s a glance at their assault on the Bengals record book.

Cincinnati Bengals Select Mauling Defender in Post-Wild Card Mock Draft

The Bengals went with another popular name for the franchise holding the 10th pick in Pro Football Focus’s latest 2026 mock draft.

Former Bengals free agent signing proves team right in playoffs

The Cincinnati Bengals had the right idea when they signed defensive lineman Sheldon Rankins back in 2024.

Bengals should avoid trading for a hometown hero after successfully turning one of their weaknesses into a strength

It’s impossible to confuse the identity of the Cincinnati Bengals. Joe Burrow, Ja’Marr Chase, and Tee Higgins are on the team to put up points with the pass game. The Bengals give themselves a chance at winning every game if those three suit up and play up to their abilities.

NFL News​


Eight Steelers coaching candidates to watch after Mike Tomlin steps down

For only the fourth time since 1969, the Steelers are searching for a new coach after Mike Tomlin decided to step down following 19 largely successful seasons in Pittsburgh.

Kevin Patullo no longer Eagles’ OC after offense’s sharp decline

The Eagles have removed Kevin Patullo from the offensive coordinator’s role, the team announced Tuesday.

Russell Wilson announces career decision after 14th NFL season

Russell Wilson’s not ready to hang up his cleats.

2026 NFL Salary Cap Tracker: All 32 NFL teams ranked by cap space

As teams gear up for the offseason, here’s how all 32 NFL teams currently stand in terms of cap space.

Super Bowl champion chides NFL for playoff schedule: ‘Not fair’

Super Bowl champion head coach Tony Dungy took issue with the NFL’s scheduling of its playoff games in the Divisional Round.

Source: https://www.cincyjungle.com/cincinnati-bengals-news/184820/franchise-record-watch
 
Former NFL GM discusses fixing the Bengals

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The Podcast “With the First Pick,” featuring former Titans GM Ran Carthon and CBS Draft Analyst Ryan Wilson, recently did an episode entitled “How to Fix the Cincinnati Bengals this Offseason.” Here are some of my takeaways from that episode.

Carthon worked in the front office of the Falcons, Rams, and 49ers before landing the general manager job with the Titans, who promoted him to Executive Vice President after his first season and demoted him to podcaster after his second.

Wilson dogged the Bengals for the size of their scouting department, but Carthon didn’t take the bait. He was complimentary of the Bengals’ scouts, specifically mentioning Mike Potts as a rising star in the field.

He believes that the Bengals should bring back Joseph Ossai.

Why?

Because, as he points out, the Bengals have drafted 21 players on defense since 2022, and 10 of them were defensive linemen. Yet, Ossai was the only one of those players who was a Week 1 starter. They hit at a position they haven’t hit on often. They need to keep him around.

He points out that they have been pretty solid drafting defensive backs. He also added that the linebackers they drafted this year (Demetrius Knight and Barrett Carter) looked like “good, quality players.”

Defensive line is where the misses have been.

Carthon added that this is in part about scouting but also about coaching and the coach’s input in the process. He talked about how the transition from Lou Anarumo’s defense to Al Golden’s could change this.

He added that when you put so much money on offense with Joe Burrow, Ja’Marr Chase, and Tee Higgins, you need a defensive scheme that is friendly to young players.

Carthon isn’t down on the Bengals coaching staff either. He thinks the team is right to bring Zac Taylor back next season. He said that he wins when Burrow is on the field and challenges people to find a coach who has a Burrow and then wins when that guy isn’t playing.

He points out that it is the key (keeping Burrow healthy) and said the Bengals could be a playoff team next season if they can do that.

In terms of prospects, they didn’t say anything too groundbreaking.

They talked about three players who Bengals fans are already talking about: Caleb Downs, Peter Woods, and Rueben Bain.

Carthon is big on Downs but didn’t talk much about the Ohio State safety. He likes Woods, but thinks the Clemson defensive tackle could go top five.

The player he talked about most was Bain. He isn’t high on Bain overall due to a lack of consistent performance, but praises him for his game against the Buckeyes. He also thinks Bain could be a good partner for Shemar Stewart because they have similar backgrounds and are from a similar place in Southern Florida.

If you want to hear more, check out “With the First Pick” and scroll back to the January second episode.

While you are on your podcast player of choice, be sure to subscribe to Bleav in Cincy.

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While you are on your podcast player of choice, be sure to subscribe to Bleav in Cincy.

Source: https://www.cincyjungle.com/cincinnati-bengals-analysis/184306/former-gm-fixing-cincy-offseason
 
Was DJ Turner snubbed by All-Pro voters?

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At one point, the 2025-26 Cincinnati Bengals were on pace to be the worst defense ever.

After the bye, things improved enough for them to finish being just bad, not historically bad.

So the panel that votes for the All Pro teams probably didn’t consider any individual players from the Bengals’ defense too seriously.

But if you look at DJ Turner’s performance in a vacuum, you can make a strong argument that he was one of the top corners in the league.

As you can see in the graphic below, Turner was the primary defender for the majority of snaps of a lot of WR1s and kept them to modest games.

DJ Turner deserved All-Pro consideration. He shadowed in a league-high 14 games and aligned against the WRs on the below list on 85% of their perimeter routes.

The stats shown are each receiver's TOTAL stats in that week's game against the Bengals. Super impressive. pic.twitter.com/LRMp1Hcf3D

— Mike Clay (@MikeClayNFL) January 10, 2026

In addition to his air-tight coverage, Turner finished with 18 passes defended, the second highest total in the entire NFL.

Further, the poor play around him should actually support his case, as it’s difficult to keep receivers from making plays with no real pass rush threat. Myles Murphy led the team in sacks with 5.5, but even he didn’t really emerge until later in the season.

All of this should just be motivation for Turner to play with even more fire next year. Hopefully this time, his defensive teammates will step up with him so he can get the recognition he deserves.

Source: https://www.cincyjungle.com/cincinnati-bengals-discussion/184902/dj-turner-snubbed-all-pro-voters
 
2026 NFL Draft Top 100 Prospect Rankings

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The Cincinnati Bengals will officially be selecting 10th overall in the 2026 NFL Draft. Let’s take a look at my current top 100 prospects for the draft this year.

1. Fernando Mendoza, QB, Indiana​


Mendoza led Indiana to the National Championship this year. The California transfer won the Heisman Trophy for his play during the regular season. Some of his best attributes include his accuracy, underrated mobility, and ball placement. Mendoza has a ridiculous 41 touchdowns to just 6 interception ratio on the season.

2. Caleb Downs, S, Ohio State​


Downs was an All-American at safety for the Buckeyes. He is considered a coach on the field. He is a tape grinder, which allows him to always be in the right spot, at the right time. He is a reliable tackler on the back end of a defense. He can line up in the box, in single high, or in the slot. He isn’t going to be an elite tester, but the tape speaks for itself. Safeties are not typically selected in the top ten due to perceived positional value; Downs should be an exception this year.

Caleb Downs (6’0 205) Ohio State

+ Coach on the field/film junkie
+ 89.6 coverage grade in 2025
+ 83.7 run defense grade in 2025
+ Has just under 2,500 snaps in only three years in college
+ Physical in run support
+ Special teams’ experience including as a punt returner
+… pic.twitter.com/mtT1VFKcSl

— Bengals & Brews (@BengalsBrews) January 12, 2026

3. Jeremiyah Love, RB, Notre Dame​


Love put up over 1100 yards rushing and over 200 yards receiving during the 2024 season. He surpassed those numbers in 2025. He rushed for over 1,300 yards with 18 rushing touchdowns. He added another 280 receiving yards with 3 touchdowns on the season. He is elusive with the ball in his hands, rarely fumbles, and is a legit weapon in the receiving game. His burst through the line and top-end speed allow him to be a threat to take it to the house on any given play.

4. Rueben Bain Jr., DE, Miami​


Bain has been putting pressure on opposing quarterbacks at a high rate all season long. He had a 30.4% win-rate on true pass sets in 2025. He is a sawed-off powerhouse at 6’3”, 275 pounds. He possesses knock-back power in his hands, is stout against the run, and had over 80 pressures during the 2025 season.

5. Spencer Fano, OT, Utah​


Fano played left tackle at Utah as a true freshman. The past two seasons, he has kicked over and played at a high level on the right side. This guy moves like a tight end. He was arguably the best run blocker in all of college football. He has a finishing mindset and plays through the whistle. He needs to be more consistent in pass protection, but he has the athleticism to continue improving in that area.

6. Peter Woods, DT, Clemson​


The sack numbers are not overly impressive, with only two this season. The advanced numbers tell a better story of the type of talent he is. He has a 16% win-rate on true pass sets. Combine that with a stop rate over 10% as a run defender. Those numbers have directly correlated with guys that end up being the best defensive tackles in football over the years. Woods is far and away the best defensive tackle in this class.

Peter Woods (6’3 315) Clemson

+ 10.1% stop rate as a run defender
+ 16.0% pass rush win rate on true pass sets in 2025 (22% in 2024)
+ Quick feet
+ Active and competent hand usage
+ Violent pop in his hands
+ Explosiveness off the snap

– Sack production
– Needs to expand his… pic.twitter.com/3VY2cYj4a0

— Bengals & Brews (@BengalsBrews) January 9, 2026

7. David Bailey, DE, Texas Tech​


Bailey transferred to Texas Tech from Stanford ahead of the 2025 season. He was one of the premier pass rushers in all of college football. He had 81 pressures and 14.5 sacks on the season. He has shown some improvement as a run defender, but that will never be his biggest strength. His explosiveness, flexibility, and bend getting after the quarterback are his calling card. That ability to be a havoc creator off the edge is what should make him a top 10 draft pick in April.

8. Carnell Tate, WR, Ohio State​


Tate runs sharp routes, has an elite contested catch rate, and averaged a fantastic 3.03 yards per route ran on the season. Even after missing a couple of games, Tate had 875 receiving yards with 9 touchdown receptions on the season. Ohio State continues producing first round wide receivers; Tate is the next in line.

9. Arvell Reese, DE/LB, Ohio State​


Reese can play off-ball linebacker or up on the line of scrimmage. He amassed 6.5 sacks on the season for the Buckeyes. Reese is heavy-handed, physical, and an athletic marvel. Regardless of where teams view him playing at the next level, he played his way into top-five consideration this year.

10. Jordyn Tyson, WR, Arizona State​


Tyson is a player I have zero questions about for his on-field ability. He is a dominant receiver when healthy. The problem has been staying healthy. He has an extensive injury history that includes a torn ACL in 2022, a broken collarbone in 2024, and hamstring issues this year. When healthy, he is a dominant weapon, making plays for his quarterback. He can line up in the slot or on the outside, makes contested catches at a high rate, possesses high-level ball tracking ability down the field, and has excellent body control. His medicals will be key to how high he is ultimately drafted this year.

11. Sonny Styles, LB, Ohio State​


Styles is a converted safety from the Buckeyes. Still just 21 years old, Styles has already played over 2,100 career snaps for Ohio State. He has looked comfortable in coverage, had just a 2.2% missed tackle rate, and has elite athleticism for the position. While Arvell Reese has burst on the scene, people should not forget just how talented Styles is.

Sonny Styles (6’4 237) Ohio State

+ Elite athlete (Feldman Freak List)
+ Team leader and captain
+ Football intelligence
+ At Ohio State for four years and is still just 21 years old until November
+ Improved as a tackler with just a 2.2% missed tackle rate in 2025
+ Avoiding… pic.twitter.com/HFkrmHoADb

— Bengals & Brews (@BengalsBrews) January 11, 2026

12. Francis Mauigoa, OT, Miami​


The former five-star recruit played his third year with Miami. He was the starting right tackle for all three of those seasons. He has allowed just 14 pressures through his first 15 games in 2025. He blocks well on the move, is a mauler in the run game, and has improved his consistency in pass protection this year. Mauigoa should be able to stick at right tackle at the next level, but if not, he could slide inside and likely be a Pro-Bowl caliber guard.

13. Mansoor Delane, CB, LSU​


Delane transferred to LSU from Virginia Tech this past year. He was the best cornerback in college football. He allowed only a 37.1% completion rate against him on the season. He will bring experience, physicality as a tackler, and a player with good ball skills to whatever team drafts him.

14. Makai Lemon, WR, USC​


Lemon may be primarily a slot receiver in the NFL, but that doesn’t mean he isn’t worthy of a top twenty draft selection. Lemon is elusive with the ball in his hands, a quality route runner, and brings added value as a returner.

15. Jermod McCoy, CB, Tennessee​


McCoy did not play a game in 2025 after suffering a torn ACL in January of 2025. His tape in 2024 was fantastic. He was a shutdown corner for the majority of the year for the Volunteers. His ability to mirror opposing top receivers, ball skills, and ability to be physical at the line in press-man coverage scream future Pro-Bowl player at the next level.

16. Keldric Faulk, DE, Auburn​


Faulk is a big-bodied edge setter at 6’6”, 285 pounds. He provides a high-floor player as a run defender with powerful hands and alignment versatility. His ability as a pass rusher is still a work in progress, which is why he doesn’t make my top 10. He had only 29 pressures and two sacks on the season. Those numbers are quite a bit lower than many of the other top players at the edge position. He is still a young prospect at just 20 years of age until September 2026. Combining that upside with his ability as a run defender is why he is still likely to be drafted fairly high this year.

17. Kenyon Sadiq, TE, Oregon​


Sadiq is an athletic pass catcher for the Ducks. He has had some injuries this year, but when healthy, he looks like the only tight end worthy of a first round selection. Even though he is considered a bit smaller for the position, that doesn’t affect him as a blocker. He is a tenacious player in that aspect, who has multiple blocks where he takes a guy 15-20 yards down the field in the run game. That type of two-way ability will entice somebody to take Sadiq in the first round.

18. Avieon Terrell, CB, Clemson​


The younger brother of AJ Terrell, Avieon, is an absolute dog on the football field. He is undersized at just 5’11 and 180 pounds. He plays much bigger than that. He reminds me of Trent McDuffie. He is competitive at the catch point, ferocious in run support, and knows how to create big plays with turnovers.

19. Vega Ioane, OG, Penn State​


Ioane was one of the more consistent bright spots for a disappointing Penn State team in 2025. Thickly built at 6’4” 335 pounds, he is a mauler in the run game. He allowed just four pressures in pass protection the entire season. Ioane has all the makings of an All-Pro for years to come in the NFL.

20. CJ Allen, LB, Georgia​


Allen is everything teams are looking for in a modern linebacker. He can rush the passer, he has excellent pursuit speed, and he has shown tremendous improvement in coverage this year. His sideline-to-sideline range, football IQ, and experience as a three-year starter are more reasons he seems like a safe bet to go before the end of the first round.

CJ Allen vs. Tennessee pic.twitter.com/F2VzY0Hvau

— Bengals & Brews (@BengalsBrews) October 31, 2025

21. Kayden McDonald, DT, Ohio State​


McDonald was one of the best run stuffing defensive tackles in college football. He can absorb double teams and hold the point of attack. While he doesn’t provide much as a pass rusher, he can push the pocket with power on the interior.

22. Cashius Howell, DE, Texas A&M​


Howell was solid in 2024 for the Aggies after transferring from Bowling Green. With the departures of Shemar Stewart and Nic Scourton to the NFL, he took on a starring role on the defense. He had 11.5 sacks on the year. He has an array of pass rush moves, a lightning-quick first step, and is a solid run defender on top of it all. There will be some concern about his sub-31” arm length. I think he can be an outlier in that aspect; he is just too talented as a pass rusher not to be impactful at the next level.

23. KC Concepcion, WR, Texas A&M​


Concepcion is a dynamic weapon as a returner, receiver down the field, and on screens and reverses. Basically, get the ball in his hands and let him go to work. The transfer from North Carolina State was tremendous for the Aggies in 2025. He had over 900 yards with 9 touchdowns on the season.

24. Kadyn Proctor, OL, Alabama​


Proctor is a good athlete overall for his size, but his foot speed off the snap against speed rushers gives me concerns. Currently weighing around 370 pounds, he also needs to lose some weight for durability purposes. I have compared him to the mountain from Game of Thrones. He can get beat with speed, has massive size, and needs to get his hands on you to be effective. He did finish strong for Alabama the second half of the season. I imagine someone takes the swing on his rare traits before the end of the first round.

25. TJ Parker, DE, Clemson​


Parker came into this season considered a top-five player in this draft class. He has not had nearly the same splash play production he did during the 2024 season. In 2024, he had 11 sacks and six forced fumbles. This year, those numbers went down to 5 sacks and 0 forced fumbles on the season. He has still been able to generate pressure at a high rate. He ended the season with a 28.6% win rate on true pass sets.

TJ Parker (6’3 265) Clemson

+ Violent finisher
+ Pop in his hands and power rusher
+ 28.6% win rate on true pass sets in 2025
+ Production in 2024 with 51 pressures, 11 sacks, and 6 forced fumbles
+ Comfortable dropping in coverage

– Would like to see more inside counter… pic.twitter.com/x295G265LC

— Bengals & Brews (@BengalsBrews) January 11, 2026

26. Caleb Lomu, OT, Utah​


Lomu was only a redshirt sophomore this year. He is an advanced technician for his age. He has a natural kick slide and blocks well on the second level. He isn’t nearly as good of a run defender as his teammate Fano, but he is further along in pass protection.

27. Colton Hood, CB, Tennessee​


Hood spent a season at Auburn, a season at Colorado, and his final one playing for Tennessee. Hood is sticky in coverage, has good awareness playing zone, and impressive closing speed. He could sneak his way into the bottom of the first round.

28. Denzel Boston, WR, Washington​


Boston has great size at 6’4” and 209 pounds. He is much more than just a contested catch guy, though. He displays toughness over the middle of the field, possesses strong hands, and is more athletic than expected for his size. He even returned punts for the Huskies.

29. Emmanuel Pregnon, OG, Oregon​


Pregnon transferred to Oregon from USC ahead of his final season of college football. It was a wise decision, as he played the best football of his young career. Pregnon is a high-level pass protector with awareness against stunts and blitzes, active hands, and quick feet. He allowed just five pressures the entire season, including the playoffs.

30. Keith Abney II, CB, Arizona State​


Abney has impressive footwork and change-of-direction ability. He has displayed good ball skills and the ability to smother opposing receivers down the field. He is willing and capable as a run defender. He had an impressive 4.3% missed tackle rate during the 2025 season.

31. Logan Jones, OC, Iowa​


Former wrestlers who are offensive linemen from Iowa are typically good bets to have some success in the NFL. He isn’t quite the prospect that Tyler Linderbaum was (not many are), but he is a good player who should be a ten-year starting center in the league. Jones was originally recruited to play defensive tackle. Going against Linderbaum was one of the reasons he decided to make the switch to the other side of the ball. Jones only allowed three pressures on the season, while facing the likes of A’Mauri Washington, Bear Alexander, and Domonique Orange.

32. Emmanuel McNeil-Warren, S, Toledo​


McNeil-Warren is going to be the next Toledo Rocket defensive player to be drafted to play in the NFL. He has excellent length, quick reactionary time, and nine career forced fumbles. Having almost identical coverage and run defense grades around 90.0 on the season per PFF.

Emmanuel McNeil-Warren (#7) Toledo
**8 career forced fumbles
**4 career interceptions
**90.4 coverage grade
**89.6 run defense grade
**Under 10% career missed tackle rate pic.twitter.com/bD2f5byKiz

— Bengals & Brews (@BengalsBrews) November 11, 2025

33. Connor Lew, OC, Auburn​


Lew declaring for the draft was a bit of a surprise to me. He is still only 20 years old. He is also coming off a torn ACL he suffered in October. He had two years of eligibility remaining, but instead will be taking his talents to the NFL. Another guy with a high school wrestling background, Lew has good athleticism, grip strength, and a high football IQ. If teams are comfortable with the medicals, he could be a guy that makes way into the late first round.

34. Caleb Banks, DT, Florida​


Banks was out injured for the majority of the 2025 season. If it wasn’t for that, he would likely be even higher in my rankings. In two games toward the end of the season in 2024, he showed what type of disruptive presence he could be from the interior. Against LSU, Banks recorded nine pressures. The following week, against Ole Miss, he added another six. Those are incredible numbers for any pass rusher, let alone a defensive tackle. He gives tremendous effort for a guy who is 6’6” and 334 pounds. He moves well at that size, as well. This is a high-risk, high-reward type of prospect.

35. Anthony Hill Jr., LB, Texas​


Hill is a versatile player in the front seven. He can line up at off-ball linebacker or play on the edge. In three seasons at Texas, he accumulated 17 sacks. He is relentless in pursuit and a physical finisher. While coverage has not been his best attribute, he did show improvement in that area this season.

36. Chris Brazzell II, WR, Tennessee​


Brazzell has great length at 6’5”. He is a big-play weapon down the field with his ball tracking, body control, straight-line speed, and size. Unlike some previous wide receivers from Tennessee who were strictly downfield weapons, Brazzell can actually run crisp routes and be a weapon in the intermediate game.

37. Dillon Thieneman, S, Oregon​


Thieneman was a highly sought-after transfer from Purdue this season. He ultimately chose the Oregon Ducks. He is a willing and capable tackler on the back end of a defense. I wish he had better eye discipline. He also takes some funky pursuit angles at times. I do expect he will test well, which could ultimately move him even higher up draft boards.

38. R. Mason Thomas, DE, Oklahoma​


Thomas is an undersized pass rusher for the Sooners. He may ultimately be limited to just a defensive pass-rush specialist role in the NFL. Those players are still valuable. He has tremendous explosiveness off the snap, bend around the edge, and closing speed to chase down the quarterback or running back. He had a 35.1% win-rate on true pass sets during the 2025 season, which was among the highest in the country.

39. Monroe Freeling, OT, Georgia​


Freeling has a basketball background which shows up immediately when watching his film. He is quick to get up to the second level, has great lateral agility, and knows how to use his body to wall off pass rushers. Freeling has ideal size for a left tackle at 6’7” and 315 pounds. He doesn’t have as much experience as some of the other top lineman in this class, but he might have the most upside.

Monroe Freeling (6’7 315) Georgia

+ Has experience playing both left and right tackle
+ Ideal frame with great length and an 84 inch wingspan
+ Basketball background shows up with his foot quickness
+ Effective blocking on the move with great athleticism in space
+ 85.7 pass… pic.twitter.com/nBu8u2UW7y

— Bengals & Brews (@BengalsBrews) January 13, 2026

40. Brandon Cisse, CB, South Carolina​


Cisse transferred to South Carolina from North Carolina State ahead of the 2025 season. He is one of the faster corners in the nation. He allowed just a 47.4% completion rate against him on the season. That ability to cover one-on-one is the biggest reason he sneaks into my top 50.

41. Chris Johnson, CB, San Diego State​


Johnson has great hip fluidity to quickly change direction and break on the football. He had an unreal 92.4 coverage grade in 2025. He allowed just a 41.9% completion rate against him, recorded 4 interceptions, and had only a 5.6% missed tackle rate in 2025. With a good senior bowl week, Johnson could rise into the first round.

42. Zion Young, DE, Missouri​


Young has ideal size for an edge at 6’5” and 260 pounds. He is among the leaders in stop rate at 9.3% on the season as a run defender. He also improved his pressure rate to a 25.6% win rate this year, after having just a 15% win rate in 2024. Zion also had a career-best 6.5 sacks on the season.

43. Chris Bell Jr., WR, Louisville​


My biggest question entering the season was how would Bell respond to being the number one wide receiver in the offense? He passed that test with flying colors. Having amassed over 900 receiving yards prior to tearing his ACL in December. His size at 6’2”, 227 pounds, combined with game-breaking top-end speed, shows a player with tremendous upside. He still needs to fine-tune the intricacies of playing receiver, but the tools are there. The injury does cloud his draft projection.

44. Akheem Mesidor, DE, Miami​


Mesidor will be turning 25 during draft month this year. That combined with injuries are the only reasons he isn’t higher on this list. Mesidor is a dominant pass rusher. He had a 35.8% win rate on true pass sets during the season. That led to him recording 10.5 sacks on the year. He is a physical finisher in the backfield, has the versatility to play up and down the line, and a dynamic first step off the snap.

Akheem Mesidor is an older prospect that will be turning 25 this year, has 30 career sacks, is a physical finisher in the backfield, and has a 29.9% win rate on true pass sets this season. pic.twitter.com/WaCXfjtBVr

— Bengals & Brews (@BengalsBrews) December 20, 2025

45. Kamari Ramsey, S, USC​


Ramsey has the versatility to play at free safety or at nickel corner. He has outstanding instincts, ball skills, and is physical in run support. One of the biggest improvements he has made this year is becoming more reliable as a tackler. In 2024, his missed tackle rate was over 20%. That number was down to just 3.2% in 2025.

46. Zachariah Branch, WR, Georgia​


Branch is a dynamic speedster at wide receiver. He put up over 800 receiving yards for the Bulldogs after transferring from USC. Branch is elusive in the open field, had just a 2.4% drop rate, and also provides added value as a returner. Even though he is a bit undersized at 5’10” and 175 pounds, he has not recorded a single fumble over the past two seasons.

47. D’Angelo Ponds, CB, Indiana​


Speaking of players that are undersized, Ponds is listed at just 5’9” and 170 pounds. You wouldn’t know it based on how he plays the game. He is a physical hitter in run support that consistently puts his body on the line and delivers the punishment. He has matched up with some of the top receivers and come out on top in his two his years at Indiana. Ponds has an 84.5 coverage grade with just a 3.6% missed tackle rate during the 2025 season.

48. Lee Hunter, DT, Texas Tech​


A big bodied nose tackle prospect, Hunter comes in at 6’4” and around 330 pounds. The durability is incredible for a player with his size. He has played over 500 snaps in each of the last three seasons. Even though he isn’t overly explosive as a pass rusher, he still had a 17.5% win rate on true pass sets as a defensive tackle. He is a high level run defender. His 11.9% stop rate on the season was behind only Kayden McDonald in this draft class.

Lee Hunter (6’4 330) Texas Tech

+ Ironman that has played over 500 snaps in three straight seasons
+ Bull rush power
+ Plays with a violent nature
+ Good effort for a big man
+ 17.5% win rate on true pass sets
+ 11.9% stop rate is among the highest in the draft class
+… pic.twitter.com/9wExbmLaXZ

— Bengals & Brews (@BengalsBrews) January 12, 2026

49. Brian Parker II, OL, Duke​


Parker played left tackle for the Blue Devils. Most project him to kick inside because he is listed at only 6’5”, 305 pounds. I actually have him listed with my center rankings. I think he could make a similar transition as Graham Barton. He is known as a team leader and a guy who constantly stays active, looking for work as a blocker.

50. Romello Height, DE, Texas Tech​


Height is an explosive pass rusher that played opposite of David Bailey at defensive end for the Red Raiders in 2025. He had 62 pressures on the season, finishing the year with a 26.5% win rate on true pass sets. He reached double digits in sacks for the first time in his career, finishing with 10 on the season. The biggest question with Romello is exactly just how big he will measure in at during the combine.

Prospects Ranked 51-100​


51. Ja’Kobi Lane, WR, USC

52. Chase Bisontis, OG, Texas A&M

53. Dani Dennis-Sutton, DE, Penn State

54. Blake Miller, OT, Clemson

55. Davison Igbinosun, CB, Ohio State

56. Jacob Rodriguez, LB, Texas Tech

57. Ty Simpson, QB, Alabama

58. Carter Smith, OT, Indiana

59. Antonio Williams, WR, Clemson

60. Malik Muhammad, CB, Texas

61. Elijah Sarratt, WR, Indiana

62. AJ Haulcy, S, LSU

63. Josiah Trotter, LB, Missouri

64. Gennings Dunker, OG, Iowa

65. Julian Neal, CB, Arkansas

66. Max Klare, TE, Ohio State

67. Christen Miller, DT, Georgia

68. Billy Schrauth, OG, Notre Dame

69. Jake Slaugher, OC, Florida

70. Jadarian Price, RB, Notre Dame

71. Michael Trigg, TE, Baylor

72. Arion Carter, LB, Tennessee

73. Zakee Wheatley, S, Penn State

74. Emmett Johnson, RB, Nebraska

75. Derrick Moore, DE, Michigan

76. Devin Moore, CB, Florida

77. Germie Bernard, WR, Alabama

78. Jake Golday, LB, Cincinnati

79. Caleb Tiernan, OT, Northwestern

80. Joshua Josephs, DE, Tennessee

81. Genesis Smith, S, Arizona

82. Ahmad Moten Sr., DT, Miami

83. Joe Royer, TE, Cincinnati

84. Omar Cooper Jr., WR, Indiana

85. Gabe Jacas, DE, Illinois

86. Jalen Huskey, S, Maryland

87. Malachi Lawrence, DE, UCF

88. Domonique Orange, DT, Iowa State

89. Chandler Rivers, CB, Duke

90. Eli Stowers, TE, Vanderbilt

91. Jaishawn Barham, LB, Michigan

92. Bryce Lance, WR, North Dakota State

93. Bishop Fitzgerald, S, USC

94. Keylan Rutledge, OG, Georgia Tech

95. Keionte Scott, CB, Miami

96. Max Iheanachor, OT, Arizona State

97. Deontae Lawson, LB, Alabama

98. Jonah Coleman, RB, Washington

99. Rene Konga, DT, Louisville

100. Kaytron Allen, RB, Penn State

Players that are just outside the top 100: Skyler Bell (WR), Kage Casey (OT), Justin Joly (TE), Xavier Scott (CB), Malachi Fields (WR), Will Lee III (CB), Jalon Kilgore (S), Deion Burks (WR), Daylen Everette (CB), Judy Bowry (OT), Taurean York (LB), Demond Claiborne (RB), Darrell Jackson Jr. (DT), Aaron Anderson (WR), Austin Barber (OT)

Source: https://www.cincyjungle.com/184768/2026-nfl-draft-top-100-prospect-rankings
 
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