Why the Bengals' big moves won't fix what's broken
Cincinnati, USAFri Apr 24 2026
The Bengals swung big by trading a top pick for defensive tackle Dexter Lawrence, hoping his return to form would push them back into the playoffs. But spending big doesn’t always mean spending smart. After three straight seasons of coming up short, fans have seen this story before—big gestures in April, empty results by January.
Lawrence alone won’t solve Cincinnati’s deeper issues. The real problem staring the franchise in the face? Protecting quarterback Joe Burrow. He’s one of the best in the league, but his career hangs in the balance every snap he takes behind that leaky offensive line. Defensive tackles win games, but they don’t stop hits. Burrow has spent years dodging blitzes and taking punishment that knocks quarterbacks out early. No amount of pass rush fixes that.
The team added Lawrence along with a couple of other defensive pieces, but the math stays the same. More three-and-outs might create extra opportunities, but those won’t help if Burrow can’t stay upright. And history shows this franchise doesn’t exactly excel at long-term planning. When your quarterback gets injured—and he will, if the hits keep coming—playoff dreams vanish faster than a first-round pick.
The Bengals’ brass seems ready to bet a high draft choice on a bounce-back year for Lawrence. That’s a gamble when his last season was his worst ever. Injuries might explain part of it, but you don’t mortgage a top-10 pick on “might. ” The front office clearly thinks this is the missing piece. Reality says otherwise.
At the end of the day, Burrow doesn’t need more pass rushers. He needs a wall in front of him. Until that happens, all the springtime hype will fade like summer heat. Fans know the difference. They’ve lived it too long.
https://localnews.ai/article/why-the-bengals-big-moves-wont-fix-whats-broken-327f2ae2
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