The Cincinnati Bengals Can’t Stand Still Anymore
The Cincinnati Bengals don’t need a long explanation for how this season unraveled. Joe Burrow said enough, and Ja’Marr Chase backed him up. When the team’s best players say something has to change, that usually means the same problems keep showing up.
The Cincinnati Bengals are 6–10 and will miss the playoffs again. That is three straight seasons without postseason football. Whatever the reasons, the record is what it is.
One Area That Actually Improved For Cincinnati
The offensive line finally gave the Bengals something to work with. After years of instability, it looked steadier late in the season. Dalton Risner settling in at right guard mattered. Communication was better. Protection was better. Things didn’t feel frantic every week.
That matters because Burrow’s health still decides everything. It always has. Keeping continuity up front should be the easiest call of the offseason. Letting Risner walk would create a problem where one doesn’t need to exist.
Even so, the offense never fully settled. When Burrow was healthy, drives still stalled. Games still tightened late. Too much depended on execution under pressure instead of control earlier in games. That is not a sustainable way to live. At some point, explanations stop mattering, and results take over.
The Defense Has To Be Addressed Head-On
The defense is where the conversation gets uncomfortable. The Cincinnati Bengals allowed more yards than any team in the league. They allowed more rushing yards than anyone, too. Injuries played a role, but injuries don’t explain finishing last.
Teams ran the ball with little resistance. Third downs, extended drives, and adjustments were slow. Those issues showed up too often to be brushed aside.
Fixing that won’t come from one signing or one draft pick. It requires better depth, more physical play, and a clearer idea of what this defense is supposed to be. Right now, that identity is hard to find.
The Cincinnati Bengals Are At An Inflection Point
This is why Burrow and Chase spoke the way they did. Players don’t talk like that unless the same conversations keep repeating. Internal improvement helps, but it can’t be the only answer anymore.
There’s timing here, too. Burrow is in his prime, and Chase will be paid like it soon. The AFC isn’t waiting for Cincinnati to catch up. Seasons slip away faster than teams expect.
The Cincinnati Bengals don’t need to blow everything up. They need to be sharper about what they keep and more honest about what hasn’t worked. Standing still isn’t neutral. It is falling behind. This offseason is the chance to prove that message landed.
