
Bengals Reportedly Listening to Trade Offers on Star Trey Hendrickson
Published
Aug. 17, 2025 1:52 p.m. ET
share
x
link
The Cincinnati Bengals are open to moving on from Trey Hendrickson.
As Hendrickson continues to be a hold-in during training camp, the Bengals are listening to trade offers for the star edge rusher, NFL Media reported Sunday. No deal is imminent, and it's unclear if Hendrickson will wind up playing elsewhere in 2025, NFL Media added in its report.
Hendrickson and the Bengals were in a contract dispute for virtually the entire offseason, with Cincinnati even allowing him to talk to other teams about a potential deal at one point. However, no deal came to fruition, and the Bengals and Hendrickson have failed to reach an agreement on a new deal as he enters the final year of his contract.
With no contract extension coming to fruition this offseason, Hendrickson wasn't shy to share how upset he was with the team. He skipped essentially the Bengals' entire offseason program, including mandatory minicamp, before sitting out the first few days of training camp in July.
Hendrickson eventually ended his hold out, returning to the Bengals on July 30. That led to some optimism that a deal could get done soon, but he hasn't practiced with the team at all.
ADVERTISEMENT
As Hendrickson is owed $16 million in the final year of his contract, the contracts for top edge rushers have grown exponentially this offseason. T.J. Watt became the latest to earn a rich deal at the position, agreeing to a three-year, $123 million ($41 million per year) deal with the Pittsburgh Steelers this offseason. Micah Parsons seems like a possibility to break that mark as well, but he's also in a contract dispute with his team and requested a trade from the Dallas Cowboys earlier in August.
Hendrickson, 30, might not end up breaking Watt's record for the largest contract ever for a non-quarterback, but he has a good case to receive a deal that would pay him at least $34 million per year, which would make him one of the five highest-paid edge rushers in the league. He's been named a Pro Bowler in all four seasons since he joined the Bengals in 2021. He's also recorded at least 14.0 sacks in three of his first four seasons in Cincinnati, including a league-high 17.5 sacks last season.
Additionally, Hendrickson has also been good at generating pressure. He had 83 pressures and was second in pass rush win rate last season (24%). He's also finished in the top 10 in pass rush win rate among edge rushers in all four years he's been with the Bengals.
Want great stories delivered right to your inbox? Create or log in to your FOX Sports account , and follow leagues, teams and players to receive a personalized newsletter daily!
What did you think of this story?
share

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


New York Times
5 minutes ago
- New York Times
There's a lesson for the rest of baseball in the Brewers' recent run of success
People in baseball keep warning me: Don't get carried away with the Milwaukee Brewers. The Brewers' batted-ball luck is insane, they say. Their 53-17 record since May 24 might be a classic case of peaking early. Come the postseason, they could be headed for another quick flameout. All true. But even though the Brewers' 14-game winning streak ended Sunday with a 3-2 loss to the Cincinnati Reds in 10 innings, their record is best in the majors by six games. The team that opened the season with the sport's eighth lowest payroll is putting the competition to shame. Advertisement There's a lesson here, if anyone in baseball cares to heed it. The lesson is in every ball the Brewers put in play and every runner they advance, every cutoff man they hit and every extra base they take. The Brewers are not perfect – Sunday's loss included a critical error to open the ninth by Brice Turang at shortstop and two botched bunts in the late innings. But they at least try to play the game properly at a time when most teams place too little emphasis on fundamentals and too much on the next big analytical thing. This is not to bash analytics, which provide tools to evaluate players and help them improve. Every team recognizes data and technology as essential elements of the game. And the Brewers, lest anyone forget, began their run of six postseason appearances in seven years under the methodical, analytically driven David Stearns. But as organizations rush to develop greater power in both hitters and pitchers – a trend players eagerly embrace, knowing it is incentivized by the game's pay structure – the team concept often is lost. Can someone please explain why clubs fixate on enhancing pitchers' fastball velocities and hitters' exit velocities but fail to properly instruct players on running the bases and hitting the cutoff man? Why can't organizations focus on both? The Brewers are an outlier, exploiting a new market inefficiency – knowing how to play baseball. They obsess over little things, in part, because they generally do not pay for superstars who do big things. Most Brewers make too little money and possess too little service time to defy their detail-oriented leader, manager Pat Murphy. And the team's highest-paid player, left fielder Christian Yelich, practices what Murphy preaches, inspiring his teammates to do the same. Murphy, who seems destined to be the first skipper to win back-to-back Manager of the Year awards since Bobby Cox in 2004 and '05, can get away with pulling two regulars off the field, as he did on April 26 with outfielder Sal Frelick (for missing a cutoff man) and third baseman Caleb Durbin (for getting picked off). Advertisement He also can get away with explaining his benching of a player, in this case shortstop Joey Ortiz on July 7, by saying, 'Yeah, the manager's pissed. I want him to give me his best approach at the plate every day, and we've given him a lot. We're playing him every day, and he just can't have lapses at the plate.' Managers generally refrain from employing such tactics with established veterans. Managers in large markets might be even more reluctant to call out players. As New York Yankees GM Brian Cashman said Friday, 'I think leaders, managers, coaches are more inclined to try to support and help players that are going through a lot as they try to navigate their struggles. Struggles are part of the game. It's just louder in a bigger market.' In any case, the danger with making too much of the Brewers is that, for nearly two months, no one talked about Uecker Magic or anything of the sort. On May 3, after the Brewers fell to 16-18 with a 6-2 loss to the Chicago Cubs, Murphy lamented, 'It seems like we've misplaced our edge a little bit.' For nearly seven weeks, the Brewers failed to register a comeback victory. During their 14-game winning streak, they came from behind eight times, including an 8-1 deficit against the Reds on Friday night. They were in position for another comeback win Sunday when William Contreras hit a two-run homer in the ninth inning, but their bullpen could not hold the lead. Have the Brewers benefited from good luck? Of course they have. Through May 24, their batting average on balls in play was .283, below league average. From May 25 through Saturday, their BABIP was .322, the highest in the majors by 11 points. And their overall batting average, slugging percentage and weighted on-base average all exceeded their expected numbers by rates that ranked first or second in the league. Advertisement Offensive regression, then, is inevitable. One rival official said even 70 games – nearly half a season – is not enough for him to believe in the Brewers' formula. But in nearly two seasons under Murphy, little in their identity has changed. In both years, the Brewers have ranked first in FanGraphs' base-running metric. In both, they have been top five in both defensive efficiency and Statcast's new team-level fielding metric. In both, they flashed occasional power, but still ranked in the bottom half of the league in homers. But last year's club, which won 93 games before falling to the New York Mets in the wild-card round, was not as good as this one. Through Saturday, the Brewers had dramatically improved their strikeout rate (from 18th last season to fifth this year) and contact rate (from 11th to fifth). They also had widened the gap to the next-best base-running team by improving their extra-base taken percentage from last season (from 13th to second) and reducing their outs on the bases (from the fourth highest to tied for the second lowest). Oh, and one more thing, before I commit the same oversight author Michael Lewis did in 'Moneyball' by giving too little credit to A's pitchers Tim Hudson, Mark Mulder and Barry Zito: The Brewers' pitching – and pitching development – is outstanding. After starting the season with an injury-depleted staff and getting shellacked at Yankee Stadium, the Brewers entered Sunday ranked third in the majors in ERA. As Mike Petriello wrote, they routinely turn castoffs into mainstays. Quinn Priester, Jared Koenig and Trevor Megill are among the examples on the pitching side. One concern for the Brewers is that their staff will wear down in the postseason, where they have been eliminated five straight times in their opening round since extending the Los Angeles Dodgers to seven games in the 2018 NLCS. The rotation ranks in the bottom five in innings. Reliever Shelby Miller was the only pitching addition at the deadline. Another early knockout would lead to another series of questions about whether the Brewers did enough before the deadline, and whether they spend enough in general. Advocates of a salary cap – read, the owners – also would cite a rapid elimination as further testament that a small-market team can't win the World Series, ignoring that the 2015 Kansas City Royals did win it, that the 2020 Tampa Bay Rays participated in it and the 2024 Cleveland Guardians came within two wins of making their second Series appearance in nine years. Advertisement The current economic system is far from perfect, leaving small-market teams at too great a disadvantage, but how to correct it is a conversation for another day. Even if the Brewers fall in an expanded and increasingly random postseason, it will not detract from what they have accomplished, and the lessons they are imparting – or should be imparting – upon the entire sport. Since losing center fielder Jackson Chourio to a strained right hamstring, the Brewers are 14-1. Since promoting trade acquisition Andrew Vaughn to replace Rhys Hoskins, who remains on the IL with a sprained left thumb, they're 28-5. In addition to hitting nine homers in 113 at-bats,Vaughn further established his Brewers bonafides last Monday, executing a suicide squeeze for his first-ever sacrifice hit, pro or college. The Brewers entered Sunday tied for fifth in sacrifice bunts and sixth in sacrifice flies, and also were second in stolen bases. They scrap. They drive opponents to distraction. They beat teams in any number of ways. 'I think we need to take a page out of the Brewers' book,' Pittsburgh Pirates right fielder Bryan Reynolds said Wednesday. 'They just do everything right. They base run, they take the extra base, they put the ball in play, swing at strikes. I think we could benefit a lot from trying to have the same kind of game style.' It's not just the small-market teams that could benefit, it's every team. Here's to the little things that make baseball beautiful. Here's to baseball's version of David using slingshots on the sport's Goliaths. Here's to the Brewers, however long they continue the fun. (Top photo of Caleb Durbin celebrating a home run with Brewers teammates: Jason Mowry / Getty Images) Spot the pattern. Connect the terms Find the hidden link between sports terms Play today's puzzle


New York Times
an hour ago
- New York Times
How to watch Bengals vs. Commanders in the ‘Monday Night Football' preseason debut
It's still preseason, but if you want to get into the 'Monday Night Football' mood early, here's your chance. The years-long tradition of tuning in to ESPN on Monday night for NFL action continues in this Week 2 preseason matchup as the Cincinnati Bengals go on the road to face the Washington Commanders. Live coverage is also available on ESPN+. Last week, the Bengals took on the defending champion Eagles. Joe Burrow completed 9 of 10 passes for two touchdowns, while Ja'Marr Chase caught four balls for 77 yards and a score. If that was an indicator for how long the starters will play, expect to see a decent amount of the star QB-WR duo on Monday (for a preseason game, anyway). Advertisement The Commanders are a slightly different case, as key starters sat out last week. Jayden Daniels, the 2024 AP Offensive Rookie of the Year, did not play in the loss to the Patriots. However, the second-year quarterback is expected to be in for 'a few series' against Cincinnati, head coach Dan Quinn told The Athletic's Nicki Jhabvala over the weekend. Many veterans will remain sidelined, and Washington will also be without No. 1 wide receiver Terry McLaurin, who was recently activated off the physically unable to perform list with an ankle injury and in the midst of a 'hold-in.' Another receiver, Deebo Samuel, could make his anticipated Commanders debut, though. Jhabvala reported that Daniels' training camp highlights included connections with Samuel and tight end Zach Ertz. Betting/odds, ticketing and streaming links in this article are provided by partners of The Athletic. Restrictions may apply. The Athletic maintains full editorial independence. Partners have no control over or input into the reporting or editing process and do not review stories before publication. (Photo of Joe Burrow: Scott Taetsch / Getty Images) Spot the pattern. Connect the terms Find the hidden link between sports terms Play today's puzzle


USA Today
4 hours ago
- USA Today
Steelers host 4 free agent workouts following LS Christian Kuntz injury
The Pittsburgh Steelers are looking to bolster the long snapper position, hosting four free agents for workouts following Christian Kuntz' chest injury during Saturday's preseason matchup against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers. On Sunday, it was reported that the Steelers brought in four long snappers for workouts: Rick Lovato, Jake McQuaide, Taybor Pepper, and Patrick Scales. Lovato, a 10-year veteran, spent the last nine seasons with the Philadelphia Eagles, where he won two Super Bowls and was named to the 2019 Pro Bowl. McQuaide, who's been playing in the NFL for the past 14 years, is a two-time Pro Bowler and recently played for the Miami Dolphins. While both Pepper and Scales lack the Pro Bowl accolades of the previous two long snappers, they each offer over 100 games of NFL experience. Following Saturday's preseason loss, Steelers HC Mike Tomlin provided some vague optimism regarding Kuntz's availability — claiming there might have been "good news" on his chest injury. We at Steelers Wire will keep you updated on the situation as more information becomes available, as Pittsburgh gears up to take on the Carolina Panthers in their third 2025 preseason matchup on Thursday, August 21. For up-to-date Steelers coverage, follow us on X @TheSteelersWire and give our Facebook page a like.