
Trey Hendrickson not reporting to Bengals' minicamp amid contract standoff: Sources
CINCINNATI — The contract extension standoff between Trey Hendrickson and the Bengals will continue.
Cincinnati's star edge rusher and reigning NFL sack king is not expected to report to mandatory minicamp as it begins today, league sources tell The Athletic. Hendrickson is subject to $104,768 in fines, per the CBA, for missing the mandatory camp.
Trey Hendrickson will not attend Bengals minicamp, per source.
Cincinnati reached out to Hendrickson's camp yesterday, but there was no movement towards a new deal for the All-Pro. pic.twitter.com/pRrIXZymj6
— Dianna Russini (@DMRussini) June 10, 2025
His absence continues a contentious offseason and sets up the start of training camp as the next moment to see if Hendrickson can and the club can reach an agreement on a new deal. Hendrickson is in the final year of a contract extension he signed in 2023 and has one year and $16 million remaining, with a cap hit of $18.3 million.
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His 35 sacks over the past two seasons are the most in the NFL, and he earned first-team All-Pro honors last season, finishing second in Defensive Player of the Year voting. Meanwhile, Myles Garrett ($40M AAV), Danielle Hunter ($35.6M) and Maxx Crosby ($35.5M) all pulled in new contracts topping $35 million per season.
'I'm not going to apologize for the rates of the defensive ends being paid in the National Football League,' Hendrickson said last month.
The Bengals are hesitant to pay the market rate to Hendrickson. He turns 31 in December and hasn't been as effective against the run as other players. Hendrickson said he is seeking a long-term deal, which forms part of the gap between the two sides.
Hendrickson surprisingly showed up at OTAs last month airing frustrations and desiring his side of the story be told after coach Zac Taylor relayed information that the CBA dictates he would be fined for missing mandatory minicamp.
'It's become personal,' Hendrickson said.
Quarterback Joe Burrow stated in February he wanted to see Tee Higgins, Ja'Marr Chase, Mike Gesicki and Hendrickson all re-signed or extended before next season. Hendrickson is the only box that remains unchecked. Burrow scaled back his tone in most recent comments, but still stated his love for Hendrickson as a person and that he 'deserves to get paid and get paid what he wants and what the market says he deserves.'
Hendrickson said bluntly last month he won't play this season on the current contract. Now all eyes turn toward getting a deal done before training camp begins on July 23rd and if Hendrickson will report if they can't agree. Last year, amid a contract extension negotiation, Chase showed up to camp but did not participate. He threatened to not play the opener, but eventually did, admitting lack of practice and focus away from the contract impacted him in a game the Bengals lost, 16-10, to New England.
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The Bengals spent a first-round pick in April on edge rusher Shemar Stewart, of Texas A&M. Stewart led the Aggies in pressures last year, but only had 1.5 sacks. The other side is manned by 2023 first-round pick Myles Murphy, who didn't record a sack in 353 sacks last season.

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