Imagine a high-stakes poker game at a Vegas table, chips stacked sky-high, and two players locked in a silent showdown. The Cincinnati Bengals and Trey Hendrickson’s extension talks feel just like that—bluffs, raises, and a pot growing heavier by the day. It’s the NFL’s version of The Cincinnati Kid meets Draft Day, with loyalty and leverage dancing like rivals in a Monday Night Football tango. For a franchise that once rode the “Cardiac Cats” magic of the 1980s, this standoff could define their next era. Will Hendrickson fold his hand or double down?
The Bengals’ front office has played this game before. They’ve locked down offensive stars Ja’Marr Chase and Tee Higgins with megadeals, but Hendrickson—their defensive anchor—remains in limbo. Executive VP Katie Blackburn dropped the latest twist at the NFL’s Annual League Meeting: “I’d be lying if I said I knew exactly what’s going to happen. So, we’ll just have to see how it all plays out.” Translation?
The Bengals granted Hendrickson permission to seek a trade in March but haven’t found suitors meeting their first-round pick price. Now, with the April 24-26 draft looming, Cincinnati’s poker face is slipping.
Stats Don’t Lie, But Hendrickson’s Contracts Might
Hendrickson isn’t just any edge rusher. He led the NFL with 17.5 sacks in 2024, becoming the first Bengal since Coy Bacon in 1976 to top the league. Yet his $16 million salary for 2025 pales next to peers like Myles Garrett ($35M/year). “Communication has been poor over the last couple of months. That’s something I hold in high regard,” Hendrickson told on The Pat McAfee Show on April 2. “They have not communicated with my agent directly. It’s been something that’s been a little bit frustrating.” Blackburn’s response?
“I think he should be happy at certain rates that maybe he doesn’t think he’d be happy at,” Blackburn said. “I think some of it is on him to be happy at some point, and if he’s not, you know, that’s what holds it up sometimes. So, you know, it takes him to say yes to something.” Cue the record scratch. Besides, the Bengals’ history with defensive stars adds fuel.
“Those comments from Katie Blackburn were definitely disappointing & communication has been poor over the last couple of months..
It’s been a little bit frustrating & if they have anything they’d like to discuss we’re definitely willing to listen” ~ Trey Hendrickson #PMSLive pic.twitter.com/C9PUdfKewj
— Pat McAfee (@PatMcAfeeShow) April 2, 2025
Remember Jessie Bates? They let him walk in 2023 after playing hardball. Now, Hendrickson’s camp sees déjà vu. “I’ve been basically asking for the same thing every year, to be solidified as a Bengal for life,” he said. i.e., Guaranteed Money. Cincinnati’s front office, however, operates like a cautious blackjack player—slow, methodical, rarely splurging unless forced.
The Loyalty Test: A High-Stakes Game of Chicken
Trey Hendrickson’s extension drama is causing his frustration to boil over. “I don’t think I want to play for incentives that will be out of my control,” he stressed. “I don’t think I want to play for a short-term contract.” So, he’s tired of prove-it deals. The Bengals, meanwhile, are juggling cap space after committing $161 million to Chase. Blackburn admitted Higgins’ deal shifted priorities, but Hendrickson’s value is undeniable.
Since 2021, he’s racked up 61.5 sacks—more than Aaron Donald in that span. In fact, it’s almost double that of Donald’s tally (31). Letting him walk would be like the ’90s Cowboys dumping Deion Sanders. Meanwhile, the trade market remains icy.
Teams balk at Cincinnati’s first-round demand, leaving Hendrickson in purgatory. “Some of it is on him to be happy at some point,” Blackburn said, but Hendrickson fired back: “They’re more than welcome to call me. I’ve had the same cell phone number since high school… So if they have anything they’d like to discuss, we have been nothing but willing to listen.” It’s a stalemate sharper than a Lambeau Field winter.
Will the Bengals Pay Up or Cash Out?
This isn’t just about money—it’s about respect. Hendrickson wants to build a “family” in Cincinnati, but the Bengals’ calculus feels colder than a Buffalo tailgate. If they lowball him, they risk losing the heartbeat of their defense. If they pay up, they signal a new era of prioritizing defense.
As the draft nears, the clock ticks louder than a fourth-quarter play clock. And Trey Hendrickson’s extension drama keeps unfolding. Will Blackburn fold or finally ante up? In the words of Hunter S. Thompson, “Buy the ticket, take the ride.” For the Bengals, that ride could define their next decade.
Main Photo: Kareem Elgazzar – Imagn Images
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