Dexter Lawrence trade reaction: Bengals' shocking move sends clear message to the rest of the NFL
Dexter Lawrence trade reaction: Bengals' shocking move sends clear message to the rest of the NFL
Cincinnati dealt a top-10 pick for Dexter Lawrence, added multiple defensive pieces in free agency and made its clearest statement yet about maximizing Joe Burrow's championship window
By
John Breech
Apr 19, 2026
at
8:34 am ET
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5 min read
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The Cincinnati Bengals have gained quite the reputation around the NFL over the years: The Bengals are cheap, the Bengals don't make big moves, the Bengals are going to waste away Joe Burrow's prime.
Well, I'm not so sure we can say that anymore. With one big move Saturday night, the team might have just squashed all of that. In what might go down as the most shocking trade in franchise history, the Bengals sent the 10th overall pick in this week's 2026 NFL Draft to the New York Giants in exchange for defensive tackle Dexter Lawrence. It is the first time in franchise history that the Bengals have traded a top-10 pick straight up for a player.
It is an all-in move by a team that never quite seems to go all-in and it's a move that makes the Bengals a true Super Bowl contender. And it is fitting the deal went down at night, because it almost seems like the front office decided to wait until cost-conscious owner Mike Brown went to bed before they decided to pull the trigger on the deal.
This definitely wasn't a move that a "cheap" team makes. Not only did the Bengals give up the 10th overall pick, but they're also going to have give Lawrence a hefty contract extension that will likely pay him nearly $30 million per year. Could they have given that money to pass-rusher Trey Hendrickson? Well, no. Hendrickson didn't want to be in Cincinnati anymore, so the Bengals let him leave and they used the money they would have spent on him to beef up their defense with key additions like Bryan Cook and Boye Mafe.
The Bengals don't make big trades often, but if you throw in the Joe Flacco deal, the front office has now made two surprising moves in less than six months. It's almost like the Bengals' front office suddenly figured out that there are other ways to build a team and they're now taking full advantage of that.
Lawrence trade should pacify Burrow
Of course, the most important aspect of this trade is that it's going to keep Burrow happy. After watching the Bengals miss the playoffs for the third straight season in 2025, the star quarterback closed the season with a clear message to the organization.
"We want to be competing for championships every year," Burrow said on Jan. 2. "We don't want to be in the spot that we're in now, so something's got to change."
That quote came roughly one month after Burrow had possibly the saddest birthday press conference of any quarterback in NFL history, and now, something has changed. Burrow wants to play for a winner, and for once, the Bengals seem to be doing everything they can to make that happen.
If you watched the Bengals defense play at all last season (or the past two seasons), then you know how badly they needed to upgrade their roster on that side of the ball. Between free agency and this trade, it's been mission accomplished so far. Not only have they added Cook and Mafe, but they also signed Jonathan Allen, who will be joining Lawrence on the defensive line. The Bengals also have B.J. Hill on their defensive line, who will be a familiar face for Lawrence because the two spent one season together in New York (2019).
Cincy's 2025 defensive additions
PlayerPosFormer teamHow acquiredNotable 2025 statBoye MafeEDGE Seattle SeahawksFree agency2.0 sacksBryan CookS Kansas City ChiefsFree agency85 tackles, 6 PD Kyle DuggerS Pittsburgh SteelersFree agency2 INT, 5 PDJonathan AllenDTMinnesota VikingsFree agency3.5 sacksDexter LawrenceDTNew York GiantsTrade34 pressures, .5 sacksThe Bengals will still need to add a linebacker, a corner and possibly another pass-rusher in the draft, but Lawrence fills one of their most gaping holes. He can stuff the run, which is something the Bengals desperately need to improve at after a 2025 season where they gave up the most rushing yards in the NFL at 147.1 per game.
Lawrence has been ranked as one of the top two interior defensive linemen in the NFL in three of the past four years. If you look at the numbers below, you can see just how much better the Giants were on defense with Lawrence on the field versus without him.
> Dexter Lawrence's impact last 3 years
OFF the field:
#32 YPA (7.7)
#31 pressure rate (29%)
#31 pass success (48%)
#30 EPA/pass (+0.14)
#30 sack rate (5.5%)
ON the field:
#8 pass success (42%)
#8 sack rate (7.4%)
#10 EPA/pass (+0.02)
#13 YPA (7.0)
#15 pressure rate (36%) https://t.co/JSrFCZOXj2
— Warren Sharp (@SharpFootball) April 6, 2026
If he can make just half that impact on the Bengals defense, that will set the stage for Burrow and the offense to carry the team to potentially double-digit wins this year.
It might seem like an overpa