Barrett Carter Now Sits At The Center Of Bengals Anxiety

As the Bengals bolster their defense, all eyes are on Barrett Carter to transform from promising rookie to pivotal playmaker in his sophomore season.

Barrett Carter enters 2026 with the kind of setup that can either accelerate a young linebacker’s rise or expose every flaw. For the Cincinnati Bengals, the hope is obvious: after last season’s rough rookie-heavy experiment in the middle of the defense, Carter is positioned to become a real difference-maker.

The Bengals leaned on two rookie middle linebackers for most of the 2025 season, and that arrangement never really gave the defense much room to breathe. Carter was one of those rookies, and while the learning curve was steep, he showed enough to keep his name in the conversation as a key piece going forward.

Carter is listed at 6-foot, 231 pounds, and he’s 23 years old. He came out of Clemson, where he was viewed as a consistently productive player with impressive athleticism.

The Bengals selected him in the fourth round of the 2025 draft, making him the second linebacker they took that year. They saw value there, and they had a Day 2 grade on him.

He also earned more trust than the rookie taken ahead of him, Demetrius Knight. Carter looked better in camp, and when veteran Logan Wilson struggled early in the season, Zac Taylor and Al Golden made the switch.

Carter took over at middle linebacker and wore the green dot, which made him the defensive equivalent of the quarterback. He was the only player on the field with a live radio in his helmet, getting play calls directly from the defensive coordinator.

Once that happened, Carter was basically on the field all the time. He settled in as the mike linebacker and, like most young players thrown into that kind of responsibility, had his share of rough moments.

Fans certainly noticed. But by the end of the season, his play was trending in the right direction.

That development mattered even more because the Bengals were asking a lot from him and Knight without much help up front. The defensive line play in front of them was poor, and that made life miserable for the linebackers. When blockers are getting to the second level right away, there’s not much room for a young linebacker to operate.

This offseason, Cincinnati made its priorities clear. Instead of pouring resources into the linebacker room, the Bengals focused on upgrading the defensive front and the secondary. The message was pretty plain: they believe Carter and Knight can improve if the pieces around them are better.

Carter is now entering the second season of his four-year, $5.2 million rookie deal. His cap hit in 2026 is $1.25 million, and he won’t be a free agent until 2029.

The opportunity is there, and so is the pressure. Carter is no longer a rookie, and the Bengals have surrounded him with more talent.

The expectation now is that he takes the next step and becomes a solid plus starter at middle linebacker. The projection is big production, too - more than 100 tackles, maybe team-leading numbers, and a couple of interceptions that would turn heads.

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