DJ Turner II may be entering the final year of his rookie contract, but the Bengals cornerback is giving off plenty of extension vibes this offseason.
Turner, 25, stirred the pot Sunday night by reposting an Instagram story that showed a cartoon cat counting money, along with the message: “CB1 Calculated, Soon,”
It’s a pretty clear sign that something is moving behind the scenes. Turner and his agent, Andre Odom, appear to be in the middle of contract talks with Cincinnati, and sources told James Rapien that both sides have mutual interest in working out a long-term deal before the regular season begins.
That would be a major payday for Turner, who is coming off steady growth on the outside of the Bengals’ defense since being selected in the second round of the 2023 NFL Draft. He’s currently set to make a $3.6 million base salary this season, but Spotrac projects his next contract could land at three years and $21.1 million per season. If that number holds, he’d rank as the eighth-highest-paid cornerback in the NFL by average annual salary.
The Bengals also seem to be pleased with where things stand. Head coach Zac Taylor said Turner has been handling his offseason with the same professionalism he’s shown on the field.
“DJ's been great,” Taylor said. “He responds every time I reach out to him.
He's been training elsewhere, so it's great to have him show up yesterday for OTAs and come in here and get the work in. It's a little bit like he's never left.
He walked into my office yesterday morning and is the same guy. He's a guy I've got a ton of respect for, as I said before.
“The way he handles his business, his energy level, his professionalism, the way he's trying to help his teammates - he's a big part of our locker room. So it's good to see him back.
He's one of those guys who's an integral part of our team, because having as many guys as possible helping this football team win is the most important thing. There's a business side of it that will be ongoing, but I love the way that he's handled it.
I love the way he's communicated it. I love the way his energy's been.
I love the way he's worked. It's been great to get him back.”
Turner has also spent plenty of time abroad this offseason working on his mental acumen, and Taylor said the young corner looked like he never missed a beat when he returned stateside and rejoined the team for OTAs.
With the business side still ongoing, all signs point toward Turner being one of the next Bengals to cash in.
In Other News...
Andrew Whitworth Just Weighed In On The Bengals Burrow Debate
Andrew Whitworths take on the Bengals quarterback chatter carried the kind of weight only a former franchise cornerstone can bring. The retired offensive tackle made it clear he sees Cincinnatis identity as already tied to Joe Burrow, pointing to the way the organization has reshaped itself around its quarterback since Burrow arrived and made a much more aggressive push to build a contender.
Whitworth also framed the discussion in a way Bengals fans know all too well: the team has invested heavily, extended key homegrown players and gone after outside help, but the whole plan still turns on Burrow staying on the field. For Cincinnati, that is the real hinge point in any championship conversation, and it is why the latest debate feels less like a roster question than a reminder of how fragile the window can be. [Read more 🡒]
Jonathan Allen Knows Exactly What Bengals Fans Feared Up Front
Jonathan Allens arrival gives Cincinnati exactly the kind of interior presence it had been searching for, but it also reinforces the idea that the Bengals are not looking to lean on one or two big bodies and call it solved. Between Dexter Lawrence, BJ Hill, TJ Slaton, Kris Jenkins, McKinnley Jackson and Landon Robinson, the depth chart has become a real competition, and the bigger picture is pretty clear: the Bengals want more than just names up front. They want enough rotation to keep the group fresh and productive.
Allen has already made his own view of the plan known, preferring a workload that keeps him from being overextended after what he felt was too much last season. That meshes with what Cincinnati is building, but it also puts a spotlight on how the snaps will actually be divided once the games start mattering. The Bengals addressed one of their most obvious roster concerns, but the exact answer to who handles the heaviest load inside is still taking shape. [Read more 🡒]
What A Real Year 2 Leap Would Mean For Shemar Stewart
Shemar Stewarts first NFL season gave the Bengals only a thin glimpse of what they drafted, and the larger question now is whether a second-year leap can turn flashes into something closer to a real role. Cincinnati needs more from the edge, and Stewarts development matters because the front office cannot keep waiting forever for a young pass rusher to become more than a project.
The path is there, but it is crowded and still unfinished. Stewart is trying to build on a rookie year that produced modest returns, and the Bengals are heading into another season with multiple players in the mix for snaps on the edge, which means every practice rep and every early-season opportunity will count. A meaningful jump would not just help Stewart, it could change the shape of Cincinnatis rotation. [Read more 🡒]
