The Bengals have plenty of star power on offense, but Chase Brown is still the guy getting shortchanged.
Ja’Marr Chase and Tee Higgins give Cincinnati what could be the NFL’s best receiver duo, and there’s hope Erick Allen can help flesh out the tight end group. Even with all that firepower, Brown has carved out his own lane as a difference-maker - and he still doesn’t seem to get the credit that comes with it.
A former fifth-round pick, Brown took over as a full-time starter in 2024 and has been a problem for defenses ever since. His 2025 season was the best of his career: 1,456 yards from scrimmage, 11 touchdowns, and his first 1,000-yard rushing season in the NFL. The production kept climbing, and the efficiency followed right along with it.
Still, Brown keeps getting treated like an afterthought in national conversations. Some even write him off as a below-average starter who’s just benefiting from the talent around him. The numbers say otherwise.
In Dalton Wasserman’s latest Pro Football Focus ranking of all 32 starting running backs heading into the 2026 season, Brown landed at No. 18. That put him behind Jaylen Warren, D’Andre Swift, and Bucky Irving, which is a tough sell when you look at what Brown has actually done.
PFF pointed to Brown’s steady role in Cincinnati’s offense and his value as a receiver, writing: “The Bengals are known for their lethal aerial attack, but Brown has become a stable force in their backfield. He recorded his first 1,000-yard campaign in 2025 while placing fifth among all running backs with 69 regular-season receptions. If Brown can continue to offer that same level of production, the Bengals can boast an authentic two-dimensional offensive unit.”
Over the last two seasons, Brown has piled up 2,806 yards from scrimmage, which ranks 10th among all running backs. That total is better than Swift, Warren, and Irving, all of whom were slotted ahead of him in the PFF rankings. His rushing success rate of 52.3% also sits inside the top eight among qualifying backs.
The simplest case for Brown is this: he’s productive, and he’s efficient. Yet he still doesn’t seem to get the same respect as some backs with less on their resume.
One reason may be how last season started. Brown managed just 2.5 yards per carry over the first five games of 2025, and three of those came with Jake Browning at quarterback while the offense sputtered.
Once Week 6 arrived, the picture changed. With Joe Flacco replacing Browning, Brown averaged 5.1 yards per rush the rest of the way and more than 100 yards per game from scrimmage. It was a sharp reminder that quarterback play can drag down an entire offense.
Now Brown heads into a contract year in 2026 with the setup looking as good as it can get. Joe Burrow is fully healthy, all five starting offensive linemen are back, and Cincinnati is one of just two teams - along with the Dallas Cowboys - returning all 11 offensive starters and its head coach.
That kind of continuity doesn’t come around often, and it should put Brown in position for another big year. If he keeps producing like this, the respect is coming eventually.
In Other News...
Bengals May Have Found A Receiver Story Fans Didn't See Coming
The Bengals have spent the offseason looking for any edge they can find at receiver, and one of the more interesting additions came from an unexpected place. Dohnte Meyers arrived after his time with the Saskatchewan Roughriders, where he worked through injuries and still managed to be part of a Grey Cup run, giving Cincinnati a player whose path to the NFL has already included plenty of adversity.
For a team always searching for reliable depth behind its top targets, Meyers is the kind of name worth watching once camp opens. His background suggests resilience and a willingness to keep pushing through setbacks, and that can matter as much as raw talent when a roster spot and a role are on the line. The question now is how quickly he can turn that kind of resume into something real in a crowded Bengals receiver room. [Read more 🡒]
Bengals Finally Have The Interior Force This Gamble Demanded
The Bengals spent a premium draft asset to get Dexter Lawrence, and the logic behind the move is easy to see. Even with a statistical dip in 2025 while playing through an injury, Lawrence still carries the kind of reputation that keeps him near the top of leaguewide conversations among executives, coaches and scouts, and Cincinnati clearly believes he can change the feel of its defensive front.
What the Bengals are buying is not just production, but gravity. Lawrence has long been the sort of interior force offenses have to account for on every snap, the player who can occupy multiple blockers and open up space for everyone around him. ESPNs 2026 preseason survey still placed him seventh among defensive tackles, a reminder that the league has not forgotten how disruptive he can be when healthy, and now Cincinnati is betting that reputation will translate into something bigger on its own line. [Read more 🡒]
National Analyst Just Put Bengals New Safety Duo In Elite Company
The Bengals spent part of the offseason trying to stabilize a defense that has too often carried too much of the load, and the addition of Bryan Cook was one of the more direct moves in that effort. Cook arrived from Kansas City on a three-year deal after finishing his rookie contract, giving Cincinnati a proven veteran to pair with Jordan Battle as the secondary tries to take a real step forward in 2026.
Sports Illustrateds Matt Verderame took notice, slotting Cook and Battle among the leagues best safety tandems and putting Cincinnati in the same conversation as some of the NFLs most established back-end groups. Battles heavy workload and production last season already gave the Bengals a foundation, and Cooks championship background adds another layer of credibility, but the bigger question is whether the pairing can turn that recognition into the kind of defensive consistency that helps push Cincinnati back into the playoffs. [Read more 🡒]
