Joe Burrow’s MVP case has real juice on paper, but the history behind the award makes the path a lot steeper than the odds suggest.
The Bengals quarterback is sitting with the third-best MVP odds this year, trailing Buffalo’s Josh Allen and Baltimore’s Lamar Jackson. That alone says Burrow is in the conversation. The bigger issue is the track record for quarterbacks trying to win the award after a season wiped out, or nearly wiped out, by injury.
Burrow is back healthy after missing more than half of last season because of a turf-toe injury that required surgery. He played only eight games in 2024, and that set up the question that came up on this week’s Growler Podcast: how often does an NFL MVP come from a season in which he barely played?
The answer is: not often.
The last MVP to follow a season with fewer than 16 games played was Jackson in 2023, when a knee injury kept him out of the final five regular-season games and the wildcard game against the Bengals in 2022.
There are a couple of other recent examples, but they come with major caveats. Patrick Mahomes won MVP in 2018 after appearing in just one game in 2017, though that was because Kansas City held him out as a rookie behind Alex Smith. Tom Brady took MVP honors in 2017 after playing 12 games the year before, but that situation was tied to his four-game suspension in 2016 during the Deflategate investigation.
The cleanest injury-related comparison is Aaron Rodgers. He’s the last, and only, player since 2000 to win MVP after playing fewer than 10 games the previous season because of injury.
Rodgers broke his collarbone in 2013, played nine games, then came back in 2014 and threw 38 touchdowns against five interceptions. He collected 31 of the 50 MVP votes.
Strip out the Mahomes case, and the rest of the MVP winners since 2000 were much steadier the year before. The other 25 winners averaged 15.02 games played in the previous season.
Only two more MVPs fit the broader “missed at least four games” category. Adrian Peterson won in 2012 after missing four games in 2011 because of a December ACL tear. Kurt Warner won in 2001 after missing five games in the middle of 2000 with a broken finger.
For Bengals fans, the franchise history is there too. The last Cincinnati player to win MVP was Boomer Esiason in 1988, when he played 12 games the year before because of the players’ strike and replacement players being used for three games in what became a 15-game season.
Ken Anderson also won the award in 1981 after missing three games in 1980 with a neck sprain caused by Pittsburgh defensive lineman Keith Gary grabbing his facemask and violently jerking it as he pulled Anderson to the ground.
In Other News...
Bengals Players Clearly Arent Worried About This Dexter Lawrence Debate
The Bengals trade for Dexter Lawrence has naturally invited some second-guessing, mostly from people fixated on age and sack totals. Inside the locker room, though, the reaction is a lot simpler. BJ Hill brushed off the noise as haters talking after Cincinnati lost its guy, and Lawrence has made it clear he is not interested in being judged only by what shows up in the box score.
Thats the part that matters most for Cincinnati, because the move was never just about adding another name to the defensive line. If Lawrence stays healthy, he gives the Bengals a much different presence at nose tackle than they had last season, and that kind of interior upgrade can change how a front looks on every snap. The debate may linger outside the building, but the people closest to it do not seem inclined to spend much time on it. [Read more 🡒]
Former Bengals Starter Is Already Facing Major Pressure Again
Cordell Volsons next chapter has put him right back in a familiar kind of pressure. After leaving Cincinnati and signing with Tennessee, the former Bengals guard is trying to win the Titans starting right guard job, where he is battling second-year lineman Jackson Slater for the spot. For a player who once held down a starting role in Cincinnati, it is another reminder that the line between opportunity and scrutiny in the NFL can be awfully thin.
Volsons path only gets tougher when you factor in the layoff. He missed the entire 2025 season with a shoulder injury and has not played regular-season football since 2024, which leaves him trying to re-establish himself after a long absence. Add in the uneven play he showed as a Bengals starter, and Tennessee is asking a lot from a veteran who needs to prove he can still be a dependable answer on the interior. [Read more 🡒]
Bengals Are Nearing A Daxton Hill Decision That Could Sting
Daxton Hills next contract picture is starting to come into focus, and it is the kind of looming decision that can quietly shape a roster. The Bengals cornerback is expected to move through his fifth-year option in 2026 before reaching unrestricted free agency after that season, which puts the team on the clock as it weighs what he means to its long-term plans.
For Cincinnati, the question is not just whether Hill has value, but whether that value lines up with the kind of money he could command on the open market. The rough estimate attached to his next deal sits around $20 million per year, a price that would force the Bengals to decide soon whether to build around him or let the situation drift toward a tougher, more expensive ending. [Read more 🡒]
