Zac Taylor Faces The Bengals Season That Changes Everything

Zac Taylor faces mounting pressure to revive the Bengals' playoff hopes as they tackle a decisive 2026 season amidst talent concerns and defensive revamps.

Zac Taylor is heading into 2026 with the kind of heat that usually comes only after a season goes completely sideways. In Cincinnati, though, the pressure has been building for a while. The Bengals kept Taylor in place while every other head coach in the AFC North got wiped out and replaced this offseason, but that decision hasn’t exactly taken him off the hook.

CBS Sports’ Jordan Dajani put it plainly: Taylor is now under the microscope and on a short leash after a run of seasons that have fallen well short of the standard set by Cincinnati’s Super Bowl trip in 2021. The Bengals did reach the AFC Championship Game the following year, but since then the postseason has been off-limits.

That’s the number that hangs over everything here: three straight playoff misses.

For a team built around Joe Burrow and Ja’Marr Chase, that’s hard to explain away. Those are two of the best players in the league, and Cincinnati should not be spending January on the outside looking in year after year. Dajani didn’t mince words about what last season looked like either.

“Cincinnati has now missed the postseason three straight years, and last season's 6-11 campaign was painful," Dajani wrote. "Not only did Burrow miss nine games after suffering a turf toe injury in Week 2, but the defense was one of the worst in the league."

The defense is really where this turns from disappointment into indictment. Dajani pointed out that Cincinnati finished in the bottom three in scoring defense, total defense, and yards allowed per play.

That reality lands squarely on Taylor, even if he’s the offensive-minded coach in the room. If the defense can’t get fixed, and the staff can’t get it fixed, the head coach still wears it.

“To put it bluntly, the Bengals are wasting an opportunity with an elite quarterback in Burrow and an elite wide receiver in Ja’Marr Chase,” Dajani wrote.

That frustration isn’t just sitting in the media space. It’s in the building, too, as the Bengals get set to report to training camp in July.

Burrow and Chase are the kind of players a franchise is supposed to build around for deep January runs, and Tee Higgins gives Cincinnati another major piece on offense. The question has been whether the rest of the roster could finally catch up.

The front office made a real push to answer that. Cincinnati traded for Dexter Lawrence, signed Jonathan Allen, added Boye Mafe and Bryan Cook, then drafted Cashius Howell and Tacario Davis.

That was not a tweak. That was a full-scale attempt to repair the biggest problem on the roster.

Burrow has clearly noticed the urgency, too. He told Vanity Fair, “We need to get better,” and added, “So it was exciting to see the initiative from everybody in the organization to realize that we’re in this exciting stage. We’re in our primes playing great football.”

That’s the part that makes 2026 feel so loaded for Cincinnati. Burrow is in his prime.

Chase and Higgins are in theirs. The defense has been attacked aggressively.

The excuses have been stripped away.

If this group still can’t turn preseason optimism into real production, the fallout could be massive. Taylor may not get another shot in 2027, and there’s even been speculation about whether Burrow could eventually force his way out if the team keeps underachieving.

For now, though, the message is simple: the Bengals made their moves, and now they have to cash in.

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