Cincinnati Bengals coach Zac Taylor is heading into his eighth season with the kind of pressure that can swallow a season whole. He has only taken the team to the playoffs twice, but when he has gotten there, the results have been strong: a 5-2 postseason record, powered in large part by Joe Burrow.
That success buys Taylor some credit. It does not buy him much security.
The Bengals’ 2026 roster has been described by Burrow as the most talented he has ever played with, and that comes with the kind of expectations that leave no room for another uneven year. Taylor’s contract runs through 2027, but Cincinnati has become more aggressive than it used to be. If this season goes sideways, the Bengals could move on, and there would be no shortage of candidates eager to coach Burrow, Ja’Marr Chase and the rest.
The first thing Taylor has to fix is the opening stretch of the season. Cincinnati cannot afford another slow start.
Even last year’s 2-0 beginning came with warning signs everywhere: the offense was out of rhythm, the defense was helped by facing the Cleveland Browns in Week 1, and the offensive line still looked unprepared. By the second game, that shaky protection helped lead to Burrow’s freakish turf toe injury.
The run game was also historically bad in the early part of the year.
There was some value in those early wins, but they were the kind that came with a price. The Bengals won twice, then dropped 11 of their next 15. That’s the balancing act with Taylor’s tenure: enough good to keep the job, enough instability to keep the heat on.
The opening schedule in 2026 is not brutal, but it is no walkover either. Cincinnati starts at home against Tampa Bay before going to Houston and then Pittsburgh. Taylor does not need a perfect start, but he does need a clean one.
The next box is the offense itself. Under Taylor, the Bengals have never finished higher than eighth in total offense, which came during the deep playoff runs after the 2021 and 2022 seasons. Last year, Cincinnati finished ninth, but that ranking came with a caveat: the early-season issues dragged the group down before Burrow eventually led the NFL in passing yards and touchdown passes.
This year, the bar should be higher. The defense is in its best shape since those Conference Championship runs, and the offense has to match it.
The ground game was especially strong last season, and there is reason to think it can stay that way. Chase Brown is entering a contract year, and the Bengals are bringing back all five starting offensive linemen.
With Brown poised to take another step and Burrow operating at his usual level, Taylor needs this offense pushing toward the top of the league in total yards.
And then there’s the postseason, where the expectations get even simpler: win a game.
A playoff appearance should be the baseline for this team, not the celebration. The Bengals should be the clear favorites in the AFC North, helped by the fact that their coaching staff is intact and Burrow is ideally healthy for the full season. Anything less than that starts to look like a missed opportunity.
Taylor cannot afford another one-and-done exit. The organization has lived through enough of those already. With the best defense he has had since at least 2022, the strongest offensive line of his tenure and a quarterback who keeps getting better, the excuses are thin.
If the Bengals get bounced in the wild card round, or worse, stumble into a bye and then lose at Paycor Stadium, Taylor will be the one left holding the bag. In that sense, 2026 is straightforward: start fast, keep the offense near the top, and finally win in January.
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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 🡒]
