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Shemar Stewart has left Bengals minicamp, and it's the team's fault for its ridiculous haggling

Shemar Stewart has left Bengals minicamp, and it's the team's fault for its ridiculous haggling

Yahoo3 days ago
Well, sometimes NFL mandatory minicamp can be interesting. The Cincinnati Bengals are the most recent source of June NFL Content™, currently having a back-and-forth with unsigned rookie defensive end Shemar Stewart that's gotten so bad Stewart left minicamp early on Thursday.
Stewart is one of a handful of unsigned first-round picks, along with Travis Hunter, Jahdae Barron and Maxwell Hairston. However, none of those players have turned to the public for their negotiations with their new teams.
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That's where Stewart has differed from his draft class brethren — and the Bengals have now caused Stewart to miss a bunch of valuable offseason opportunities.
According to Kelsey Conway of the Cincinnati Enquirer, Stewart would like his contract language to resemble the language of the Bengals' recent first-round picks. Seems like a pretty innocuous request. Since the 2011 collective bargaining agreement instituted the rookie wage scale, there really isn't much wiggle room for negotiation on these deals. The rookie contract holdout that used to be prevalent in the league prior to 2011 has largely been eliminated, leading to situations that appear to be as sour as Stewart's becoming more and more rare.
"I'm 100 percent right. I'm not asking for nothing y'all have never done before,' Stewart said, according to Jay Morrison of Sports Illustrated. 'But in y'all case, y'all just want to win arguments (more) than winning more games."
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Stewart said he thought he would be on the field by now to start working on his game, but instead he missed mandatory minicamp and organized team activities while this contract situation resolves itself. Stewart was in meetings and studied his playbook, but he understandably avoided on-field work for now to decrease his risk of injury.
Assuming Stewart and his camp are being truthful in their side of events, there's really no reason for the Bengals to be haggling like this. They have cap space. The 18th overall pick isn't a very hefty contract. And, most importantly, Stewart really needs the practice reps in order to quickly live up to the standard of a first-round pick.
He didn't have much by the way of college production at Texas A&M and clearly has a ways to go before becoming a down-to-down impact player in the NFL. The athleticism is there in droves, but daily practice reps are what a player like Stewart needs. Considering that the Bengals are going to be in a Super Bowl window as long as they have the offensive firepower they do, they need to get this across the finish line to have an important piece of their defense ready for training camp in July.
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Cincinnati also has a new defensive coordinator in Al Golden. Golden needs the defense at full strength if he's going to be able to replicate in the NFL the success he had at Notre Dame last season. According to TruMedia, the Bengals were 30th in defensive success rate and 29th in expected points allowed per play. That's not going to cut it if the Bengals want to reverse their luck from last year and get into the postseason that they barely missed last season.
Don't miss the forest for the trees! This is a middle-of-the-first-round rookie contract! Just do a little capitulating, get it signed and keep it moving come training camp. It's the best plan for everyone involved and removes a big distraction for a crucial season in Cincinnati.
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Can Shemar Stewart return to college instead of signing with Bengals?
Can Shemar Stewart return to college instead of signing with Bengals?

USA Today

time33 minutes ago

  • USA Today

Can Shemar Stewart return to college instead of signing with Bengals?

The Shemar Stewart situation has gotten very chaotic as the first-round pick in 2025 -- who impressed everyone at the NFL Combine -- for the Cincinnati Bengals continues to hold out. It's gotten to the point where we're just weeks away from training camp, Stewart is arguing that he wants the language in his contract to look like those of usual Bengals first-rounders ... and suddenly, everyone's now wondering: would it be possible for the defensive end to... return to Texas A&M? What the what? Why would he want that in the first place, you ask? Well, given NIL, he might be able to make as much (and maybe more?) money if he's back in college. But how can someone taken in the NFL Draft go back to his college? This is where it gets a little tricky. It's all hypothetical. Here's what he could do. Could Shemar Stewart find a loophole to go back to Texas A&M? Maybe it comes in the form of a lawsuit. He could sue the NCAA to break the rules about a player going back to college once they're drafted, so that's on the table. From CBS Sports: During Monday's episode of the Cover 3 podcast, CBS Sports college analyst Bud Elliott noted that Stewart has actually been working out at Texas A&M this summer. "A guy who has had some good A&M stuff in the past, he hit me, he's like, 'Hey, Shemar might end up back here,'" Elliott said. ... "'He's been at College Station, he's been fully involved in workouts, He's holding out from the Bengals, (the) relationship is toxic. He could try to come back and play again this season and go into the draft again next year.'" Could Shemar Stewart play in the CFL? Possibly, but as that article above notes, the Bengals would have his NFL rights for three years. Could Shemar Stewart go back into the NFL Draft? Yes. He'd just not have to play football for a year. So, yeah this is getting pretty dramatic, I'd say. Stay tuned.

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