
Bengals slammed as ‘dumb' for Shemar Stewart contract mistake
While some heat gets directed at Stewart himself for not putting ink to paper and practicing with his teammates, the Bengals' long history of contractual issues (never mind the current issue with Trey Hendrickson) continues to put them under fire.
The latest comes from Robert Mays during an appearance on the Mina Kimes Show.
'No matter who it was, doing this with a guy that you drafted in the first round is dumb on its own,' Mays said. 'The guy, who is the rawest player that you could have drafted in the first round, not getting every single rep in practice in a season where, again, you justifiably want to win your division and want to win playoff games, is very frustrating.'
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That's certainly one way to look at it. For whatever reason, the Bengals decided right now was the time to reset contract precedent when it comes to the voiding of guarantees. That, again, despite the Hendrickson contract standoff.
And that, despite how important it is to improve the defense around the youth movement directed by Al Golden, never mind Mays' commentary about Stewart being a raw prospect.
Were this not the Bengals and the above not sticking out, perhaps Stewart's saga doesn't get as much national coverage. But the fact he wasn't even practicing was unusual, which has thrown the Bengals under the microscope.
RELATED: Joe Burrow feelings on Trey Hendrickson contract standoff revealed

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8 hours ago
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9 hours ago
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CINCINNATI (AP) — One day after signing his rookie contact, Cincinnati Bengals defensive end Shemar Stewart took the field for his first NFL practice on Sunday. While Stewart was the final Bengals' draft pick to sign and criticized ownership while the negotiations were going on, coach Zac Taylor said that the organization can leave all of that contention in the past. 'That's part of being a professional,' Taylor said. 'Just put it behind you. He's a part of our team, so we support him every step of the way now. You just put all that stuff behind you.' Stewart missed three practices before signing his rookie deal, and he also didn't participate in any of the Bengals' spring workouts. On Sunday, he went through some extra sets of drills with one-on-one instruction from defensive line coach Jerry Montgomery, was a full participant in position drills and then received about 10 reps in full-team drills against the first-team offense. 'I just needed to get on the field as soon as possible,' Stewart said. 'I needed to start learning, start getting better. There is a long season ahead. I needed to be ready.' He said that he didn't have any regrets about the negotiation process. Stewart also defended his agent, Zac Hiller. Bengals director of player personnel Duke Tobin criticized Hiller last week by saying that Stewart was listening to the advice that he was paying for. Stewart said that he appreciated Hiller's approach in negotiations. Stewart's four-year deal is worth $18.97 million guaranteed, including a $10.4 million signing bonus. Stewart, the 17th overall pick in April's draft, and Hiller eventually agreed to the Bengals' provision voiding future guarantees if there are any off-field incidents or conduct detrimental to the team. However, he received $500,000 more of his signing bonus now instead of later in the season. 'I want an agent that's more of a pit bull,' Stewart said. 'I don't want an agent that can easily be pushed over. I want someone that's going to war (for) me, so I don't have to do any of the hard work behind the scenes. In terms of that, I think Zac is a great agent. He handles business very well. That's my dog for life.' On the field, Stewart struggled with the heat as well as the new techniques from the Bengals coaching staff. At one point during practice, he poured water over his eyes only to find out that it was Gatorade. That stung his eyes, and he joked about it being a learning moment. During his first practice rep against offensive linemen, he got pushed back and spun around. That was another learning moment. 'Just get him out here and get him going with our fundamentals and with Jerry and all the things we're teaching,' Taylor said. 'Tomorrow we get the chance to put the pads on, to get a chance to feel what that feels like again. It's just good to go full speed with him.' Stewart said that he hopes this week was a start of a long Bengals' career, and he's focused on the long game now that his contract has been signed. 'It was never me vs. anybody,' Stewart said. 'We just didn't see eye to eye. At the end of the day, I'm happy to be a Bengal. I'm happy that I got drafted here. We have a long relationship ahead of us. There's no bad blood. It's just how things go sometimes.' ___ AP NFL: