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As Bengals Struggle, Joe Burrow’s Words Carry Extra Weight

Hunter Tierney 's profile
Original Story by Wave News
December 17, 2025
As Bengals Struggle, Joe Burrow’s Words Carry Extra Weight

There are certain things you can say as an NFL quarterback that fans will shrug off. The usual “we’ve got to execute,” “that one’s on me,” “we’ll watch the tape,” rinse and repeat.

But Joe Burrow didn’t give us that.

He gave us something that sounded way more human than a franchise quarterback is “supposed” to sound in December. Something closer to a guy taking inventory of his own career.

“If I want to keep doing this, I have to have fun doing it. I’ve been through a lot, and if it’s not fun, then what am I doing it for? So that’s the mindset I’m trying to bring to the table.”

And then, because the NFL has a sick sense of timing, the very next game looked like a visual representation of everything he was trying to subtly say there.

Ten degrees. A division rival. A must-win spot. And Burrow — looking comfortable back in the lineup after missing most of the season — takes another beating in a 24-0 loss that officially ends whatever shred of hope they had of making the postseason.

Comments That Should Send Shivers Up a Franchise

Quarterbacks are trained to sand everything down, to keep it neutral, to never let the conversation drift toward anything that sounds personal. This wasn’t that.

And to be fair, it wasn’t a dramatic “I’m out” moment. It wasn’t a threat. It wasn’t a cryptic “we’ll see what happens.” But it also wasn’t accidental. Nothing Burrow says ever is. He’s one of the most calculated thinkers and speakers in this league, and you can hear and see it when he talks. This felt intentional — honest, yes, but delivered with purpose.

It sounded like something you say when you’re tired.

Burrow has been through it. The torn knee in 2020 that rewired his career before it really started. The constant pressure in 2021 that turned every playoff win into a survival story. The wrist injury in 2023 that shut everything down. And now, in 2025, a turf toe injury that wiped out nine games and forced him to watch his prime tick by from the sideline. He talked a bit about how all that is weighing on him:

"I think I've been through more than most, and it's certainly not easy on the brain or the body, so I'm just trying to have fun doing it again." 

A Rough Date With a Division Rival

Cincinnati Bengals quarterback Joe Burrow (9) walks for the locker room after the fourth quarter of the NFL Week 15 game between the Cincinnati Bengals and the Baltimore Ravens at Paycor Stadium in Cincinnati on Sunday, Dec. 14, 2025. The Bengals were shut out, 24-0.
Credit: Sam Greene/The Enquirer / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

After those comments, the Ravens rolled into Paycor and went on to win the game 24–0; and somehow, the box score almost makes it harder to believe. Cincinnati actually ran nearly twice as many plays, picked up more first downs, had one more offensive possession, and held the ball for double the time of possession.

And they still got blanked.

That’s the kind of loss that messes with you, because it doesn’t feel like you were completely overmatched — it feels like you wasted every opportunity you had. Burrow threw two interceptions, including a pick‑six that basically slammed the door, and he’ll be the first one to tell you he has to be better. He wasn’t blameless. He missed throws he normally hits. He forced one he didn’t need to.

But this wasn’t just on him.

Outside of Ja’Marr Chase, there wasn’t much going for this offense. Drives stalled. Timing broke down. And while Burrow was only officially sacked three times, the pocket was far from steady. Pressure showed up early enough to speed him up, late enough to disrupt routes, and often enough to make the whole thing feel uncomfortable.

And that’s the part that lingers. Not just because it ended their season — but because it’s the last thing you want to see when your quarterback has just told you, out loud, that the joy is starting to matter.

“The Bengals Don’t Spend” Isn’t Totally Fair — But It’s Not Totally Wrong Either

Yes, the Bengals paid Burrow. They paid Ja’Marr Chase. They’ve written some very big checks, and that part matters.

But “spending” in the NFL isn’t just about the headline number you tweet out when a contract gets signed. It’s about howyou spend and where you’re willing to push past your comfort zone.

It’s about paying market price for the second and third wave of team-building — the offensive linemen who don’t move merch, the corners who don’t get name recognition, the veteran depth that only gets noticed when they're needed and your season starts wobbling.

Most importantly, it’s about whether you build an organization around your quarterback that treats “protecting him” as a philosophy. Cincinnati has tried to address the offensive line. They’ve made moves. They’ve signed guys. They’ve drafted players with upside. On paper, it’s effort.

The problem is that effort hasn’t consistently translated into Burrow getting to play football without feeling like he’s under fire on every dropback. Clean pockets come and go.

And on the other side of the ball, the defense has been a weekly problem for years now. One week it’s coverage. The next it’s run fits. The next it’s situational breakdowns. It’s always something.

When Burrow is healthy, this team is never truly “out.” That’s the compliment. That’s the power of having a quarterback like him.

But it also becomes the trap.

Because when you have a quarterback that good, it’s easy to convince yourself you’re close — close enough to tweak instead of overhaul, close enough to survive instead of dominate.

And sometimes you just aren't.

The Carson Palmer Comparison Isn’t Crazy

Cincinnati Bengals quarterback Joe Burrow (9) is assisted to the locker room with an injury in the second quarter of the NFL Week 2 game between the Cincinnati Bengals and the Jacksonville Jaguars at Paycor Stadium in downtown Cincinnati on Sunday, Sept. 14, 2025. The Jaguars led 17-10 at halftime.
Credit: Sam Greene/The Enquirer / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

Bengals fans heard Joe Burrow make those comments at the podium and immediately thought to themselves:

Carson Palmer did this already.

He got frustrated. He felt like the organization wasn’t serious enough about winning at the highest level. He asked out. When that didn’t move things, he threatened retirement. And when people didn’t believe him, he followed through — at least long enough to make it clear he wasn’t bluffing. Eventually, the Bengals traded him.

That whole era left scars in Cincinnati because it wasn’t clean. It dragged. It sat there for months, unresolved, uncomfortable, and quietly toxic. It’s why even the idea of history repeating itself still makes fans uneasy.

And here’s the part nobody really wants to say out loud: Burrow is the kind of personality who could absolutely do it.

Not because he’s dramatic. He’s not. Because he’s deliberate.

Burrow doesn’t strike you as someone who floats trial balloons or speaks just to vent. If he ever decided he was done with the situation — done with the physical toll, done with the constant feeling of “almost,” done with being asked to be perfect just to keep things competitive — I don't think he would hesitate to step away from the game to make a point.

So What Does a Split Actually Look Like?

Here’s the reality check: Burrow can’t just wake up one morning and get traded like a disgruntled receiver who subtweets his way out of town.

He’s under contract through 2029. He has a no‑trade clause. And financially, he’s woven into the Bengals’ cap structure in a way that makes a clean, painless break almost impossible. This isn’t a switch you flip — it’s a lever you pull only if you’re ready for some damage on both sides.

So if you’re thinking, “This ends with Burrow in a different jersey,” that outcome probably isn’t quick, quiet, or easy. And it doesn’t happen unless Burrow himself decides it has to.

Which leaves three realistic paths forward.

1) The Bengals Treat This Offseason Like a Five‑Alarm Fire

Not a light offseason where they take a chance on a second-round tackle and think it'll change everything.

A real offseason with a noticeable overhaul.

The kind of offseason that acknowledges this season for what it was and responds accordingly. A true reset on defense. An aggressive, no‑half‑measures plan to protect Burrow. A willingness to attack weaknesses with money and premium picks, not just one or the other.

2) Burrow Stays, but the Vibe Changes

This is the quiet version. The one that doesn’t come with headlines or ultimatums.

Burrow doesn’t go public. He doesn’t demand a trade. He doesn’t threaten retirement.

But the relationship shifts.

It becomes more transactional. More business‑like. He shows up, he plays, he competes — and he’s still Joe Burrow — but his heart isn't fully in it. The franchise quarterback doesn’t always have to ask out for everyone to feel the distance.

3) Burrow Eventually Forces the Issue

This is the Carson Palmer lane.

It’s not the most likely outcome today, but it’s on the table because of two things that define Burrow: his competitiveness and his honesty.

If he truly believes the organization can’t — or won’t — build a real contender around him, then the only way out is to make the situation unavoidable. That could look like a trade request.

Or it could be something even bigger.

Joy Isn’t a Luxury. It’s the Line Every Career Eventually Reaches.

Cleveland Browns defensive end Myles Garrett (95) chases down Cincinnati Bengals quarterback Joe Burrow (9) during the first half of an NFL football game at Huntington Bank Field, Sept. 7, 2025, in Cleveland, Ohio.
Credit: Jeff Lange / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

Football fans love toughness. We love the “he’ll play through anything” stuff. We love the bloody lip, the limp to the huddle, the montages of popping up after a big hit. It’s part of what makes this sport what it is, and part of why certain players get elevated to a different level in a city.

Burrow has given Cincinnati all of that. He’s played through pain, taken hits he didn’t need to take, and stood in pockets most quarterbacks would bail on without thinking twice. He’s earned the respect that comes with that, and then some.

But there’s a line where toughness stops being admirable and starts being tragic.

So when Burrow says he has to have fun to keep doing this, he’s not telling you he’s weak. He’s not asking for sympathy, and he’s not backing away from competition. He’s telling you he’s aware.

The Bengals can ignore that quote if they want. Fans can argue about it, meme it, spin it, or pretend it was nothing more than a bad day at the podium.

But the organization can’t afford to treat it that way.

Because if Burrow ever decides the “fun” isn’t coming back — if the injuries keep piling up, if the protection never truly stabilizes, if the defense keeps bleeding points, if the seasons keep ending before Christmas — well... Bengals fans know how this story ends. 

All stats courtesy of NFL Pro.

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