4 Bengals free agents who could follow Brian Callahan if he leaves Cincinnati

Could Bengals free agents join Brian Callahan on another team?

This feels like the year the Cincinnati Bengals could actually lose offensive coordinator Brian Callahan to a head coaching gig with another team.

As of this writing, Callahan had contact with four different teams about head coaching vacancies just after becoming the NFL’s longest-tenured offensive coordinator.

Interestingly, this possible Callahan departure (and likely Dan Pitcher promotion) comes at a time when the Bengals also have some key offensive players heading to free agency.

That could lead to a situation where one of the following names actually joins Callahan on one of the interested teams (Chargers, Titans, Panthers and Falcons), too.

Jonah Williams headed to free agency, not sure what future holds

Jonah Williams chats about his trip to free agency.

Last offseason when the Cincinnati Bengals signed Orlando Brown Jr., left tackle Jonah Williams was moved to right tackle while trade rumors swirled.

Before the season when he was told he would have to change positions, he asked for a trade.

Throughout the 2023-24 season, Williams played every single snap at right tackle and did so well. Now at the end of the season, he will be a free agent.

Williams was head coach Zac Taylor’s first draft pick in 2019, and he said he appreciates that he’s one of the people Taylor wanted to start building a team around a year before they took Joe Burrow in the 2020 draft.

He didn’t say whether he wants to be back with the Bengals yet since he was asked right after the win over the Browns and he hadn’t had time to think about it, but he did say he gave it his all over the past five seasons.

“They gave me the chance to do this and I gave them everything I had,” Williams said. “All I could do is be the best right tackle I could be. That’s what I was doing at left. I’ve proven I can play both. What I end up doing in the future is kind of unknown right now.”

Williams has played left tackle for most of his career, but since Brown is under contract for three more years, if he re-signs with Cincinnati, he will likely have to be on the right side of the line moving forward.

There’s also the fact that left tackles normally make more money than right tackles since almost all quarterbacks are right-handed, and they protect the blind side. That will certainly be a consideration for Williams as he heads into free agency.

He has made himself a sought-after target in free agency, so there will be other teams going after him. But right now, all Williams is concerned about is being able to spend time with his daughter during the offseason, and he is thankful for his time in Cincinnati.

“I gave my all,” Williams said. “I don’t know what the future holds, but I’m proud of what we built here and appreciative of the opportunity.”

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Oklahoma Sooners set to host 2025 5-Star safety

Junior day is just around the corner and one of the top defensive recruits is set to be at Oklahoma.

The Oklahoma Sooners are hoping to continue their hot start to their 2025 recruiting class as they prepare for their junior day in just a few weeks. The Sooners are set to host several of the nation’s top juniors on Jan. 27, 2024.

One of the most high-profile players expected to be in attendance is Galveston, Texas native [autotag]Jonah Williams[/autotag]. The five-star is listed as a linebacker on most sites, but safeties coach [autotag]Brandon Hall[/autotag] is his primary recruiter, signaling where Oklahoma expects him to play.

The Texas Longhorns are currently the leader for Williams, according to On3’s recruiting prediction machine at 43.4%. But Oklahoma is a close second at 25.7%. Williams is also a highly touted baseball player, so I’m sure Oklahoma will use that to help land the safety.

They’ve had great success with that, landing two in the 2024 class. Williams finished last season with 54 tackles, four tackles for loss, eight pass breakups, a fumble returned for a touchdown, four interceptions, taking three for scores, and two punt and kick return touchdowns.

This was after an incredible 2022 campaign that saw him be named the Texas District 9-5A-I Overall MVP as a sophomore and help his school go undefeated in the regular season for a defense that only allowed 31 total points in 11 games, while the offense averaged 51 points per game.

Safe to say, this would be a huge win, and it starts with a great junior day visit.

Contact/Follow us @SoonersWire on Twitter, and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Oklahoma news, notes, and opinions. You can also follow Jaron on Twitter @JaronSpor.

Jonah Williams says Bengals running game must improve

Jonah Williams talks about the struggling Bengals running game.

One of the biggest problems that hurt the Cincinnati Bengals during Sunday’s loss to the Pittsburgh Steelers was the putrid running game.

There, the Bengals rushed just 11 times for 25 yards. Eight of those chances went to Joe Mixon, who gained 16 of the yards. New starting quarterback Jake Browning had the rest.

The Browning-led offense faced stacked boxes each and every time, but the problem feels much deeper, in the realm of schematics.

Offensive tackle Jonah Williams touched on these topics after the loss.

“We’ve got to get more on the ground,” Williams said, according to Paul Dehner Jr. of The Athletic. “That is another deal where it felt like we were running uphill a lot. Better scheme, better execution, just better across the board. You can’t rush for 25 yards and play against the Steelers — or really many people.”

At this point, the miserable ground game problem goes all the way back to last offseason when the team didn’t take the need to upgrade the running back room seriously or implement a better scheme and/or plan.

And the one way it did — with rookie Chase Brown in the fifth round — resulted in Zac Taylor having to explain after the loss why Brown didn’t get a single carry.

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Alabama lands in top-12 for 2025 LB Jonah Williams

2025 linebacker Jonah Williams released his top schools list on Wednesday. The Texas native included Alabama as one of his finalists.

There has already been one Jonah Williams to have played for Alabama. Now, the Alabama coaching staff is attempting to get another one on board. Yes, you heard that right. Alabama is one of 12 schools that has an opportunity to land 2025 linebacker Jonah Williams. Williams revealed his top schools list on Wednesday night.

The Texas native can play multiple different positions at 6-foot-3 and 200 pounds. Some schools are recruiting Williams to play linebacker whereas others are recruiting him to play safety.

It will be interesting to see how he continues to grow and develop before arriving on a college campus. Alabama will work to get Williams on campus in the spring in all likelihood. It is unlikely that he will visit during the season at this point.

Roll Tide Wire breaks down Jonah Williams’ recruiting profile.

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5-star LB Jonah Williams puts Oregon Ducks among top schools

5-star LB Jonah Williams puts Oregon Ducks among top schools

The Oregon Ducks have been finding a ton of success on the field this season, and they’re turning that into success on the recruiting trail. After picking up commitments from a pair of 5-star defensive linemen — Ayden Breland and Elijah Rushing — over the past month, Dan Lanning and the Ducks are now in a great position to potentially land another 5-star player in the 2025 class as well.

On Wednesday, 2025 5-star Jonah Williams announced his top 12 schools, with the Ducks firmly in the mix. Williams plays a mix of safety and linebacker in Texas, standing at 6-foot-3, and 205 pounds.

According to the 247Sports composite, Williams is rated as the No. 16 overall player in the 2025 class, and the No. 2 ATH. On3 has Williams listed as a linebacker, where he is the No. 15 overall player and No. 2 LB in the class.

No matter which position you put him in on defense, it’s clear that Williams is one of the top players in the class, and a huge target for the Ducks.

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LSU makes final 12 for 5-star linebacker from Texas

There are currently no Crystal Ball projections for Jonah Williams at this time, but Texas is a 44% favorite to land him per On3.

One of the top players in the 2025 recruiting class has narrowed his final list of schools down to 12 and the LSU Tigers have made the cut.

[autotag]Jonah Williams[/autotag] is a 6-foot-3, 200-pound, five-star linebacker from Galveston, Texas, where he plays for Ball High School. The Ball Tornadoes are 8-1 this season with one game remaining before the playoffs start.

The Tornadoes will be the No. 1 seed in their region and have home-field advantage in the playoffs.

LSU made Williams top 12 list along with Colorado, Texas, Oklahoma, USC, Oregon, Tennessee, Alabama, Ohio State, Texas A&M, TCU and Arizona State.

There are currently no Crystal Ball projections for Williams at this time but Texas is a 44% favorite to land him per On3. LSU currently has five commitments for the 2025 recruiting class and their class is ranked as the No. 5 class in the country.

Williams would be the first linebacker in the class to commit to LSU.

Contact/Follow us @LSUTigersWire on Twitter, and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Louisiana State news, notes, and opinions.

2025 5-Star Athlete out of Galveston (TX) has placed Texas A&M in his Top 12

Highly coveted 2025 5-Star Athlete Jonah Williams has placed Texas A&M in his Top 12 program list.

Earlier this week, 2025 five-star offensive tackle Solomon Thomas released his Top 10 program list, which included Texas A&M, solidifying the work head coach Jimbo Fisher and his staff have put in going into next Summer’s annual recruiting barrage.

Following Thomas’s announcement, one of the more highly coveted defensive prospects in the 2025 cycle released his own Top 12 program list as five-star athlete/linebacker Jonah Williams has revealed his future collegiate options, including Colorado, Oklahoma, Texas, South Carolina, Oregon, Tennessee, Alabama, Ohio State, LSU, TCU, Arizona State, and Texas A&M.

According to 247Sports Composite, Williams is currently positioned as the 16th-ranked player in the cycle, the 2nd-ranked linebacker, and the 4th-ranked player in Texas amid his senior season at Ball High School in Galveston (TX).

Texas A&M’s relationship with Williams goes back nearly a year, as Fisher offered the future superstar back in early February, leading to two unofficial visits on April 1, while attending the Aggies’ annual recruiting pool party on July 29, joining a host of future prospects and current Texas A&M commits.

While nothing is set in stone, my guess is that Fisher and Williams are close to setting an official visit date for the final two home games this season or going into 2024.

During Williams’ 2022 sophomore season, Williams recorded 59 tackles, three tackles for loss, and four interceptions, including three returned for touchdowns.

Contact/Follow us @AggiesWire on Twitter, and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Texas A&M news, notes, and opinions. Follow Cameron on Twitter: @CameronOhnysty.

Bengals teammates talk about Joe Burrow’s toughness

Bengals teammates are wowed with Joe Burrow again.

The Cincinnati Bengals improved to 4-3 with a win over the San Francisco 49ers in Week 8 and Joe Burrow was nearly perfect, going 28 of 32 throwing the ball for 283 yards and three touchdowns,

After starting 1-3 while Burrow struggled to heal from a calf injury that had been bothering him since the preseason, the Bengals have won three straight largely due to the quarterback looking like his old self before he was hurt. His teammates told Geoff Hobson of Bengals.com they know how tough it was for him to come back and look like himself.

“Yeah. He looked like himself. That’s who he is,” left tackle Orlando Brown said. “That’s why I’ve got so much respect for him. He keeps playing hard. He never gives in.”

Wide receiver Tyler Boyd thinks the Bengals are a top team in the NFL if Burrow is playing like he did in San Francisco.

“It is huge. It let everyone know that we are back,” Boyd said. “They are one of the top teams in the NFC. It’s on high alert now. We are the team to beat. We will continue to be that team. It’s us. Who Dey.”

The Bengals have a tough schedule ahead of them, but Boyd is right in saying they will be tough to beat with Burrow back at full health playing like he is.

“When he’s 28-for-32, it’s going to be hard to stop us when he’s able to do that,” Jonah Williams said. “When we’re rushing for over 130 with the playmakers we have.”

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Bengals suddenly have a very good Jonah Williams problem on their hands

Jonah Williams is silencing a lot of critics right now.

Critics of Cincinnati Bengals offensive tackle Jonah Williams, come on down.

Williams, the much-maligned first-round pick who had his ups and downs at left tackle over the years, suddenly looks like a natural at right tackle.

Through seven games, it’s hard to bring up the number of times Williams has been cast in a negative spotlight on one hand — even with a limited-mobility Joe Burrow at quarterback.

The rushing attack looks fantastic and Williams has a 69.6 overall PFF grade so far. Ranking in the mid-30s might not sound amazing, but it sure beats the tar out of the Bobby Hart days of 60th or worse.

We can just take a simple eye test, too, like this one-on-one with Nick Bosa, of all players:

Much of the criticism shoved at Williams over the years has been the product of his position being a little like cornerback — fans only think about them when something goes wrong. And he happens to struggle twice a year against a guy named Myles Garrett — and who doesn’t?

There was also silly criticism leveled at Williams because he asked for a trade this past offseason after the arrival of Orlando Brown Jr., which shoved him to right tackle. But that was Williams and his agent using their last little bit of leverage, knowing all too well that he wants to play left tackle and left tackles make far more money in free agency than right tackles.

Once camp started, though? Not a peep about a move. Williams has put his head down and is in the middle of his best season as a pro.

The absolute best-case scenario for the Bengals after signing Brown to play left tackle was that Williams would move to the right and excel, solving two problems with one single move — giving the team the best offensive line of the Burrow era.

Williams has done just that, coming off offseason knee surgery and confronting his first position change as a pro in superb fashion.

So much so, that other teams will be looking to pay Williams big money next summer on the market if this trend keeps. And now the Bengals are going to have to step back and ponder whether to give him an extension to keep him there, perhaps at the cost of someone like Tee Higgins.

But it’s the best possible problem to have for a team that hasn’t had steady line play in, well, a really long time. And it’s all a credit to Williams, who just played a critical role in the beatdown of the 49ers on the road, never mind helping Burrow stay healthy while injured and especially never mind where this could help the Bengals go soon.

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