Daxton Hill

Bengals CB Dax Hill Suffers ACL Tear

Moved from safety to cornerback this offseason, Dax Hill won a Bengals starting job. It will now be a while before the former first-round pick reclaims that role. The Bengals fear Hill suffered an ACL tear Sunday, NFL.com’s Ian Rapoport tweets. Zac Taylor has since confirmed Hill sustained the tear, which will end his season.

The shift to cornerback led to Hill starting the first five Bengals games this season. After struggling to find a home over his first two NFL seasons, the Michigan alum had begun to show promise at corner. Pro Football Focus graded Hill 33rd at the position through five games, but the third-year cover man will not resurface until 2025.

Cincinnati completed the position change to start its offseason program, and while Hill was not guaranteed a starting role as a result of this switch, he earned one opposite Cam Taylor-Britt. Hill had beaten out DJ Turner for the gig; Turner figures to return to the lineup for a Bengals team struggling on defense amid a 1-4 start.

Primarily a rookie-year backup behind Jessie Bates and Vonn Bell, Hill moved into Cincy’s starting lineup after the team let both defect in free agency. The results did not impress, and the team bailed on Hill as a safety starter after one season. Fortunately, Hill’s CB skills — honed partially at Michigan, where he played alongside Turner — gave him a rebound opportunity. But Hill will, in all likelihood, lose most of his first full-time CB season due to injury. That reality playing out would place the former No. 31 overall pick on shakier ground entering a 2025 contract year.

The Bengals let Chidobe Awuzie play out his contract last year, leading the former Cowboys draftee to sign a big-ticket Titans deal. Hill moving to corner meant the team has used three first- or second-round picks at the position since 2022; Taylor-Britt arrived as a 2022 second-rounder, with Turner going off the board in the 2023 second round. This combo will be needed for Lou Anarumo‘s embattled group, as it attempts to salvage the worst of its Joe Burrow-era starts.

This injury also stands to impact Hill’s fifth-year option price. The four-tiered structure makes any Pro Bowl player eligible for the second rung on this ladder, while Tier 3 is for players who played at least 50% of their teams’ snaps over their first three seasons or 75% in two of the three. Hill staying healthy this year pointed him toward the third rung, as he played 100% of the Bengals’ defensive snaps last season. Instead, he will be eligible for the bottom CB option number. That would make it easier for the Bengals to pick up Hill’s 2026 option, but coming off an ACL tear will make authorizing a fully guaranteed salary more difficult for the team.

Dax Hill Wins Starting CB Job; Bengals Likely To Make RB Addition

This year’s Bengals training camp pitted two former Michigan teammates against each other for a starting job. Despite Dax Hill changing positions this offseason, he won the matchup.

The Bengals moved Hill from safety to cornerback, and a competition with DJ Turner formed. Although Turner started 12 games as a rookie, The Athletic’s Paul Dehner Jr. notes it will be Hill who opens the season as Cincinnati’s starting outside corner opposite Cam Taylor-Britt (subscription required).

Moved to corner to start the offseason program, Hill fared well at a position he also saw time at while with the Wolverines. The 2022 first-round pick and Turner, a 2023 second-rounder, each saw time in Jim Harbaugh‘s secondaries from 2019-21. Hill has been moved around at the pro level as well, playing both safety and in the slot. He appears to have found a home — for the time being, at least — on the perimeter.

After starting just two games as a rookie, the former No. 31 overall pick worked as a 17-game starter in 2023. This produced 110 tackles but poor coverage metrics; Pro Football Focus rated Hill as the sixth-worst safety regular last season. The Bengals also changed up their safety equation this offseason, bringing back Vonn Bell and signing ex-Raven Geno Stone.

Lou Anarumo‘s secondary will feature experience on the backend and youth on the boundary, with Taylor-Britt only going into his third season. Chidobe Awuzie left in free agency, but rather than Turner stepping in, a somewhat unexpected conclusion took shape. Turner will step into the team’s top backup role. Mike Hilton remains on the roster as a veteran presence, supplying considerable seasoning in the slot.

Additionally, Dehner continues to name Samaje Perine as a reunion candidate. The prospect of the Bengals bringing back their former backup/passing-down back surfaced this offseason, and Perine is not a lock to make the Broncos’ 53-man roster. Perine would pass straight to free agency if released, as a vested veteran, but the Bengals could also ensure they end up with the ex-Joe Mixon backup by trading for him.

Perine is tied to a $2.83MM salary this season, and he played a key role as a Russell Wilson outlet option during the Broncos’ five-game win streak last year. But Denver may end up keeping only three backs. Javonte Williams, who may well have been battling Perine for a roster spot, has solidified himself as Denver’s starter. The team has shifty rotational piece Jaleel McLaughlin and fifth-round rookie Audric Estime in line to make the initial 53 as well.

Cincy traded Mixon to Houston for a seventh-round pick and added Zack Moss as a lower-cost replacement. The team will carry 2023 fifth-rounder Chase Brown, with Trayveon Williams still in place as a third-stringer. The Bengals, however, lost fourth-year RB Chris Evans to a season-ending patellar tendon tear recently. Brown should be expected to start over Moss, per Dehner, despite the team giving the recent Colts spot starter a two-year, $8MM deal.

Even if Perine does not make it back to Ohio, Dehner names running back as the position the Bengals will most likely try to upgrade in the coming days. Teams have until 3pm CT Tuesday to set their initial 53-man rosters.

Latest On Bengals’ Secondary

Breakdowns in the secondary played a key role in the Bengals missing the postseason in 2023, and the team has made a number of moves in that area in recent months. The safety spot has seen the arrival of one veteran (Geno Stone) along with a reunion with another (Vonn Bell).

The latter was in Cincinnati from 2020-22, serving as a full-time starter alongside Jessie Bates during that time. Bell departed last offseason by inking a three-year Panthers pact, although he only wound up playing a single campaign in Carolina. Bell and the Bengals reunited on a one-year deal worth the veteran’s minimum in March.

The 29-year-old is, to no surprise, in line to reprise a starting role in his second Cincinnati stint. Bell took first-team reps during offseason practices, as detailed by Paul Dehner Jr. of The Athletic (subscription required). He and Stone occupying starter’s workloads would relegate Jordan Battle to a depth/special teams capacity. The 2023 third-rounder logged seven starts last season, but he was one of a number of Bengals defensive backs who struggled in coverage. The additions of Stone and Bell will provide the team with experienced options, although it will be interesting to see if Battle can compete for a full-time defensive gig in training camp.

Of course, one of the other main offseason developments the Bengals have seen is the transition of Dax Hill from safety to perimeter corner. The 2022 first-rounder was lauded for his positional versatility coming out of college, but things have not gone according to plan for him so far. Hill primarily played in the slot when he was used at corner with Michigan, making this summer an important time to acclimate to spending time on the outside.

If Hill manages to get comfortable with his new position, a starting role should await him in the fall. The 23-year-old worked with the first-team defense this spring, per the Dayton Daily News’ Laurel Pfahler. Hill and 2023 second-rounder DJ Turner could be competing for a starter’s spot during camp in a cornerback room which lost Chidobe Awuzie in free agency. Veteran slot man Mike Hilton and 21-game starter Cam Taylor-Britt are still in place from last season.

Cincinnati ranked 31st in the league in passing yards allowed last season, and the play of the team’s secondary will be worth watching closely in 2024. New faces at safety could provide needed stability on the backend while Hill’s success in playing at corner will no doubt go a long way in determining the team’s willingness to pick up his fifth-year option after the season ends. With three years remaining on their respective rookie deals , meanwhile, Battle and Turner will have plenty of time to regain first-team roles if they start the year in a rotational capacity.

Bengals To Move Dax Hill To CB

When the Bengals made him a first-round draft choice two years ago, Dax Hill was considered the second-best safety in his class, behind only Kyle Hamilton. While Hamilton became a First-Team All-Pro in his second year in the league for the division-rival Ravens, Hill struggled to make the same leap, and as Kelsey Conway of the Cincinnati Enquirer writes, the Michigan product will be moved to cornerback.

After playing just 131 defensive snaps as a rookie in 2022, Hill became a full-time starter at safety last year followng Jessie Bates‘ free agency defection to the Falcons. Hill’s surface-level statistics were strong enough, as he recorded 110 total tackles, 1.5 sacks, six tackles for loss, and two interceptions among 11 passes defensed. The advanced metrics, however, told a different story, as Pro Football Focus considered Hill the sixth-worst safety out of 95 qualified players.

PFF was especially critical of Hill’s coverage ability and assigned him a poor 43.0 grade for that component of his game. Plus, as Conway observes, Hill also struggled with communication on the back end of Cincinnati’s defense, struggles that are particularly noticeable when they come from a free safety.

Hill did line up as a corner, both in the slot and outside the numbers, at the collegiate level, and he saw some action at both spots last season as well. Per Conway, the Bengals will allow him to compete for snaps at the nickel and on the boundaries in training camp, and the team believes he can still be a key piece of its secondary.

“We’ve seen [cornerback play] from him and we think it’s the best opportunity right now to help our team,” head coach Zac Taylor said. “He’s a superb athlete, he’s got great size, and he did a good amount of coverage at Michigan, playing inside covering slots, played some outside. The versatility is what made him the pick that he was. We’re really excited for his future. He has done a tremendous job embracing this opportunity, and I’m excited to see him go out there and compete.”

Hill will vie for boundary snaps with DJ Turner and for slot time with Mike Hilton (the team also added TCU corner Josh Newton in the fifth round of this weekend’s draft). Hill’s position change is good news for free agent acquisition Geno Stone, who parlayed a seven-interception 2023 season with Baltimore into a two-year, $15MM contract with Cincy. Stone now looks poised to serve as the club’s starting free safety.

Bengals To Sign First-Round Pick Daxton Hill

The Bengals have agreed to terms Daxton Hill (Twitter link via NFL.com’s Ian Rapoport). The Michigan defensive back is expected to put pen to paper today, making it all official.

[RELATED: Latest On Bengals’ Bates]

Hill was viewed as the consensus second-best safety prospect heading into the draft, behind only Notre Dame’s Kyle Hamilton. After the Ravens nabbed Hamilton at No. 14 overall, the Bengals came in to pounds towards the end of Round 1. Many anticipated that Hill would still be on the board to start Day 2, but the Bengals weren’t willing to risk it.

Hill’s versatility is viewed as a major plus — he could see time at free safety, strong safety safety, or even reps as a slot receiver. On the defensive side, Hill notched 69 tackles for the Wolverines last year, including 4.5 tackles for loss and half a sack. He also nabbed eight passes defensed and two interceptions, giving him four picks across his three seasons.

In accordance with his slot, the No. 31 overall pick will earn $13MM over the course of his four-year rookie contract. This year, he’ll start with a modest $705K base salary and carry a $2.4MM cap figure. His salary will escalate over the life of the deal, ending with a $4.2MM cap charge in 2025. Of course, by then, the Bengals will reserve the right to keep him for ’26 via the fifth-year option.

Draft Rumors: Jets, Dean, Walker, Hill, Hamilton

Both New York teams are in the enviable position of having two top-ten picks in Thursday’s first-round of the 2022 NFL Draft. The Jets have made it clear that they are prepared to use their No. 10 overall pick in order to acquire 49ers wide receiver Deebo Samuel, who requested a trade this week.

According to Tony Pauline of Pro Football Network, league sources believe the Jets will use the No. 4 overall pick to address their defense, despite recent chatter that they may be targeting NC State offensive lineman Ikem Ekwonu. Pauline reports that he has heard that “the coaches love Kayvon Thibodeaux, but front office personnel have a lot of concerns.”

Thibodeuax has seen his stock drop since the tail end of the college football season with questionable concerns over his motor and effort. Coaches, though, see his ability and potential and, understandably, want him on their defense.

Here are a few more Draft rumors from Pauline’s article concerning some risers and fallers:

  • Pauline claims there’s a 50/50 chance that Georgia linebacker Nakobe Dean goes in the first round. Dean led the National Champion Bulldogs in tackles for loss and was second on the team in both total tackles and sacks. He’s a talented prospect, but teams desire to have the fifth-year option at their disposal for other positions such as cornerback, receiver, or quarterback.
  • Dean’s teammate, fellow Georgia linebacker Quay Walker, has been soaring up the boards lately. Like Dean, it’s unlikely Walker hears his name called on Day 1, but it’s looking more and more likely that he won’t last long in the second round of the Draft.
  • Michigan safety Daxton Hill has been the consensus second-best safety prospect for all of the offseason. While he’s been rising up boards as teams begin to realize his versatility and ability to play as a free safety, in the box safety, or even over a slot receiver, he’s still unlikely to be selected in the first round. Hill is another player expected to be drafted early into Day 2.
  • The top consensus safety prospect on the board, Notre Dame’s Kyle Hamilton, has been dropping in popularity in the days leading up to the Draft. It won’t be enough for him to lose his title as the top-ranked safety over Hill or even enough to drop him out of the first round, but for a player that is consistently considered a top-ten or even top-five prospect in the Draft, this fall is potentially costing him top money. Pauline reports that league sources see Hamilton going around picks 15 to 20.