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Washington Commanders linebacker Frankie Luvu ‘has been suspended without pay for repeated violations of playing rules intended to protect the health and safety of players, including during Sunday’s game against the Seattle Seahawks,’ according to a statement from the league.

Luvu committed his third hip-drop tackle of the season on ‘Sunday Night Football’ against the Seattle Seahawks, sparking the suspension. He was fined for the previous violations in Week 4 and Week 8.

According to the release:

Luvu violated Rule 12, Section 2, Article 18 (a)(b), which states that: “It is a foul if a player uses the following technique to bring a runner to the ground: (a) grabs the runner with one or both hands or wraps the runner with both arms; and (b) unweights himself by swiveling and dropping his hips and/or lower body, landing on and/or trapping the runner’s leg(s) at or below the knee.”

Luvu’s hip-drop tackle came with 7:55 remaining in the first quarter after he brought down Seattle’s Jaxon Smith-Njigba, according to NFL Network’s Mike Garafolo.

Washington is set to face the Detroit Lions in Week 10 on Sunday, Nov. 9 and Luvu would be eligible to return to the team on Monday, Nov. 10.

The linebacker can choose to appeal the suspension, according to the league’s Collective Bargaining Agreement. Any appeal hearing for Luvu would be heard by Derrick Brooks, Ramon Foster, or Jordy Nelson.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

San Antonio Spurs rookie guard Dylan Harper will miss an undetermined number of games as he recovers from a calf injury sustained in a game on Sunday, Nov. 2 against the Phoenix Suns.

The Spurs announced Harper underwent an MRI in Los Angeles on Monday, Nov. 3 that revealed he has a left calf strain. The Spurs did not reveal a timetable for his return, stating only, ‘the team will provide updates as appropriate.’

Harper suffered a calf injury while defending Nick Richards’ dunk attempt during the second quarter of Sunday’s game. He was seen wincing in pain before heading to the locker room and was ruled out during halftime for the rest of the game.

Harper has emerged as one of the top rookies in the NBA through the first two weeks of the season. The No. 2 overall pick in the 2025 NBA Draft out of Rutgers is averaging 14.0 points, 4.0 rebounds and 3.8 assists per game, while shooting 50% from the floor and 35.7% on three-pointers.

He had scored 12 points on 5-of-8 shooting in just 11 minutes of play on Sunday. His best game so far occurred on Oct. 26 against the Brooklyn Nets when he tallied 20 points on 8-for-11 shooting, six rebounds, eight assists and two steals.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Resolution Minerals Ltd (ASX: RML; OTCQB: RLMLF) (“Resolution” or “Company”) is pleased to report that its maiden drill program at its 100% owned Horse Heaven Gold-Antimony-Tungsten- Silver Project (“Horse Heaven” or the “Project”), Idaho, USA (Figure 1) has delivered additional broad intervals of near-surface gold mineralisation at Golden Gate Prospect.

Highlights

  • Golden Gate now has reported results for three diamond holes from surface, all ending in gold mineralisation, confirming a large, open intrusion-related gold system. The two most recent holes include:
    • HH-GG25-003C: Down hole interval of 253.0m @ 1.50 g/t gold from surface to 253.0m (open ended), including:
      • 111.9m @ 2.31 g/t gold from 130.5m and 18.3m @ 3.98 g/t gold from 149.4m (with the highest assay result of 5.91 g/t gold over a down hole width of 1.5m)
    • HH-GG25-002C: Down hole interval of 265.2m @ 0.60 g/t gold from surface to 265.2m (open ended), including 89.9m @ 1.15g/t gold from 121.9m.
  • On 28 October 2025, the Company reported a down hole interval of 189.2m @ 1.30 g/t Au from 34m, ending in mineralisation, in HH-GG25-001C, including:
    • Down hole interval of 12.9m @ 2.32 g/t Au from 94.4m; and
    • Down hole interval of 70.8m @ 2.24 g/t Au from 128.8m.

These results demonstrate the continuous potential for a large intrusive-hosted gold system with geology, sulphides and alteration similar to the Stibnite gold-antimony deposit, only ~16km away.

  • Multiple near-term catalysts include:
    • A Reverse Circulation drill rig is being mobilised to Golden Gate to immediately follow-up on the results of the first three holes.
    • Assay batch results from 7 additional oriented Core holes of the Phase-1 program (including bottom of HH-GG25-001C) to be released progressively over the following months.
  • RML’s Horse Heaven project is strategically located in a district central to domestic critical mineral supply chains (gold-antimony-tungsten-silver), all aligned with the U.S. government priorities.

RML’s CEO of US Operations, Craig Lindsay, commented on the discovery:

“Following up our first hole with even stronger results from holes 2 and 3 is an exceptional outcome for the Golden Gate prospect.

These results confirm that Golden Gate hosts a large, robust gold system with all holes returning broad gold mineralisation from surface and finishing in mineralisation.

That level of continuity and consistency is extremely rare this early in a program and highlights the potential scale and our belief that Golden Gate has all the hallmarks of a significant intrusive- related gold deposit, comparable to the major systems seen elsewhere in the district, including Perpetua’s Stibnite, which is only 16km away.

With multiple targets still to test across the broader Horse Heaven Project, including Antimony Ridge, our confidence continues to grow that we’re on the verge of uncovering a truly district- scale gold system with complementary known tungsten and antimony mineralisation.”


Click here for the full ASX Release

This post appeared first on investingnews.com

Here’s a quick recap of the crypto landscape for Monday (November 3) as of 9:00 p.m. UTC.

Get the latest insights on Bitcoin, Ether and altcoins, along with a round-up of key cryptocurrency market news.

Bitcoin and Ether price update

Bitcoin (BTC) was priced at US$106,465, a 3.3 percent decrease in 24 hours. BTC’s lowest valuation today was US$105,040, and its highest was US$108,137.

Despite ending last week with promising upside momentum, the persistent presence of strong sell pressure is acting as a barrier to accessing key resistance levels, raising doubts about sustained bullish recovery.

Analysts like Ted Pillows highlighted a pattern of weekend price pumps that typically do not hold during regular trading days.

Indeed, BTC started November with a 2 percent drop. Market participants are bracing for retests of support below the psychologically important US$100,000 level. Institutional demand has also weakened sharply, with significant outflows recorded from major Bitcoin ETFs.

Ether (ETH) was priced at US$3,573.75, a 7.4 percent decrease in 24 hours, and its lowest valuation of the day. Its highest was US$3,890.47.

Meanwhile, the market capitalization of privacy-preserving cryptocurrencies has surpassed US$24 billion, an increase of about 80 percent over the past week, led by Dash (DASH) and Zcash (ZEC).

Altcoin price update

  • Solana (SOL) was priced at US$164.07, down 11.1 percent over the last 24 hours and at its lowest valuation of the day. Its highest was US$176.52.
  • XRP was trading for US$2.28, a decrease of 8.7 percent over the last 24 hours. Its lowest valuation of the day was US$2.27, and its highest was US$2.42.

Crypto derivatives and market indicators

The crypto derivatives market remains active with high liquidation volumes, US$16.49 million for BTC and US$32.87 million for ETH in the four hours leading up to the closing bell, indicating ongoing bullish positions.

Open interest has slightly declined: 1.10 percent for BTC to US$69.57 billion and 0.78 percent for ETH to US$44.51 billion, reflecting cautious trader sentiment.

However, funding rates of 0.006 for BTC and 0.001 for ETH suggest a bullish bias persists. Additionally, the RSI near 38 indicates the market is approaching oversold levels, hinting at potential short-term stabilization or reversal.

This mix of technical opportunity amid cautious sentiment underlines the need for close monitoring of derivative positions and market reactions ahead.

Bitcoin dominance in the crypto market now stands at 60.3 percent, roughly two percent higher compared to last week. The Fear and Greed Index dipped three points further into the fear zone from last week to 36.

Today’s crypto news to know

Canada set to unveil draft stablecoin legislation

Sources for the Globe & Mail said on Friday that Ottawa will introduce draft stablecoin legislation as soon as December. The plan will reportedly be unveiled alongside the Federal budget on Tuesday (November 4) and tabled before the holiday recess. Sources also said that lawmakers drew inspiration for the legislation from the Genius Act.

The unidentified sources, who have reportedly viewed the draft, also indicated that it is deficient in clearly defining a digital currency and specifying who would be responsible for its oversight.

Canada currently applies dual regulatory frameworks for digital currencies depending on their nature and use. Some are treated as securities, giving authority to provincial and territorial governments, while others are treated as payment instruments under federal authority.

This overlapping jurisdiction results from the absence of a clear, unified legal definition for digital currencies in the country.

IREN becomes latest Bitcoin miner to diversify into AI

Bitcoin miner IREN has signed a US$9.7 billion multi-year GPU cloud services contract with Microsoft (NASDAQ:MSFT), the company announced this morning.

Under the terms of the deal, IREN will provide Microsoft access to NVIDIA (NASDAQ:NVDA) GPUs hosted within its data centers. In addition, IREN secured a US$5.8 billion equipment deal with Dell Technologies to support this GPU infrastructure.

This highlights a broader industry pivot among Bitcoin miners diversifying into AI computing services and data infrastructure amid tightening mining margins. Other miners like Hive Digital Technologies (TSXV:HIVE,NASDAQ:HIVE), MARA Holdings (NASDAQ:MARA), Riot Platforms (NASDAQ:RIOT) and TeraWulf (NASDAQ:WULF) are also making strategic moves into AI and high-performance computing sectors.

Ripple launches digital asset spot prime brokerage service

Ripple announced the official launch of its digital asset spot prime brokerage service, a new offering aimed at enabling streamlined access to spot digital asset trading for institutional clients.

The move underscores Ripple’s efforts to expand its suite of services in the growing digital asset market and follows its US$1.25 billion acquisition of Hidden Road, a multi-asset prime brokerage firm. This acquisition positioned Ripple as the first cryptocurrency company to own and operate a global multi-asset prime broker.

“The launch of OTC spot execution capabilities complements our existing suite of OTC and cleared derivatives services in digital assets and positions us to provide U.S. institutions with a comprehensive offering to suit their trading strategies and needs,” said Michael Higgins, International CEO, Ripple Prime.

Securities Disclosure: I, Giann Liguid, hold no direct investment interest in any company mentioned in this article.

Securities Disclosure: I, Meagen Seatter, hold no direct investment interest in any company mentioned in this article.

This post appeared first on investingnews.com

Investor Insight

A cycle-aware gold developer-explorer focused on value creation at the steepest part of the Lassonde Curve – pairing a de-risked Canadian gold project with transformational discovery potential in Mexico, and overlaying partner-funded uranium exposure.

Advancing community partnerships in both jurisdictions underpin the strategy, ensuring responsible advancement and alignment with stakeholders.

With a tight share structure and disciplined approach, Fortune Bay is positioned for multiple near-term catalysts as capital flows back into quality juniors.

Overview

Fortune Bay (TSXV:FOR,FWB:5QN,OTCQB:FTBYF) is a technically driven gold exploration and development company whose strategy is to create value at the steepest part of the Lassonde Curve. The company advances assets through discovery, resource expansion and early-stage development, then seeks monetization routes (sales, JV buyouts, M&A, royalties or equity) before the project enters capital-intensive build phases. This cycle-aware approach aims to maximize per-share value while minimizing dilution.

The current portfolio spans two 100-percent-owned gold projects – Goldfields in Saskatchewan, Canada, and Poma Rosa (formerly Ixhuatán) in Chiapas, Mexico. These projects are complemented by three uranium assets in Saskatchewan – Murmac, Strike and The Woods – that are being advanced under partner funding.

In 2025, Fortune Bay entered into an agreement with Cormark Securities Inc., as lead underwriter and sole bookrunner, for a “bought deal” private placement totaling C$8,000,071. Proceeds of the placement will help accelerate permitting and pre-feasibility work at the Goldfields Gold Project, launch exploration at Poma Rosa, and support ongoing growth and operations.

Overall, Fortune Bay’s business strategy blends a de-risked development asset (Goldfields) with transformational discovery potential (Poma Rosa), and non-dilutive uranium exposure, positioning the company for multiple catalysts and potential re-rating as market capital flows into quality juniors.

Company Highlights

  • Cycle-smart model: Advancing projects through discovery, resource expansion and early-stage development, then monetizing before the capital-intensive build phase.
  • Poma Rosa Project (Mexico): Historical gold resource at Campamento (1.04 Moz measured and indicated; 0.70 Moz inferred) sitting atop an untested porphyry system – offering both near-term ounces and discovery blue-sky; community re-engagement progressing to enable exploration restart. Historical estimate, not treated as current under NI 43-101.
  • Uranium optionality, non-dilutive: Advancing Murmac & Strike (optioned to Aero Energy) and The Woods (optioned to Neu Horizon) under partner capital while Fortune Bay remains operator, leveraging uranium expertise, offsetting overhead and preserving discovery upside and exposure to uranium market tailwinds.
  • Strong leadership: Led by discovery-driven geologists and capital-markets veterans with a track record of building and monetizing companies.
  • Fully Funded: Fortune Bay raises C$8.0 million in a bought deal with Cormark Securities.

Key Projects

Goldfields Project

Located in Saskatchewan, Canada, Goldfields sits in one of the world’s top mining jurisdictions with road access, nearby hydropower, historical mining infrastructure and well-advanced permitting groundwork. The project’s 2022 preliminary economic assessment (PEA) outlined 101 koz/yr average production over 8.3 years with C$234 million initial capex and life-of-mine all-in sustaining cost of US$889/oz (base case US$1,650/oz), with strong sensitivity to higher gold prices.

In 2025, Fortune Bay released an updated preliminary economic assessment (PEA) for the Goldfields project in Saskatchewan, outlining a sub-5,000 tpd open-pit mine designed to leverage existing infrastructure and permits. At a base gold price of US$2,600/oz, the project delivers an after-tax NPV5 percent of C$610 million and a 44 percent IRR, rising to C$1,253 million NPV and 74 percent IRR at spot gold (~US$3,650/oz). The plan includes a 13.9-year mine life with 896,000 ounces of payable gold, cash costs of US$1,207/oz and AISC of US$1,330/oz, supported by an initial capex of C$301 million. With 97 percent of ounces in the mine plan classified as indicated and additional upside from expansion drilling, the project demonstrates both low risk and strong growth potential.

An updated mineral resource estimate (MRE), effective September 11, 2025, was completed as part of the updated PEA to account for a slightly lower cut-off grade reflecting higher gold prices. The resources are constrained within a conceptual open-pit shell. Prepared by SRK Consulting (Canada) in accordance with CIM Guidelines and NI 43-101, this MRE replaces the previous estimate dated September 1, 2022. SRK used the same resource estimation procedures and also developed the supporting mineralization models, which were informed by structural and petrographic studies.

The MRE reconciles to within 1 percent of historical mine production at Box when the historically reported process plant recovery of 96 percent is applied, providing additional confidence in the estimate.

Poma Rosa Gold-Copper Project

In Chiapas, Mexico, Poma Rosa hosts the Campamento epithermal gold-silver system with a historical resource of 1.04 Moz gold, measured and indicated, and 0.70 Moz gold inferred, and sits above a large, under-evaluated copper-gold porphyry system evidenced by broad mineralized intercepts, including 601.4 m @ 0.3 percent copper, 0.7 g/t gold and 2.7 g/t silver at Cerro La Mina, and multiple target areas across the tenement.

Fortune Bay is re-establishing community relationships to enable exploration agreements and a restart of field programs, with a pathway that includes updating the historical resource to current NI 43-101 standards and testing porphyry/skarn targets. The Campamento estimate is historical and not treated as current.

Uranium Portfolio

The Murmac and Strike projects are optioned to Aero Energy, while The Woods is optioned to Neu Horizon. Together, they cover more than 60,000 hectares on and near the Athabasca Basin’s northern rim, targeting shallow, basement-hosted high-grade deposits. Drilling at Murmac/Strike has confirmed Athabasca-style mineralization with multiple shallow uranium intercepts. Meanwhile, The Woods offers district-scale potential along the Grease River Shear Zone with extreme surface/lake-sediment uranium anomalism. Fortune Bay remains the operator for these assets, while partners fund exploration, generating non-dilutive income and preserving discovery leverage.

Management Team

Wade Dawe – Executive Chairman

Wade Dawe is an accomplished entrepreneur, financier and investor . He has founded or co-founded a number of successful companies, including Keeper Resources, which was sold for $51.6 million in 2008, and Brigus Gold, which was acquired by Primero Mining in 2014 in an all-share deal valued at $351 million. Dawe is currently a director of TSX-listed Pivot Technology Solutions and of TSXV-listed kneat.com. He holds a Bachelor of Commerce degree from Memorial University (MUN), where he serves on the Advisory Board to the Faculty of Business Administration.

Dale Verran – Chief Executive Officer

Dale Verran is an exploration geologist and mining executive with over 25 years of international experience. He has a track-record of successful project generation, discovery and project advancement, in both Africa and Canada. Prior to joining Fortune Bay, Verran served as vice-president, exploration for Denison Mines, where he was involved in the discovery of over 70 million pounds of U3O8. He is a former executive technical director for a large independent exploration group operating in Africa, Remote Exploration Services, and former exploration manager for Manica Minerals, a private prospect generator company with an extensive multi-commodity portfolio of projects in Africa.

Sarah Oliver – Chief Financial Officer

Sarah Oliver has more than 10 years of experience working in the accounting and finance industries – most recently as the chief financial officer of the predecessor company to Fortune Bay. She worked with PwC Canada in their consulting and deals group and then in their assurance practice, as a senior manager where she assisted her clients through various acquisitions and mergers, public and private financings and advising on accounting policy and control implementation. Oliver has been a chartered professional accountant, chartered accountant since 2007.

Gareth Garlick – VP Technical Services

Gareth Garlick has approximately 25 years of international experience in the mining and mineral exploration industry. He is experienced in all aspects of the mining cycle, ranging from grassroots exploration to resource estimation and resource reconciliation on producing mines, and has been overseeing all of Fortune Bay’s operational and development-related work. Garlick is a registered P.Geo (EGBC) and holds a Bachelor of Science (Honours) in Geology from the University of Cape Town.

This post appeared first on investingnews.com

Kimberly-Clark said on Monday it will buy Tylenol maker Kenvue KVUE.N in a cash-and-stock deal valued at about $48.7 billion, to create one of the biggest consumer health goods companies in the United States.

Shares of Kenvue were up 18% in premarket trading, while Kimberly-Clark‘s shares were down 12.5%.

Kenvue has been under a strategic review, leadership shake-up, and mounting litigation risks. It came under fresh scrutiny following President Donald Trump’s comments linking its popular pain medicine Tylenol to autism.

The deal will bring together brands including Neutrogena, Huggies and Kleenex under a consumer health and personal care company with expected combined annual revenues of roughly $32 billion.

Sources in June told Reuters the strategic review of its operations could include a sale or breakup of the company that had been spun off from healthcare conglomerate Johnson & Johnson JNJ.N in 2023.

Kenvue‘s shareholders will receive $3.50 per share and 0.15 Kimberly-Clark shares for each Kenvue share held. That implies a per-share deal value of $21.01, or an equity value of $40.32 billion, according to Reuters calculations.

This post appeared first on NBC NEWS

Sometimes a big menu can be overwhelming.

The Cincinnati Bengals and Chicago Bears realized that simple is better, limiting their part of the Week 9 menu to only offense. Plenty of points and yards were available in the buffet as the two Midwest teams battled for a much-needed win.

Chicago ultimately walked away with the 47-42 victory, which included a few last-second lead changes. Cincinnati scored a pair of touchdowns with an onside kick recovery in between, totaling 15 points in the final two minutes.

Instead, it was the rookie tight end, Colston Loveland, who got the last laugh for the visitors, scoring the 58-yard touchdown with 17 seconds left.

On a day that included seven lead changes and some gaudy numbers on offense, we’ll do our best to piece together this Week 9 contest. Here’s a look at the Bengals and Bears showdown, by the numbers.

Bengals-Bears by the numbers

1,071

The combined total yards between Cincinnati and Chicago on Sunday. It is about half the amount of total yards gained by the Tennessee Titans (2,196 in nine games), Cleveland Browns (2,108 in eight games) and Arizona Cardinals (2,172 in seven games).

576

…represents the most total yards in a game this season. Chicago’s 576 surpassed the Denver Broncos’ 512 yards that they notched in Week 4 against these same Bengals.

15

Missed tackles. Per NextGenStats, Cincinnati entered Week 9 with a league-high 94 missed tackles for 645 additional yards and managed to add 15 more for 133 yards, including one on Loveland’s game-winning touchdown.

21.78

The top speed that Charlie Jones hit on his kick return touchdown the open the game. It puts the returner into the top 10 of fastest ball carriers during the 2025 season. It represents the seventh-fastest speed entering Week 9.

38

…points are apparently not enough to win. The Bengals scored at least 38 points in back-to-back weeks but lost in heartbreaking fashion to the Jets and the Bears. They are the first team since the 1966 Giants to score at least 38 points in back-to-back games and lose, per ESPN Insights.

The Bengals are also the first team in the Super Bowl era to allow more than 500 total yards, more than 38 points, and have zero takeaways in consecutive games, according to NFL researcher Dante Koplowitz-Fleming.

1961

The last time a Bears rookie tight end finished with at least 100 receiving yards in a game. Loveland joined Mike Ditka in that exclusive club after his 118 yards in Week 9, per NFL researcher Dante Koplowitz-Fleming.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Rookie Dylan Harper left the San Antonio Spurs’ game on Sunday, Nov. 2 against the Phoenix Suns due to an injury.

Harper suffered a calf injury while defending Nick Richards’ dunk attempt during the second quarter.

Harper was ruled out by the team at halftime as a result of the injury.

The rookie guard was seen wincing in pain after initially suffering the injury and later went to the locker room.

The 19-year-old Harper — the No. 2 overall pick in the 2025 draft — had scored 12 points on 5-of-8 shooting in just 11 minutes of play on Sunday. He’s averaging 14.4 points, 4.6 rebounds and 2.4 assists in five games this season.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Eight players earned their first career Gold Glove award while New York Yankees pitcher Max Fried, Cleveland Guardians left fielder Steven Kwan and Chicago Cubs left fielder Ian Happ each won their fourth career Gold Gloves when this season’s winners were announced Sunday night.

Fried becomes the fourth Yankee pitcher to win a Gold Glove, the first since Mike Mussina in 2008. He won three consecutive Gold Gloves with the Atlanta Braves between 2020-22.

Kwan’s streak of four straight Gold Gloves in as many major league seasons is the third-longest streak to begin a career in history, trailing only Ichiro Suzuki and Nolan Arenado, who each began their careers with 10 consecutive Gold Gloves.

Happ also won his fourth consecutive award after leading all National League players with +9 defensive runs saved.

The list of first-time winners included Detroit catcher Dillon Dingler, Twins/Blue Jays first baseman Ty France, Royals third baseman Maikel Garcia, Red Sox center fielder Ceddanne Rafaela, St. Louis shortstop Masyn Wynn, Cubs center fielder Pete Crow-Armstrong, Giants pitcher Logan Webb and Marlins utility player Javier Sanoja.

The Platinum Glove awards, given out to the best defensive player in each league, will be announced Nov. 7.

Here are the 2025 Gold Glove Award winners:

American League

Pitcher: Max Fried, Yankees (4th)

Catcher: Dillon Dingler, Tigers (1st)

First base: Ty France, Twins/Blue Jays (1st)

Second base: Marcus Semien, Rangers (2nd)

Third base: Maikel Garcia, Royals (1st)

Shortstop: Bobby Witt Jr., Royals (2nd)

Left field: Steven Kwan, Guardians (4th)

Center field: Ceddanne Rafaela, Red Sox (1st)

Right field: Wilyer Abreu, Red Sox (2nd)

Utility: Mauricio Dubon, Astros (2nd)

National League

Pitcher: Logan Webb, Giants (1st)

Catcher: Patrick Bailey, Giants (2nd)

First base: Matt Olson, Braves (3rd)

Second base: Nico Hoerner, Cubs (2nd)

Third base: Ke’Bryan Hayes, Pirates/Reds (2nd)

Shortstop: Masyn Wynn, Cardinals (1st)

Left field: Ian Happ, Cubs (4th)

Center field: Pete Crow-Armstrong, Cubs (1st)

Right field: Fernando Tatis Jr., Padres (2nd)

Utility: Javier Sanoja, Marlins (1st)

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

  • DE Trey Hendrickson had an NFL-high 35 sacks between the 2023 and ’24 seasons.
  • Cincinnati fell to 3-6 after another awful home loss Sunday to Chicago.
  • The Bengals defense has been terrible in recent years despite Hendrickson’s exploits.

The Cincinnati Bengals have shown progress in recent years, insomuch as they don’t completely resemble a franchise operating as if the Reagan administration was still in effect – though the franchise’s heyday did coincide with Ronnie’s political peak.

But if the Stripes’ (needed) evolution is going to take a quantum leap, they need to face reality and deal defensive end Trey Hendrickson ahead of the NFL’s trade deadline, which expires at 4 p.m. ET on Tuesday.

Cincinnati miraculously lost 47-42 at home to the Chicago Bears on Sunday, dropping its record to 3-6 after surrendering 30 points in the second half. Injured quarterback Joe Burrow is nowhere in sight, and neither is a postseason berth for the Bengals – and they didn’t manage to qualify for the playoffs last season, when Burrow and Hendrickson were fully healthy. Yet after pouring hundreds of millions into the roster this year, basically to keep last year’s failed 9-8 edition intact, it’s high time to look to the future.

Burrow suffered a toe injury in Week 2 and hasn’t played since. He may or may not return next month. Hendrickson, who held out of the team’s offseason program and the early part of training camp before extracting a deserved raise for the 2025 season, has been dealing with a hip issue and has missed most of the past three games – inactive in Week 7 and again on Sunday. He’s scheduled to reach free agency in March.

Rather than let him do that – and likely get no more (eventually) than a third-round compensatory pick in return – Bengals owner Mike Brown should break with organizational form and induce a bidding war for the man who is, by far, his best defender. Hendrickson should spark quite a market considering the valuable position he plays, his historical level of production – his 17½ sacks last season topped the NFL, and his 35 spanning the 2023 and ’24 campaigns were also the most league-wide – and, given the fact he’s still only 30 years old, an acquiring team might be willing to offer a little more to get him, then take the opportunity to extend his contract.

It was pretty clear after their summer standoff that Hendrickson and the Bengals wouldn’t be renewing their vows, even if Brown – and he still seems to think NFL contracts should be ironclad commitments – correctly caved to bring the four-time Pro Bowler’s compensation appreciably nearer to peers like Myles Garrett, T.J. Watt, Maxx Crosby and others, that trio set to earn more than double (based on average annual value) the $16 million Hendrickson was initially due. After doling out nine-figure, multi-year extensions to wideouts Ja’Marr Chase and Tee Higgins in March – at the urging of Burrow – Brown begrudgingly agreed at the end of August to pay Hendrickson $29 million in sum for 2025.

But now? Brown can literally cut his losses while benefiting from what is shaping up as a sellers’ market.

Though limited recently by his hip, Hendrickson has remained his typically productive self when on the field, collecting four sacks and, per PFF, 23 pressures this season despite playing for a defense on which he’s pretty much the lone threat opposing offensive coordinators fret about while devising their game plans. And given, much like last year, that the Bengals don’t have a snowball’s chance unless they score at least 30 points, what’s the point? Cincinnati wisely obtained veteran quarterback Joe Flacco to fill in for Burrow when it became clear previous understudy Jake Browning wasn’t up to the task. But after a 33-31 upset of the Pittsburgh Steelers in Week 7, the Bengals lost to the previously winless New York Jets 39-38 before Flacco futilely passed for 470 yards and four TDs in Sunday’s defeat.

Now? It’s over for this team.

On the other side of a Week 10 bye await the Steelers, Patriots, Bills and revitalized Ravens (twice). On the other side of 2025 awaits the task of overhauling a double agent defense, a task Cincy has kicked down the road even while placating Burrow with the offensive firepower he’s demanded – for all the good it’s done since the team reached Super Bowl 56 at the end of the 2021 season and then the 2022 AFC championship game. The Bengals D hasn’t ranked better than 25th overall since the start of the 2023 season.

And while Brown has been historically reluctant to hand out top-of the-market contracts – though he’s made progress there with Burrow and Chase – it’s time for him to get comfortable with significant midseason deals and (gasp!) eating some dead cap money ($15.7 million in Hendrickson’s case) … though he wouldn’t have to pay the remainder of his $16 million base salary for 2025. What he might add is something in the neighborhood of a second-round pick or at least a package with an equivalent value to fortify a defense that’s put so much inordinate pressure on Burrow and, now, Flacco. And, according to various reports Sunday morning (including one by FOX NFL insider Jay Glazer), the Bengals might finally be open to taking calls on Hendrickson given their increasingly apparent predicament.

It’s an easier concept to grasp than Reaganomics and might eventually help Burrow and Co. get a long-awaited Lombardi Trophy, the quarterback once boasting Cincinnati’s championship window was open as long as he was active. So far, the Burrow-era Bengals haven’t delivered the 57-year-old organization’s first title. But maybe by dealing Hendrickson – plus, perhaps, corner Cam Taylor-Britt and others – while embracing the way NFL business is conducted in the 21st century, they might finally get to the promised land.

Trey Hendrickson landing spots?

New England Patriots: With more than $51 million in available cap space, per Over The Cap, plus a surplus of 2026 draft picks boosted by deals consummated just last week, they have the money and draft capital to make Cincinnati a compelling offer while potentially providing Hendrickson a home he can thrive in to finish out his career.

Dallas Cowboys: Only the Patriots have a bigger cap overage than Jerry Jones’ $30 million. And his depleted defense certainly could use capable reinforcements given how it’s failed to recover from the summer trade of DE Micah Parsons to the Green Bay Packers. Parsons’ departure did line Jones’ draft coffers, though it’s hard to see him parting with one of his extra first-rounders for Hendrickson.

Detroit Lions: They just gave DE Aidan Hutchinson a four-year, $180 million extension. But there’s money left over for a team that’s also Super Bowl-caliber – and could certainly use another relentless QB hunter opposite its newly minted star.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY