The clock is ticking, and the Cincinnati Bengals may not get a better opportunity to fix their defense than this. Caleb Downs isn’t just a top prospect; he’s a near-perfect fit – at least according to Matt Bowen of Sports Illustrated, who recently paired the top prospects in the 2026 NFL Draft with their ideal teams.
Bowen tabbed Downs as not just a logical option, but as one of the cleanest schematic matches in the class. With the draft set for April 23, the former Ohio State star could be a no-brainer selection if the board breaks Cincinnati’s way.
“I think Downs could go higher in the top 10, but this was the best fit in my eyes after the Bengals signed safety Bryan Cook in free agency,” Bowen wrote. “Under coordinator Al Golden, Downs would be an interchangeable safety. He could rotate low in the single-high zone while playing over the top from depth. Plus, with Downs’ ability to disrupt the line of scrimmage, Golden can play him as a big nickelback in three-safety personnel. He has the urgent play demeanor to set the identity of Cincinnati’s defense.”
If Cincinnati can pull the trigger on Downs, the safety room would go from a question mark to a strength in a single offseason. He would join Bryan Cook, who the Bengals grabbed in free agency away from Kansas City, Kyle Dugger, who the team signed from Pittsburgh, and Jordan Battle, who had a good finish to the 2025 campaign, to form a versatile trio. The team already signaled urgency at the position when it allowed Geno Stone to walk while investing heavily in Cook.
Duke Tobin, Cincinnati’s director of player personnel and de facto general manager, made it clear at the 2026 NFL Combine that improvement on defense, and especially at safety, is about more than just one player.
“I’m not going to say that anybody was the cause of our defensive fall this year,” Tobin said. “The group has to play better as a whole.”
Tobin emphasized the traits Cincinnati covets: instincts, range, coverage ability, and physicality in space—qualities that happen to align closely with Downs’ scouting profile.
“You want instinctive guys who see the big picture,” Tobin said. “They have to have speed to cover. If they can cover in man, that really opens up a lot of opportunities for you. They have to be willing to tackle in the box… Defense is reacting to what the offense does. They’ve gotta see it, react to it, and play fast.”
That description reads less like a wish list and more like a blueprint for Downs.
If he’s available when Cincinnati is on the clock, the decision will not require much debate.
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