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Former Bengals, Cowboys LB Logan Wilson Retires
Sam Greene/The Enquirer / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

Early this afternoon, linebacker Logan Wilson took to Instagram to bid farewell to his brief NFL career. After only six years of play at the professional level, the 29-year-old defender has announced his retirement.

Growing up in Wyoming, Wilson was an All-State athlete starting in his sophomore year of high school. By his junior and senior seasons, Wilson was earning All-State honors on offense (WR), defense (S), and special teams (P). Even though he was an All-State athlete, the fact that that state was Wyoming limited the amount of interest he received from colleges. He only received scholarship offers from Weber State and Wyoming and chose to stay in-state with the Cowboys. After redshirting his freshman season, Wilson was a full-time starter as a redshirt freshman and continued in that role for three years after that. His 421 total tackles are the fourth-most in school history.

The Bengals drafted the first-team All-Mountain West linebacker in the third round of the 2020 NFL draft. Though he only started two games as a rookie, he was constantly rotating in, and by the midpoint of the season, he was on the field for over half team’s defensive snaps. By the start of Year 2, Wilson had replaced Josh Bynes as a starting linebacker, and he finished the season as the team’s leading tackler, a feat he would repeat in each of the next two years, earning a four-year, $37.25MM extension. He likely would’ve accomplished the feat for four straight years, but a season-ending knee surgery ended his 2024 campaign after just 11 games.

Injuries had needled Wilson over the course of his NFL career, but that season-ending injury was the first time he had missed more than three weeks in a row. He only ever participated in every game of a season once, in 2023. That year he recorded career highs in total tackles (135), tackles for loss (5), passes defensed (9), and interceptions (4).

In 2025, Wilson started the season as a starter at inside linebacker, but as the team started limiting his time and giving more opportunities to Clemson fourth-round rookie Barrett Carter, Wilson requested a trade, and Cincinnati moved him to the Cowboys to honor that request, receiving just a seventh-round pick in the process. While he didn’t regain a starting role in Dallas, he was able to retain a decent rotation. In the aftermath of the season, the Cowboys waived Wilson to free up a considerable amount of cap space from the remaining years of his extension.

Over the course of his brief career, Wilson proved to be an effective, versatile linebacker when healthy. He finishes his NFL career with 565 total tackles, 11 interceptions, 26 passes defensed, seven forced fumbles, 5.5 sacks, 19 tackles for loss, and 18 quarterback hits. In his retirement post, Wilson expressed thanks for getting to live out his NFL dream as a kid from Wyoming.

This article first appeared on Pro Football Rumors and was syndicated with permission.

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