CINCINNATI (AP) -All the elements are in place for the Cincinnati Bengals to finally air it out.
The Bengals (8-3) have morphed from a four-win team into the AFC North leader by changing the way they do things on offense. Instead of having Carson Palmer throw the ball around, he\’s handing off to one of the most balanced running attacks in the league.
Surely, with Detroit\’s last-ranked pass defense coming to town, it\’s a good time to let it fly.
“That\’s not our offense,\’\’ said receiver Chad Ochocinco, who spends far more time blocking than catching these days. “It\’s not what we do. We are a Nebraska-style, run-the-ball (offense). We\’ve got everything in except the option. That\’s what we do.\’\’
The new style has taken them a long way. They\’re one victory from clinching only their second winning record in the last 19 years and moving one step closer to the division title.
low down Cleveland\’s historically bad passing game two weeks ago. Brady Quinn threw for a career-high 304 yards and four touchdowns in Detroit\’s 38-37 win.
How bad is the Lions\’ pass defense? To put it in perspective, Quinn and the Browns visited Cincinnati last week and managed a total of 169 yards altogether, the fewest by a Bengals opponent in 26 years.
Now, imagine what Carson Palmer and company could do if they tried.
Will they? Or will they stay with the grind-it-out style that actually had the home fans booing during a 16-7 win over the Browns last Sunday at Paul Brown Stadium?
“We\’ve taken heat for that, but it\’s been a winning formula for us, and it\’s been a winning formula in this league,\’\’ said Palmer, who threw for only 110 yards against Cleveland. “We\’re going to go about our business the way we have for the past however many weeks. If the pass is there, we\’ll take it. But we\’re run-first.\’\’
He\’s not exaggerating. The Bengals haven\’t thrown for more than 261 yards in any game this season. Palmer hasn\’t passed for 300 yards since the final game of the 2007 season – he missed all but four last year because of an elbow injury.
The elbow is fine, but the emphasis has changed. The Bengals now load up with extra blockers, going with a power style that has been highly efficient. They\’ve had three running backs top 100 yards in a game this season: Cedric Benson, Bernard Scott and Larry Johnson. The only other time in franchise history that three Bengals rushed for triple-digits in one season was 1970.
The Lions would like to evolve into an offense more like Cincinnati\’s. The Lions are averaging less than 100 yards rushing per game, putting the onus on rookie quarterback Matthew Stafford, who spends his time trying to duplicate that 38-point performance against the Browns.
“I think we played pretty well in that game,\’\’ Stafford said. “We made some big, explosive plays and we\’ve got some talented guys that can make plays like that. Hopefully we\’ll see more of that these last five games.\’\’
His coach would rather take a different approach – one more like the Bengals\’ plan.
“We shouldn\’t be throwing it 50 times a game,\’\’ coach Jim Schwartz said. “That\’s one thing we need to point to. You take a lot of lessons from the Bengals and what they went through (last year), starting 1-11-1.
“Their last three games last year, they beat the Redskins, Browns and Chiefs. That\’s when Cedric Benson and their running game really began to emerge. Cedric ran for, like 350 yards, and they won all three. That sort of propelled them into this season. Even though it was a bad season for them last year, the way they finished helped them, and we need to do the same thing.\’\’
First, they have to stop Benson, back after missing two games with a sprained hip. During his absence, Scott and Johnson each had a 100-yard game.
Benson has four 100-yard games this season, one shy of the franchise record shared by five players. When Johnson ran for 107 yards against Cleveland, Benson bristled over questions whether his role might be reduced when he was back from his injury.
He wants to reclaim his role as leading rusher against Detroit.
“It\’s no fun standing on the sideline,\’\’ Benson said. “I had a lot of good things – still have a lot of good things – going this season, and I\’m just excited about getting back into it.\’\’
After the win over Cleveland, Ochocinco lobbied for the Bengals to throw the ball 50 times against the Lions. A few days later, after coaches and teammates had talked to him, he was back to accepting his new role as a lower luminary in the offense.
“We\’ve been successful with the run, so I think it will be in our best interest to stay with the run, especially with Cedric back with us,\’\’ Ochocinco said. “Us the receiving corps? We\’re no different than insurance. You need us, we\’ll be there.\’\’
Add A Comment