Tag: cincinnati bengals

  • What Does The Future Hold For Tee Higgins?

    What Does The Future Hold For Tee Higgins?

    by Chris Ball

    Loveland, Ohio – Injuries derailed so much of the promise last season for the Bengals. While the most crucial was to Joe Burrow, Tee Higgins also missed five games due to various injuries and was limited to just 42 receptions, the lowest total of his career. It was very bad timing in a contract year for a player who surely wanted to show the Bengals and the league that he was deserving of a big payday.

    That leaves Higgins and the Bengals in a very unique position this offseason. The team has $53.2 million in cap space which is good for sixth-most in the NFL. There is money to spend , but also plenty of needs to fill including an impending mega-extension for Ja’Marr Chase.

    This is why many Bengals pundits believe that the Franchise Tag is the most likely option with respect to Higgins’ contract status going forward. Briefly, the Franchise Tag a would allow the Bengals to retain Higgins at a salary that reflects the average of the top five players at his position or 120% of his previous salary – whichever figure is higher. There are two types of “tags” the exclusive tag, which would prevent Tee from negotiating with any other team and would fully guarantee his salary.

    The other is the non-exclusive tag which allows players to negotiate with other teams even if they are tagged. If Tee reaches a deal with another team, the Bengals would retain the right to match the deal if they wish. If they choose not to match and Tee signs somewhere else the Bengals would receive a pair of first-round picks as compensation for losing him.

    The average salary of the top five wide receivers would mean that if the Franchise Tag is applied to Tee his potential contract would be for one year at $20.7 million. Bengals fans may recall that this was the track taken by the team with respect to Jessie Bates who played out his year on the Franchise Tag before signing with the Atlanta Falcons last year. It wasn’t a very pretty process as Bates skipped all offseason workouts and much of training camp before finally signing his contract for the year. And just as with Higgins, there were logistical issues in offering Bates a lucrative long-term deal given the need for yet another gargantuan contract the following year for an irreplaceable star player: Joe Burrow.

    It seems unlikely that the Bengals and Higgins will reach an agreement on any sort of extension, though it is a possibility. That leaves the Franchise Tag as the most viable option. The Bengals must tag Higgins by March 5 but the two sides can still negotiate for a longer deal. If they can’t agree by July 15 then (if put in place) the tag becomes official and Tee would be playing on the one-year contract.

    That isn’t necessarily the end of the story, however. There is a question as to whether Tee Higgins would play under the tag. Though it’s rare, players have threatened to sit out an entire season rather than play under the cloud of a one-year contract. While it’s too early to predict what Higgins’ reaction might be, contract talks and the millions of dollars at issue rarely lead to simple or clean solutions.

    The Bengals could apply the tag to Higgins and then trade him to another team that could then work out a longer contract, which is commonly referred to as a “tag and trade.” However, the Bengals are not known for even normal trades much less trades of players playing under the Franchise Tag.

    If Tee Higgins is back for another year, no matter how that’s accomplished, it will undoubtedly be a good thing for this team. Yes, he was injured last year and had some issues with drops, but he showed that he still can be a dynamic and impactful wide receiver. You have no further to look than his 80-yard touchdown against the Steelers to see that when healthy he is a top tier wide receiver.

    Tyler Boyd is gone, Charlie Jones and Andrei Iosivas are young and developing. The Bengals have no consistent threats at tight end. A healthy and productive Tee Higgins punishes teams for double teaming Ja’Marr Chase and frees him up to run deeper routes. Higgins is athletic for his size and strong enough to out muscle most corners in the NFL.

    Even if it is for one year at 20 million, getting Tee Higgins on the field for this team in 2024 is an absolute priority. The window for the Bengals to win and make deep playoff runs will not stay open forever, especially as superstars like Chase (rightfully) will be paid vast sums of money, shrinking the pie for other players on this team.

    While that window is open, the Bengals must do whatever is necessary to put the best players on the field. Players like Tee Higgins.


    Christopher Ball is a longtime Loveland resident and an attorney. He graduated from Loveland High School in 2003 and was a member of the football team before going on to become a coach’s assistant at DePauw University in Greencastle, Indiana. He has been following and rooting for the Reds and Bengals since the early 1990s and has been through the many ups and downs that fandom has wrought over the years.

  • Bengals sign former Loveland High School standout QB Drew Plitt to practice squad

    Bengals sign former Loveland High School standout QB Drew Plitt to practice squad

    Loveland Magazine file photo of Drew Plitt visiting Loveland High School in 2018

    Loveland, Ohio – The Cincinnati Bengals signed former Loveland High School standout, QB Drew Plitt to their practice squad today. Plitt (6-2, 217), a first-year player out of Ball State University, originally was a college free agent signee of the Bengals in 2022. He played in two preseason games for Cincinnati in 2022 before being waived, and was not with an NFL team during the ’22 regular season and ’23 offseason. Plitt played in five games for the Arlington Renegades of the XFL during the 2023 season.

    The Bengals play the Pittsburgh Steelers at 1 PM in Paycor Stadium this Sunday.

    Drew Plitt QB’d the Loveland Tigers when they won the State Championship in 2013
  • Rickey Mulvey:  Stadium Sponsors – Buy or Sell?

    Rickey Mulvey: Stadium Sponsors – Buy or Sell?

    Former Loveland Magazine Intern and Loveland native Ricky Mulvey talks about Hamilton County naming rights.

    NFL Football is back this week, should you be keeping an eye on the companies plastered on the side of stadiums?

    Ricky Mulvey and Dylan Lewis discuss:

    – Why stadium sponsors generally don’t outperform their peers or the market.

    – When major sponsorships do and don’t make sense as part of a marketing budget.

    – Monster Energy’s brilliance in focusing on extreme sports.

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  • Numerous sources: Loveland’s Drew Plitt headed to Bengal training camp

    Numerous sources: Loveland’s Drew Plitt headed to Bengal training camp

    Loveland, Ohio – Geoff Hobson the Senior Writer for Bengals.com reported yesterday, “Bengals head coach Zac Taylor said after Friday’s practice that they’ll be without quarterback Joe Burrow for several weeks and wouldn’t say what that means for the Sept. 10 opener in Cleveland.”

    Drew Plitt (Loveland Magazine file photo)

    Chris Roling in the Bengals Wire wrote yesterday, “In the wake of the injury to quarterback Joe Burrow, Cincinnati Bengals head coach  Zac Taylor had confirmed the team will add another quarterback to take training camp and preseason reps with Trevor Siemian and Jake Browning.

    “Not too long after that revelation, NFL Network’s Ian Rapoport reported that the Bengals hosted quarterbacks Reid Sinnett and Drew Plitt on workouts.

    “Plitt is the name Bengals fans will recognize. A Loveland High School product, Plitt was with the team last summer before going on to find success in the XFL.”

    Ian Rapoport the “National Insider for NFL Network and NFL.com.” has reported, “With #Bengals QB Joe Burrow sidelined for several weeks with a calf strain, Cincy is working out two former XFL QBs — Reid Sinnett and Drew Plitt (who was with the #Bengals in camp last year).
    There has been no official statement about Pitt from the Bengals.
    Plitt has been with the Arlington Renegades of the the XFL.

    Plitt has previous experience playing in the pre-season opener for the Bengals. Loveland Magazine reported in August, 2022, “The only thing that stopped six-for-six Bengal rookie Drew Plitt Friday night at the 2022 pre-season opener in the newly renamed Paycor Stadium was when he found the endzone via a 25 yd. floater to wide-receiver Kendric Pryor. Plitt threw for 77 yds with a perfect rating of 158.33. Plitt completed the Bengals’ first touchdown in Paycor Stadium history.” (Only one thing stopped six-for-six Bengal rookie Drew Plitt Friday…)

    Plitt went to high school in Loveland, Ohio where he played quarterback for the Tigers. His biggest achievement at Loveland was leading the school to the 2013 Division II state title which was the school’s first state championship ever. In 2015, he threw for over 1,400 yards with 15 passing touchdowns and three rushing touchdowns in ten games. He was the team captain and was honorable mention all-district as a senior.

  • Get To Know Arlington Renegades Quarterback Loveland native Drew Plitt

    Get To Know Arlington Renegades Quarterback Loveland native Drew Plitt

    [learn_more] Content goes here[/learn_more] [vc_row][vc_column][vc_column_text]by

    Drew Plitt has been with the Arlington Renegades since day one, but his past success is what has brought him here to the XFL as one of the few rookie quarterbacks.

    High School Football Experience

    Photo by The Enquirer

    Plitt went to high school in Loveland, Ohio where he played quarterback for the Tigers. His biggest achievement at Loveland was leading the school to the 2013 Division II state title which was the school’s first state championship ever. In 2015, he threw for over 1,400 yards with 15 passing touchdowns and three rushing touchdowns in ten games. He was the team captain and was honorable mention all-district as a senior.

    While deciding which college to go to, Plitt had offers from Ball State, Bowling Green, Eastern Michigan, and Lafayette. In the end, he decided to pick Ball State as the college of his choice. His former high school head coach Fred Cranford told Cincinnati.com what kind of quarterback the school was going to get.

    “Drew’s quarterback style and talent will allow him to be crazy successful there. Ball State is getting a championship, high character quarterback. Ball State loves his talent and style, his leadership and quarterback intangibles.”

    Loveland Head Football Coach Fred Cranford via Cincinnati.com

    Ball State Experience

    Photo by Mike DiNovoUSA TODAY Sports

     

    In his first year in college back in 2016, Plitt was redshirted for the season as a freshman. The next year in 2017, he started the season as the fourth quarterback on the depth chart. Due to injuries to the quarterback position, Plitt was forced into action and played in the last five games of the season starting three of them. He finished his first season with 430 passing yards and three touchdowns along with three interceptions. Plitt also ran for 29 yards and one touchdown in the season.

    Read full story with video, NFL (Cincinnati Bengal) experience and more…[/vc_column_text][/vc_column][/vc_row]

  • Official statements from Cincinnati Bengals, Buffalo Bills, and NFL

    Official statements from Cincinnati Bengals, Buffalo Bills, and NFL

    Photo by Cincinnati Bengals

    7:36 AM – Tuesday, January 3, 2023

    Up-dated at 8:38 AM with this Buffalo Bills Statement

    The Buffalo Bills issued the following statement at 1:48 am on Damar Hamlin’s condition.

    Photo by Buffalo Bills

    “Damar Hamlin suffered a cardiac arrest following a hit in the Buffalo Bills’ game versus the Cincinnati Bengals. His heartbeat was restored on the field and he was transferred to the University of Cincinnati Medical Center for further testing and treatment. He is currently sedated and listed in critical condition.”

    Hamlin’s injury took place at the 5:58 mark of the first quarter. The game was postponed by the NFL after Hamlin received medical attention on the field.

    The team and all of the sports world continue to pray for his recovery. Get well soon Damar!

    Statement: Cincinnati Bengals

    The Bills at Bengals game has been suspended until further notice. We will provide more details as they are available.

    From Bengals.com:

    The Bengals’ Monday night game against the Bills at Paycor Stadium was postponed when Bills safety Damar Hamlin was taken from the field in critical condition.

    Hamlin went down with 5:58 left in the first quarter when he tackled Bengals wide receiver Tee Higgins after what appeared to be routine a 13-yard gain. He got up and then suddenly collapsed.

    NFL commissioner Roger Goodell said Hamlin received immediate medical attention on the field by team and independent medical staff and local paramedics. He was then transported to University of Cincinnati Medical Center.

    “Our thoughts are with Damar and the Buffalo Bills,” Goodell said in the statement. “We will provide more information as it becomes available. The NFL has been in constant communication with the NFL Players Association, which is in agreement with postponing the game.”

    A pall quickly fell over the most anticipated Monday Night Football game in recent memory that was not only taking place before a national television audience but in front of an overflow crowd thought to be the biggest crowd in Paycor history.

    Hamlin, 24, is a second-year player from the University of Pittsburgh.

    In a midnight media conference call, Troy Vincent, the NFL’s executive vice president of football operations, said the decision to postpone the game came after the head coaches, Zac Taylor of the Bengals and Sean McDermott of the Bills, met with their teams back in the locker rooms.

    “It was fluid and things were changing by the minute. The emotions you can imagine in both locker rooms,” said Vincent, who along with NFL commissioner Roger Goodell and NFL Players Association executive director DeMaurice Smith were patched into conversations with the coaches and head referee Shawn Smith.

    “I commend both of those coaches. Tough situation to go back and look at 53 men in the locker room to just try and calm people down. It was obvious on the phone with them that emotions were extremely high. It was a very volatile situation and I think the coaches, they led tonight. They led their locker rooms.”

    Vincent said there was no thought of resuming the game after a five-minute delay.

    “Five-minute warmup never crossed my mind, personally. And I was the one,” Vincent said, “that was communicating with the Commissioner. We never, frankly, it never crossed our mind to talk about warming up to resume play. That’s ridiculous. That’s insensitive. And that’s not a place that we should ever be in.”

    Jeff Miller, NFL executive vice president of communications, public affairs & policy, said there has been no thought about how the league plans to address the unprecedented postponement when it comes to a future date. It won’t be Tuesday. The Bills planned to fly home Monday night, although the league said some of Hamlin’s teammates stayed behind to be with him.

    “That’s not the consideration right now,” Miller said. “Our concern is for the player and his well-being. At the appropriate time, I’m sure that we’ll have a conversation around the next steps regarding the game.”

    The Official Statement from the NFL:

    Tonight’s Buffalo Bills-Cincinnati Bengals game has been postponed after Buffalo Bills’ Damar Hamlin collapsed, NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell announced.

    Hamlin received immediate medical attention on the field by team and independent medical staff and local paramedics. He was then transported to a local hospital where he is in critical condition.

    Our thoughts are with Damar and the Buffalo Bills. We will provide more information as it becomes available.

    The NFL has been in constant communication with the NFL Players Association which is in agreement with postponing the game.

    The NFL Network:

    Bills safety Damar Hamlin in critical condition after suffering cardiac arrest; Buffalo-Cincinnati game postponed

    Buffalo Bills safety Damar Hamlin, 24, suffered a cardiac arrest after making a tackle during Monday night’s game against the Cincinnati Bengals, the Bills announced early Tuesday morning. He is currently sedated and in critical condition.

    With just over six minutes remaining in the first quarter Monday night, Hamlin tackled Bengals wide receiver Tee Higgins after a 13-yard catch. Hamlin got to his feet, then collapsed backward. Hamlin received CPR while on the field. According to the Bills, his heartbeat was restored on the field before he was transported in an ambulance to the University of Cincinnati Medical Center for further testing and treatment.

    After initially suspending play, the NFL announced the game had been postponed.

    “Our thoughts are with Damar and the Buffalo Bills,” the NFL said in a statement on Monday. “We will provide more information as it becomes available. The NFL has been in constant communication with the NFL Players Association which is in agreement with postponing the game.”

    The NFLPA said it had been in touch with both teams and the league, and is focused on Hamlin’s “health and well-being.”

    Hamlin was attended to immediately by medical staff, with players from both teams surrounding him, many of them visibly emotional. After Hamlin was taken to the hospital, officials spoke with coaches from both teams. The decision was then made to suspend play, with players and coaches exiting the field to the locker room, before the game was ultimately postponed.

    On a conference call with the media a couple hours after the game’s postponement, NFL executive vice president of personnel Troy Vincent said there was never any conversation about a five-minute warmup period to resume play, as was referenced during the ESPN broadcast.

    “It never crossed our mind to talk about warming up to resume play,” Vincent said. “That’s ridiculous. That’s insensitive.”

    Bills players were scheduled to travel back to Buffalo from Cincinnati on Monday night, with a handful of members from the organization staying back to support Hamlin, Vincent said. Members of the Bengals organization, including head coach Zac Taylor, also went to the hospital to check on Hamlin, NFL Network’s Cameron Wolfe reported.

    There are currently no plans to resume the Bills-Bengals game and a determination on that will be made at an appropriate time, NFL EVP of communications, public affairs and policy Jeff Miller said on the conference call. The game was halted with six minutes remaining in the first quarter and the Bengals leading, 7-3.

    Since his hospitalization, there has been an outpouring of support to a community fundraiser Hamlin previously established.

    Hamlin was a sixth-round pick of the Bills in the 2021 NFL Draft. He made his first career start in Week 3 of this season after Buffalo safety Micah Hyde sustained a season-ending injury. Hamlin has remained in the starting lineup ever since.

  • Zac Taylor Signs Contract Extension

    Zac Taylor Signs Contract Extension

    Hobson_Geoff

    Geoff Hobson

    Bengals.com Senior Writer

    Three years ago, the day after the Super Bowl, Zac Taylor signed on to coach the Bengals.

    Three days after this Super Bowl, Taylor signed an extension through 2026 before heading to Wednesday’s Washington Park rally honoring his Bengals and their just-miss loss to the Rams in Super Bowl LVI.

    “He’s a good young coach,” said Bengals president Mike Brown, back in his Paul Brown Stadium office handwriting thank you notes to his well-wishers.

    “Zac has come into the league and worked to develop the foundations for a winning program that can be successful over time. The fruits of Zac’s efforts were seen this year, and Zac is well-regarded by our players and coaches. I know the effort and passion Zac brings to the building and to our team, and I am pleased by his approach. And I think the city of Cincinnati sees him the way the players and I do. He’s brought excitement to the town and deserves credit and recognition for that.”

    It was Brown and the city that Taylor acknowledged with game balls after the Bengals won their first playoff in game in 31 years, a thrilling 26-19 Wild Card win in a sea of sound supplied by the largest Paul Brown Stadium crowd ever.

    After linebacker Germaine Pratt’s interception at the Bengals 2 with 12 seconds left, Taylor pointed to Brown’s patience through the 6-25-1 record of his first two seasons. Then he went to Mount Lookout Tavern to hand out some game balls to fans, igniting a playoff tradition. 

    “If I coached in any other organization in football, I probably wouldn’t be here right now in my third year. That’s the truth,” Taylor said.

    The patience paid off when a team that lost 13 one-score games in that stretch became the first team in history to win three straight postseason games by just 13 points.

    And after Taylor began his career unable to win his first 15 road games, he delivered the franchise’s first two road playoff victories.  

    “He’s excelled managing the team. When he first started, he was someone who had dealt with one side of the ball. I think he’s learned to manage the whole thing,” said assistant head coach and special teams coordinator Darrin Simmons.

    “It just comes from experience. He has a great way with our players. When he talks to them, it’s heartfelt. It’s to the point, but heartfelt and everybody listens to what he says and they take what he says to heart. It’s well thought out. It’s structured. All the guys that matter are listening. He’s also helped select the right guys to build the foundation and get the culture he wants.”

    220122-Burrow-Joe_dropback

    Mike Brown spent his first years in pro football watching his father, Browns head coach Paul Brown, dominate the game in the 1950s with quarterback Otto Graham. That cemented his belief that the coach and the quarterback are at the top of the list when it comes to winning in the NFL and he’s got faith in the team of Taylor and Joe Burrow.  

    Then as he helped his father build the expansion Bengals, he saw how patience could be a virtue.

    “I watched what he did. He was doing a good job when sometimes the results weren’t what we wanted,” Brown said. “There were reasons for it. Once we got Joe in the harness and some other guys playing the way they can play, we got to the point where we can pretty much play with anybody.”

    It was also not lost on the offensive-minded Brown that the 2021 Bengals scored 444 points in the 16 games the starters played. That was four short of the franchise record set by the iconic 1988 offense. Clearly, he likes the new wave offense Taylor runs. 

    “In this league, if you want to get to where you wish, getting to the Super Bowl, you need a lot of things,” Brown said. “All of those are important. But certain people, and I would be one, would say the most important part is being able to score. These days 30 points is at a level you’re able to win week in and week out. It’s something we’re shooting for in the future. We have the ability to do it if we’re going right. Zac is the reason we can do that. It’s his system. He teaches it effectively and our guys have bought into it.”

  • No Storybook Ending As Bengals Come Up Short , 23-20, In Super Bowl LVI

    No Storybook Ending As Bengals Come Up Short , 23-20, In Super Bowl LVI

    Hobson_Geoff

    Geoff Hobson

    Bengals.com Senior Writer

    INGLEWOOD, Calif. – In the Hollywood foothills Sunday, the Bengals took an improbable story that would have been rejected by any scriptwriter in town, but couldn’t produce their first ever Lombardi Trophy in heartbreaking 23-20 loss to the Rams on the steamy sound stage of Super Bowl LVI.

    The Bengals were creeping to rookie kicker Evan McPherson’s field goal range with 40 seconds left at midfield on fourth-and-one, but the Rams future Hall-of-Fame defensive tackle Aaron Donald made the signature play when he nearly sacked quarterback Joe Burrow and made him get rid of a desperate throw that had no shot. The play defined how the L.A. pass rush took over the game with a Super Bowl-record tying seven sacks.

    The Bengals defense that had supplied so much magic at the end of games in this postseason, couldn’t conjure up any more. It incurred three penalties in 10 seconds inside the 10 inside two minutes.

    It set up Rams quarterback Matthew Stafford’s rolling one-yard flip to wide receiver Cooper Kupp with 85 seconds left to give them the margin of victory. It was Kupp’s second touchdown of the game and gave him 92 yards and the Super Bowl MVP trophy against a stubborn defense that deserved a better fate.

    With 1:47 left from the 8, linebacker Logan Wilson was called for a hold on Kupp. Then a TD was wiped away by offsetting penalties, a Rams’ hold and roughing on Bengals safety Vonn Bell. Again on Kupp. Then cornerback Eli Apple was called for holding Kupp and that put the ball on the Bengals 1.

    The Rams pass rush, docile in the first half with just one sack in the last minute, erupted in the second half and their record-tying seventh sack was particularly vicious early in the fourth quarter and sent Burrow limping to the sidelines grabbing his right knee. Rams edger Von Miller and outside linebacker Leonard Floyd broke him in half and twisted on a third-down play that sickened Who Dey Nation. When right tackle Isaiah Prince belted Floyd for the shot on Burrow, it was Prince who got flagged.

    But as Burrow waved off trainers and doctors the heroic Bengals defense pitched another stop and Burrow came back on. He finished a very brave 22 of 33 for 263 yards and a 100 passer rating.

    The Bengals offense just never did find any consistency Sunday. From his own 40 and the clock ticking under seven minutes, Burrow took a shot at slot receiver Tyler Boyd on a third-down slant and Boyd suffered his first drop since the third game of the year and that set up the winning 15-play drive.

    After a lethargic 155-yard first half that put them in a 13-10 hole, the Bengals stepped up as the third quarter team they’ve all year long in a wild opening to the second half. It only took one snap. Burrow stepped up in the pocket and whipped a long one to Tee Higgins (100 -yard night) battling Pro Bowl cornerback Jalen Ramsey on the left sideline. Ramsey fell down as Higgins outmuscled him and he was off on a 75-yard touchdown play that put them in front 17-13 on the longest postseason pass in Bengals history.

    Then on the next snap, cornerback Chidobe Awuzie came up with their eighth interception of the postseason when quarterback c’s pass tipped off the hands of wide receiver Ben Skowronek and in a span off 22 seconds the Bengals had a chance to put in the dagger as the momentum swung visibly to the orange-and-black-clad fans.

    But in no particular order, Donald awoke from a first half stupor he didn’t appear on the stat sheet and chased Burrow out of bounds for his first of two sacks of the night. But when he pushed Burrow to the ground as he was going out of bounds, the bench objected and the offensive line got in Donald’s face.

    There were no flags, but fireworks when a fan ran on to the field. Then on third-and-three from the Rams 11, Donald got Burrow again for a sack and as Burrow hopped up he appeared irked one of his receivers broke the wrong way.

    c kicked the 38-yard field goal to give them a 20-13 lead, but the sense was the Rams defense had turned the tide just as quickly.

    The Rams got a Matt Gay field goal to cut it to 20-16, but the Bengals couldn’t answer. Burrow had wide receiver Ja’Marr Chase wide open on third down, but Burrow one-hopped it.

    Then on the next series, the Rams rattled off back-to-back sacks. Von Miller, who also had been dormant in the first half, worked a stunt on the right side and came roaring inside to dump him for a 10-yard loss near his goal line.

    As the defense had done all postseason it kept them in it as the game veered into the fourth with the Bengals holding an eerie 20-16 lead, the lead they lost in with 34 seconds left in their last Super Bowl 33 years ago.

    The Bengals made the Rams punt three times in a row as their front play just as dominant as the Rams did. Nose tackle D.J. Reader ended one drive on a sack. Edge Sam Hubbard dropped running back Cam Akers for a two-yard loss to end another. Then Wilson and cornerback Mike Hilton combined for a tackle to stop another drive. The Bengals were immense in the run game, holding the Rams to 43 yards on 23 carries.

    The first half didn’t go the way the Bengals drew up it, but they had to feel fortunate that by the time Dr. Dre and Snoop Dogg took the halftime stage at SoFi Stadium, they only trailed the Rams, 13-10, and were getting the ball to start the second half.javascript:falseJoe Mixon lofts back-corner trick-play TD pass to Tee Higgins

    When running back Joe Mixon throws your only touchdown pass of the half for his first career touchdown pass in the biggest game of all, you know your offense isn’t operating high octane. Burrow couldn’t get in a groove as the Bengals managed just 155 yards in a half they really only put together one good drive.

    At that point the Bengals had done a nice job controlling Donald. Neither he or Miller was on the halftime stat sheet.

    Burrow was 12 of 18 for just 114 yards while Mixon ripped off 40 yards on seven carries but they couldn’t string anything together. Still, down 13-3, Burrow put together a nice 12-play touchdown drive hitting all of thee of his receivers and a nice swing pass to Chase for a four-yard rush on third-and-two in the red zone.

    Then Mixon became the first non-quarterback in four Super Bowls to throw a touchdown (Eagles tight end Trey Burton courtesy of the Philly Special) when he took a pitch wide, ran, then straightened and lofted a ball over safety Nick Scott when he came up on the run and Higgins had a six-yard touchdown catch. Higgins had three catches for 25 yard in the half that included a nifty 14-yard YAC.

    Their only penalty of the half hurt them. It came after free safety Jessie Bates III made an end zone interception on a third-and-long, but Vernon Hargreaves III, who was inactive, came off the bench to celebrate. It left Burrow with the ball at the 10 instead of the 20 with three timeouts at the two-minute warning.

    In all three playoff games the Bengals had scored in the final two minutes of the half. But they couldn’t get anything going. On one snap, Miller and Donald chased him into an incompletion and the the first sack the Rams got was a coverage sack for Floyd with about a minute left in the half.

    The Rams got the ball in good field position, but on third-and-one Lions quarterback Matt Stafford took a deep shot to wide receiver Van Jefferson and Awuzie was draped all over him. Stafford played OK, but not good enough to become the 32nd quarterback to be Super Bowl MVP. He had three touchdowns and he survived Odell Beckham Jr.’s devastating knee injury in the second quarter. But he also threw two picks and completed just 26 of 40 passes for 283 yards.

    The lethargic Bengals offense got a spark from, who else? Burrow to Chase. Chase got by Pro Bowl cornerback Jalen Ramsey, something you don’t usually see, and Chase responded with a catch you don’t usually see, a diving one-handed catch for a 46-yard play.

    After the big play, the Bengals were snugly in the red zone at the Rams. But Burrow threw three straight incompletions and McPherson went 13-for-13 on a 29-yard field goal to cut the lead to 7-3.

    The passing game just didn’t click all day. Miller leaped over left tackle Jonah Williams to knock down the first down pass. On second down, Burrow went to Mixon in the flat, but there was nothing there. And on third down, with Ramsey on Higgins and not getting much room. The ball was a tad behind Higgins and broken up.

    Bengals edge Trey Hendrickson blew up the first series of the game with a sack when Rams running back Cam Akers knocked left tackle Andrew Whitworth off the block on second down and on third down tackle B.J. Hill hauled down Akers for nothing to complete a dominant first defensive series. It was a harbinger of the defense’s effort the rest of the way, but the offense couldn’t get to the magic 24 points.

    It seems like for the first time this postseason the Bengals didn’t play complementary ball on the Super Bowl’s opening sequence. The offense faltered despite terrific field position at their own 42. But head coach Zac Taylor opted to go for it on fourth-and-one at midfield, they didn’t get it and the Rams cashed for the game’s first touchdown.

    The Bengals couldn’t get three yards on three snaps after Burrow hit Boyd slanting underneath for seven yards on first down. On second down Mixon barely got two up the middle and backup running back Samaje Perine got nothing in the same place on third down. Then on fourth-and one, Burrow spread them out and it looked like he had Higgins open on the right sideline, but he went back to the middle where Chase was bracketed and the ball was defended by inside linebacker Ernest Jones.

  • Ohio Vs. Hollywood: The State Of Mind For Bengals And Burrow In Super Bowl LVI

    Ohio Vs. Hollywood: The State Of Mind For Bengals And Burrow In Super Bowl LVI

    Hobson_Geoff

    Geoff Hobson

    Bengals.com Senior Writer

    LOS ANGELES – Bengals quarterback Joe Burrow, bidding to become the second quarterback in history to win a Super Bowl for a state where he was either born or went to high school, famously dissed the underdog thing in the team meeting the night before they beat the Titans in the Divisional game.

    But it sounds like he may have found a new theme as the fourth-seeded Bengals look to turn the last six Burrow starts into an NFL title Sunday against the Rams at SoFi Stadium.

    “Ohio,” may not mean underdog. In this game, it just may mean style and attitude. Whatever it may be, the home state of Burrow and his Bengals certainly provides a neat foil for the Hollywood-based Rams stacked with stars playing a Super Bowl in their own building built more like an MGM sound stage than a stadium.

    There is not only Hall-of-Fame pass rushers Aaron Donald and Von Miller, but Jalen Ramsey, the guy the Bengals believe is the best cornerback in the game, and Cooper Kupp, the guy the numbers say is the best wide receiver in the game.

    Could be Ohio vs. Hollywood. Throw in Bengals free safety Jessie Bates III from Fort Wayne and it’s Ohio-Indiana vs. Hollywood. Throw in the Collinsworth guys from Northern Kentucky being part of the NBC broadcast and maybe this is Ohio-Indiana-Kentucky vs. Hollywood.

    “I like the title,” said Bengals cornerback Mike Hilton after Friday’s brisk 40-minute final tuneup. “Knowing that they’re the flashy guys and we’re the blue-collar guys, were getting the best of both worlds with the Super Bowl on the line. They’re real flashy for the camera. We’re blue collar, get it out of the mud. They’re a great team. We’re just different.”

    Hilton is the personification of the muddy Bengals, a team that has won their last two games at the gun and the third at their two-yard line. The team that lost their first 13 straight one-score games under head coach Zac Taylor won three straight of those to get here.

    Hilton got here the hard way, too. Undrafted and spurned by the Steelers despite four solid seasons, he brought his steel-trap tackling and single-minded passion to a defense trying to find its way and it turned out to be a perfect match. In the postseason he’s been all over the yard with four pass deflections, including the acrobatic steal of Ryan Tannehill in the red zone that saved the Tennessee game.

    “They all had it,” Hilton said of his team’s penchant or dirty work. “They just needed somebody to pull it out of everybody.”

    Hilton is going to have to have to have a vintage Hilton game in the muck of the slot Sunday. The Rams love to motion and run bunch formations and Hilton is going to have to come down hill in the middle of the field. He knows that’s how Burrow runs the offense.

    A defensive player at quarterback.

    “The way he carries himself and the way he’s not afraid of contact,” Hilton said. “He’s a tough dude. I’m happy he’s my quarterback.”

    Hilton’s quarterback handled his final pregame media duties Friday befitting the tone of the game. The throng of cameras and reporters wanted him to go GQ Joe with questions about his dress, hair and even the one sock he always puts inside out.

    But like he has all week, he has stuck to Midwest Joe. Athens Joe. Ohio Joe.

    They even asked him if he’d like to live out here and he gave them the Buckeye Chamber of Commerce answer.

    “No,” he said. “I like four seasons.”

    If the sock fits.

    Burrow has proudly this week carried the Ohio banner as the Bengals try to bring home the first Super Bowl to the state and the first NFL title in nearly 60 years. They were the easy answers.

    “Being from Ohio, I can relate to the entire fan base. I think that’s something rare,” Burrow said. “There’s not a lot of NFL players that get to play for a team in their home state. I think they can relate to me and I can relate to them.”

    That’s because their quarterback has been grinding like them. Just as Bengals fans persevered 31 years for that playoff win, Burrow still grimly carries Athens’ last-minute loss in the 2014 Division III state title game as his childhood friends nearly brought back the ultimate prize for an impoverished region.

    Just as Bengals fans’ limped with the knee of Ickey Woods and Ki-Jana Carter and Carson Palmer, Burrow gutted out the same terrifying ACL injury with a Comeback Player of the Year that put his team in the Super Bowl.

    “They all had it,” Hilton said of his team’s penchant or dirty work. “They just needed somebody to pull it out of everybody.”

    Hilton is going to have to have to have a vintage Hilton game in the muck of the slot Sunday. The Rams love to motion and run bunch formations and Hilton is going to have to come down hill in the middle of the field. He knows that’s how Burrow runs the offense.

    A defensive player at quarterback.

    “The way he carries himself and the way he’s not afraid of contact,” Hilton said. “He’s a tough dude. I’m happy he’s my quarterback.”

    Hilton’s quarterback handled his final pregame media duties Friday befitting the tone of the game. The throng of cameras and reporters wanted him to go GQ Joe with questions about his dress, hair and even the one sock he always puts inside out.

    But like he has all week, he has stuck to Midwest Joe. Athens Joe. Ohio Joe.

    They even asked him if he’d like to live out here and he gave them the Buckeye Chamber of Commerce answer.

    “No,” he said. “I like four seasons.”

    If the sock fits.

    Burrow has proudly this week carried the Ohio banner as the Bengals try to bring home the first Super Bowl to the state and the first NFL title in nearly 60 years. They were the easy answers.

    “Being from Ohio, I can relate to the entire fan base. I think that’s something rare,” Burrow said. “There’s not a lot of NFL players that get to play for a team in their home state. I think they can relate to me and I can relate to them.”

    That’s because their quarterback has been grinding like them. Just as Bengals fans persevered 31 years for that playoff win, Burrow still grimly carries Athens’ last-minute loss in the 2014 Division III state title game as his childhood friends nearly brought back the ultimate prize for an impoverished region.

    Just as Bengals fans’ limped with the knee of Ickey Woods and Ki-Jana Carter and Carson Palmer, Burrow gutted out the same terrifying ACL injury with a Comeback Player of the Year that put his team in the Super Bowl.

    While Burrow worked on his knee, head coach Zac Taylor worked on hauling his program out of a 6-25-1 hole. Burrow wasn’t the only guy grinding. Even Taylor has said this week, the miserable close losses and 15-game winless road streak made them better.

    “We knew what we had in Zac as a head coach,” Burrow said. “Going into this year we knew we were going to have to win. We wanted to go out and win for Zac because he works really hard to put us in position to be successful. He’s a great head coach. As a player you feel like you can go talk to him if you have a gripe with something we did that day. Maybe he takes it into account. Maybe he doesn’t. But he’s definitely going to listen to you.”

    Hilton was asked if Burrow played defense, what position would he play.

    “I like Joe at safety,” Hilton said. “He’s got some range back there and, of course, he’d be able to set the defense and communicate.”

    That’s the setup. Ohio vs. Hollywood as another grind begins.

  • Cris Collinsworth Welcomes The “Their Time,” Bengals To The Super Bowl 40 Years Later

    Cris Collinsworth Welcomes The “Their Time,” Bengals To The Super Bowl 40 Years Later

    Jim Breech and Cris Collinsworth (80) are watching all their postseason records disappear.

    Hobson_Geoff

    Geoff Hobson

    Bengals.com Senior Writer

    LOS ANGELES – If it seems like Al Michaels has called everything but a presidential election, it’s because he has.

    Michaels, NBC’s Miracle Man who is calling his record-tying 11th Super Bowl Sunday, puts another benediction on a team Thursday as he watches the Bengals practice at UCLA.

    “I think America has been captivated by this team,” Michaels says. “Come back down 18 to Kansas City on the road. And everybody said, ‘Whoa.’”

    Michaels could look across Bengals head coach Zac Taylor’s toughest practice of the week and see Pauley Pavilion, the gym where he called John Wooden’s last two seasons and 10th national championship. He also called some of the first great moments of the Big Red Machine and sees Sunday as a nice bookend to his days on the Ohio River that included a World Series.

    But Michaels couldn’t call it when he sat down with Bengals rookie wide receiver Ja’Marr Chase earlier Thursday and asked him who had the Bengals rookie postseason receiving record.

    Chase said he didn’t know and Michaels pointed at his partner and said, “Him.”

    “One of the great blank looks,” Cris Collinsworth says. “That’s the way it should be. This is their time.”

    Collinsworth, who has almost as many Emmys (16) analyzing the NFL as Chase has postseason catches (20), says Chase is the best receiver in Bengals history even though he’s built more like a running back.

    “That’s why,” Collinsworth says. “I think he’s a phenomenal athlete who just happens to play wide receiver. He plays the position like Gale Sayers would play it. You’ll probably have to tell him who Gale Sayers is.”

    While we’re at it, on the 40th anniversary of the Bengals’ first Super Bowl team, isn’t Joe Burrow playing quarterback like Collinsworth played that year? A rookie taking shot after shot and getting up and setting record after record on the way to the Super Bowl. And so cool while doing it. Collinsworth had ’80s aw-shucks swag. Burrow has 2020s social media swag.

    “There never has been anybody cooler than this kid,” Collinsworth says. “That’s impossible.”

    What’s not impossible is that Burrow has made an All-Pro team. You just have to go to Collinsworth’s Pro Football Focus web site to find it. It’s the Pro Bowl team he put together. Burrow is his quarterback.

    “He deserved it,” Collinsworth says.

    Shelve the PFF grades for a sec. Collinsworth can get a little nostalgic.

    “I’m like everyone else. If you can’t have fun watching these guys play football …” Collinsworth says. “They’ve got a certain energy. What’s the big deal? When I came in, I didn’t know. We were the top seed. We won the first two games at home and went to the Super Bowl. I did it in my first year. Doesn’t everybody? I get the same kind of feel with this bunch. ‘OK, we’ve won a couple of games and we’re at the Super Bowl at UCLA. We beat them in school, too, so we’ll keep winning.’ I mean, that’s just how it seems. They’re young and they’re just playing.”

    That’s why Collinsworth thinks these Bengals have repeated history and taken Cincinnati by storm. No one was expecting it.