The Cincinnati Bengals played the ball control game as they ran down the Cleveland Browns throats in a 16-7 workman like victory. The Bengals held the ball for just over 38 minutes as they rushed for 210 yards on the ground.
The Browns were simply unable to stop the Bengals two-headed rushing attack of Larry Johnson and Bernard Scott. With Cedric Benson out for the second straight game with a hip injury, the team continued to impose its will in the running game. Johnson had 22 carries for 107 yards; Scott had 87 yards on 18 carries.
The stellar play of the Benglas defense continued Sunday. An overmatched Brady Quinn looked awful, going 15/34 for 100 yards. That’s a 51.3 QB rating. He threw behind several receivers. His passes too often were at the shoelaces. A couple of times, he threw downfield between two receivers—but the pass was so bad, that it was hard to know who the intended receiver was.
Quinn wasn’t even pressured much by the Bengals front four, but the pass coverage was once again top notch. The linebackers were all over the field, especially Brandon Johnson and his eight tackles. The Browns finished with only 58 yards on the ground and 169 total.
Overall the game plan was incredibly vanilla. The Bengals had zero trick plays and lots of runs between the tackles. No reason to empty the play book in a game like this.
"There are no tosses or loop-di-loop plays. It's basically, `Line up and go after it,' " Johnson said.
Punter Kevin Huber was able to keep the ball out of Josh Cribbs on punt returns and he barely touched the ball at all. Although he did throw an 18 yard bomb to Quinn that was the second biggest offense play all day for the Browns.
The Browns defense knew what was coming but simply couldn’t do anything about it. Carson Palmer had a pedestrian 110 yards, completing 13 of 24 passes with a touchdown. He didn’t have an exceptionally accurate day. He has gone 15 straight games without having a 300-yard passing day. He only has two TD tosses in the past four games.
Palmer has really adapted to the “game manger” role in this offense. He doesn’t have to do it all for the Bengals to have a chance. He continues to take care of the ball and be the leader on offense.
"It felt like a bad-weather game," said Palmer. "It was just a physical, run the ball, control the field position and feed off the defense game."
Past concerns did arise during the game. The team is averaging around 18 points a game minus the Bears 45 point explosion. The offense is settling for field goals and getting killed by penalties. An infuriating 10 penalties for 75 yards continually killed momentum on drives.
The main culprits were the offensive line—too many holding penalties. The pass protection was below average as well. As great as the run blocking was, the pass blocking was pretty awful. Palmer was sacked three times and hurried throughout the game.
Chad Ochocinco (three receptions for 38 yards) is still playing at a high level, but if teams take him away, Palmer is struggling find other receivers. Partly because they are not getting open, and also because he is getting hit before he can get to that second or third read.
So what does it all mean? Well 8-3 is 8-3. A perfect 6-0 divisional sweep for the first time in franchise history is a tremendous achievement. But there are still things that need to be cleaned up.
CBS Sports analyst Boomer Esiason said it perfectly after the game. Maybe it’s a good thing that the Bengals haven’t hit on all cylinders yet. They are doing what needs to be done in order to win the game. Maybe they’re saving the best for December and January.
"If we can run the football and play good defense, I can drive into the stadium pretty confident most days, and that's a good feeling," coach Marvin Lewis said. "I think we are at that point."
Sunday, November 29, 2009
Bengals Run Over Hapless Browns
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