The Bengals vs Pittsburgh

If the Bengals are playing better on defense and running the ball at a better clip than they did back on Oct. 21 when they lost to the Steelers, then Pittsburgh has a different look in the secondary.

The Steelers not only won’t have cornerback Ike Taylor, the man that took away A.J. Green last time on just one catch, but the man that is supposed to shadow Green this Sunday in Pittsburgh (1 p.m.-Cincinnati’s Channel 12), Kendall Lewis, is coming off Sunday’s hip injury in Dallas.

Not only that, but Lewis told The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette’s Gerry Dulac after practice Wednesday that he stepped in a hole during the workout and is more worried about his knee than his hip.

Meanwhile, before his own practice Wednesday, Green tried to remember the last time he had been held to one catch while playing an entire game.

“I don’t remember; it was a long time ago,” said the usually implacable Green, admitting his frustration at the coverage that either had a safety over the top or a linebacker underneath helping Taylor.

“It gets frustrating sometimes because of the tension of trying to stop ‘take me away, take me away.’ Hey, that comes with the territory, but I’ve got to make a play whenever my number is called.”

The month of December has been almost Steelers tough. Green’s only TD in the three games this month has been in the garbage time of last Thursday’s 34-13 victory in Philadelphia. His longest catch has been 17 yards. He’s got 18 catches in 31 targets for 10.3 yards per catch, nearly four below his season average. There have been no A.J. moon balls in December.

“I started off real hot; a lot of people were giving me a lot deep,” he said. “I expected a lot of people to take away the deep game … a lot of cushion.”

Bengals quarterback Andy Dalton took one shot at Green deep in Philly and a leaping Green looked like he was going to alley-oop it away from the corner in the end zone until backup safety Colt Anderson came in at the last instant.

“The safety came right over the top. I didn’t see the safety over there, so I thought I was just trying to hold the corner off,” Green said.

The Steelers don’t let anybody go long. They lead the NFL allowing the fewest passes of 40-plus yards (two) and 20-plus (25). Back on Oct. 21, they gave Green shots, but not many.

“There were a couple of opportunities, but like I said their scheme is so good it’s hard to guess what they’re doing,” Green said. “We’re playing against a sound defense. Nothing too complex. We shot ourselves in the foot a couple of times.”

But even though Green hasn’t exploded lately, he’s simmered with greatness. On Cincinnati’s go-ahead touchdown drive in Philly, Green stretched to Gumby a third-and-nine off the conversion list for an 11-yard gain that put the Bengals in the red zone.

“Just keep running the short stuff and the big stuff will open up later on,” Green said.

While Green has the numbers (his 11 TDs lead the AFC and his 1,208 yards are seventh in the NFL), rookie wide receiver Marvin Jones and slot receiver Andrew Hawkins may get the chances Sunday. In the four wins the Bengals have over Dick LeBeau’s defense in the past nine seasons, the No. 2 and No. 3 receivers, and not the No. 1, have made the plays.

In the 38-31 win at Heinz in ’05, Chad Johnson and T.J. Houshmandzadeh each had five catches, but with LeBeau taking away Johnson for 54 yards, Houshmandzadeh had a 43-yard TD and 88 yards. The Bengals also won at Heinz in ’06 when Houshmandzadeh and Chris Henry each had two touchdown catches while Johnson had only one catch total.

Then in the ’09 sweep of the Steelers, slot receiver Andre Caldwell caught the winning four-yard TD pass with 14 seconds left in Cincy, and at Heinz No. 2 receiver Laveranues Coles led the team with five catches for 67 yards while Johnson had two catches in a game the only TD came on Bengals running back Bernard Scott’s 96-yard kick return.

NUGENT CAUTIOUS: For the first time since he injured his kicking calf two weeks ago Wednesday, kicker Mike Nugent returned to the field and he was listed as limited. But it sounded like he is still taking it slowly and it’s unclear if he’ll be ready for Sunday.

“Just lightly swing my leg,” he said of where he is. “One-steps, mainly. Not really trying to be too aggressive. You don’t want to have something react and things happen again and kind of go through the whole process for another however many days. One of those things I’m just being very patient with it.”

It’s not a normal injury. Josh Brown has kicked brilliantly in Nugent’s absence and now the question is how long can the Bengals keep two kickers. The answer could be Sunday if they continue to stay healthy everywhere else. Nugent indicated the subject has come up.

“I don’t want to use the word vague, because it sounds negative, but in a positive way we leave it vague,” Nugent said. “It’s one of those things like hey if I’m imitating a coach I’m saying just do what you can to get better and heal as fast as possible. It’s one of those things where your schedule changes a little bit. You have to come in here and do extra treatment. You hate standing on the sideline and watching. As long as I keep getting better each day that’s the way I’m looking at it.”

This isn’t Nugent’s first rodeo. He lost his job with the Jets in 2008 when he suffered a quad injury on the season’s opening kickoff and while he remained on the roster he was inactive the rest of the way as the club stayed with Jay Feely.

“You learn from it, but that was more long term and serious than this is,” Nugent said. “Right when I came back Jay did just phenomenal, can’t take anything away from how well he did and did that the rest of the season, so, that was one of those things that was earlier in my career and you sometimes can worry about things that are out of your control. I’ve learned now that it’s completely out of my control. Only thing under my control—the timeline is even out of my control for me—but when it comes to working out or rehabbing or strengthening, I think that’s the only thing I can really focus on.

DRE RETURNS: For the second time since he suffered a concussion in San Diego on Dec. 2, rookie cornerback Dre Kirkpatrick was marked as full go in practice Wednesday and he hopes he has no return of the symptoms that have kep him out of the last two games.

He said the last symptoms he had were Friday, where he had vision problems and headaches while driving. But he said he’s had nothing since and feels confident he’s overcome another Year One obstacle.

“The Bengals have taken the time to observe my injury and managing it well. I just think they’re going a great job,” Kirkpatrick said. “It’s just a mental process. Just really messing with your head, especially for me for all the things I’ve gone through this season, not being on the field and wanting to play. All that takes place in the concussion because that’s some of the things you’re thinking about and they really don’t want you to think a lot.”

Kirkpatrick says he’s taken the protocol test—matching it up with his healthy baseline—four or five times as he deals with his second concussion after getting one in college.

“The one at ‘Bama, I was completely out. I don’t remember really anything about the play,” he said. “This one right here it seems like it’s lingering on longer than the first one. Same symptoms but this one is lingering.”

But Kirkpatrick says it doesn’t phaze him (“I’m not worried about the head. It’s football. If it’s going to happen, it’s going to happen. This is my job, this is how I feed my family”), but he is thinking about trying a new helmet.

“It’s more of a speed helmet,” he said. “It’s supposed to have extra cushioning. Just going to see how it works.”

For Kirkpatrick, the club’s No. 1 pick, it’s another in a series of injuries that have limited him to five games this season. A bone spur near his knee wiped out training camp and pushed his NFL debut into November.

“Everything happening to me this year is just killing me inside. I’m just trying to hide it and deal with it on my own terms,” he said.

SLANTS AND SCREENS:

» Left tackle Andrew Whitworth, who got a concussion Thursday night in Philadelphia, said he’s fine and ready to go and was limited Wednesday.

“Everything is back to normal,” he said.

Running back Cedric Peerman, who hasn’t practiced since injuring his ankle Dec. 2 in San Diego, eturned to practice Wednesday and was limited.

» Whitworth on what it all means: “It’s not about a prove-it game. It’s not a statement game. This is, ‘This is on the line, how much does it mean to you, and how well can you play when everything is on the line?’ That’s the bottom line.”

» If there was ever a Bengal that played big against the Steelers, it was the late Chris “Slim” Henry. When he and Carson Palmer got hurt on the same play of the ’05 Wild Card playoff, they did it hooking up on the club’s longest postseason pass, a 66-yarder.

In the next chapter in 2006, Henry caught two of Palmer’s four TD passes in a 28-20 win in Pittsburgh. In the ’06 season finale at PBS, the last time the Bengals played Pittsburgh in late December with a playoff berth on the line, Henry led a fourth-quarter rally with a 66-yard TD catch and drew a pass interference penalty on a long ball that set up Shayne Graham for a 39-yard field goal and the win to get into the postseason with 12 seconds left. He went wide right.

Three years later on Dec. 17, Henry died from injuries suffered in a truck accident while he was on injured reserve. Three years later, the Bengals still remember.

Each December since his death, defensive tackle Domata Peko’s family offers a remembrance and this season he gave his teammates black stocking caps emblazoned with Henry’s orange No. 15, as well as a memorial Christmas ornament.

Peko also gave a cap to Bengals president Mike Brown and it’s been a staple for him during the last few weeks of practice. There are 16 players left from that ’09 team and they remember.

“It’s a great thing, an awesome thing to keep him in our memories and keep him alive,” Whitworth said. “It’s just a great opportunity to remember a guy that meant a lot to us and was a big part of us.

“It’s a guy that we were all close with and still means a lot to us. With everything that’s going around with some of the guys across the league, it’s just an opportunity to remember a person special to us.”

» Sunday is the 40th anniversary of Steelers running back Franco Harris’s Immaculate Reception on fourth down that beat the Raiders in the playoffs in the last minute on a heaven-sent ricochet pass. Lewis, a Pittsburgh-area native of McDonald, Pa., knows exactly where he was. It happened to be at Carlynton High School in Crafton, Pa., the alma mater of former Steelers head coach Bill Cowher.

“The Carlynton High School wrestling tournament,” said Lewis, then 14. “I don’t think I was wrestling. I was wrestling JV or junior high or whatever I was then. We heard the Steelers beat the Raiders. Back then you had to go to someone’s house to see it on television where we were from. There wasn’t a TV out in the lounge.”

Cowboys Don’t Belong In The Wild

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First, I have to apologize for not writing last week. I had a few personal things I had to handle but my stripes were still out in full force and the Bengals took care of business. Now with that comes criticism as well. Today, I will sort through them and as good as a biased fan will ever do. I also want to touch base on BJGE, even though I have been a big critic of his. I will talk about what we have to do in order to beat the Cowboys as well.

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Over the past few weeks I have heard people uttering about the Bengals and I would love to jump in with my very biased opinion. I have heard from a few other unimportant team fans that the Bengals dont play anyone this year and that their schedule has been easy. I dont agree and I feel that some of the teams we have played play hard every week despite their record. Cleveland is a tough and up coming team that is makng people take notice, plus they are a divsion gameand you can never go all in with these games. They know each other bettter than other teams which often times make it a great game. I have no excuse for the first loss to a tough Baltimore team. We were embarrased. That is all to say of that. Also I feel that we play in the toughest division of footall. The AfC North has consistently sent at least 2 teams to the playoffs. Just based on the two they are 1/4 of our schedule. Not to mention we don’t create the schedule.

One of our biggest issue to me in those games was the lack of a running game. However, the past few weeks you would think we have a superstar back. Afterall he did start off veery rocky by giving up his staple of not letting the ball go and he hadnt seen what 100 yardslooks like. Today, BJGE has done things he didnt need to do, to get him this job. That is good for us as it keeps defenses honest and some of the pressure off Andy Dalton. I also believe the OC takes some blame for not letting BJGE get rolling. I dont know many backs who can get rolling with less than 5 touches a quarter. This will not be any different for a short yardage back. So now I am a liitle bit more fond of BJGE and I am hoping he can continue to see the holes and break big runs. He isnt Corey Dillon, but he did get 3 straight 100 yard games, something that hasnt been done since Dillon in 1998. Pretty sweet for a guy who was a short yardage guy.

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Now to what really matters this week. The Cowboys. The Cowboys are a shakey, uncertain, and confusing because they are everything but consistent. However that may be a concern of ours because its hard to game plan for teams like this. So what would any coach say? Gameplan for the best Cowboys! Now with that being said the Cowboys have the #2passing attack in the league so it will be imperitive that the defensive unit is mistake free. I know Romo tends to fold when the games are crucial, but that normally happens in the playoffs. We cant be their route to the playoffs because they have to be ours and our schedule still holds tough games with the Steelers and Ravens. If there are no hats hiting Romo it is my belief that our secondary will suffer and we cant get into a scoring challenge unless it is in the first quarter where we score the most points. We have lost the hunger after that in every game and have lost leads due to this issue. And Tony Romo has 1/3 of his wins from behind which could possibly play right into how this season has gone.

Not only do we have to worry about Romo but Demarcus Ware is an absolute monster who is going to cause havoc. Even our own Dave Lapham says he can be a problem. And if he isnt contained, double teamed, stunted, and blocked well he will be an issue. But don’t let me appear to be a fan of the Cowboys because they too have a shaky secondary that AJ Green can expose and have a big day. I mean he is due one. Every since breaking the franchise record previously held by Carl Pickens, he has been relitively quiet (for AJ Green). We have to get him his mojo back. If he can get going there is no stopping him and when he is going, normally everyone else is as well.

To be truly honest, this game is going to be pretty even. They have a hot offense, and our defense is hot. Its going to be nice to catch our Bengals back on tv, as the band wagon fans pile back on. But that isn’t a bad thing for the true fans who cant afford ticket prices right now and are having a hard time. I would love for them to see thier team do well, and I will be watching as well.

My prediction for the game is 28 Bengals 13 Cowboys. Enjoy the game guys and dont forget to shout – #WhoDeyAllDayEverydayEspeciallyOnSunday

Streaking Bengals invade San Diego

You can bet “4th-and-29” will be prominent when Norv Turner’s epitaph is finally written in San Diego.Uv

Norv’s Chargers continue to invent new ways to lose as they get ready to host the resurgent Cincinnati Bengals on Sunday.

The Bengals, who have won three consecutive games and have outscored opponents by a gaudy 21.3 points over that span, currently sit in seventh place on the outside looking in at the AFC playoff race with just five games to go.

“The anticipation comes down to these last five now and what they mean and how important they are,” Cincinnati coach Marvin Lewis said. “We’re in OK position. We’re not in great position, but we’re in OK position. And we’ve got to improve upon it each and every week.”

Last week against Baltimore all the Chargers needed to do was stop the aforementioned 4th-and-29 late in the game. San Diego dropped off its entire defense as a preventive measure as Joe Flacco looked on helplessly, almost admitting defeat by checking down to Ray Rice.

The Rutgers product, however, caught it on the right side, and zig-zagged across the field before stretching over the first-down marker, beating half the Chargers defense in the process.

There was a lengthy review to determine whether the spot of the ball was correct, and eventually it was moved back about a half-yard. After resetting the chains to their original position, the spot still left plenty of room for a first down at the San Diego 34.

Rookie kicker Justin Tucker eventually tied the game on the final play of regulation before winning it with 1:07 to play in overtime as Baltimore stole the 16-13 win.

“I guess for you guys (the media), you can say that, and it’s easy to say,” Turner said when asked if that play defined his team’s season. “It’s a play we had guys in position to make the play and we didn’t handle it very well.”

Philip Rivers went 23-for-36 with 228 yards and a touchdown in the loss for the Chargers, who have dropped their past three games. Malcom Floyd caught four passes for 65 yards and a score, while Ryan Mathews had 19 carries for 72 yards in the loss.

“What we’re trying to do is find a way to win a game, and that’s obviously the frustrating part,” Turner said. “We were able to make a couple plays in the first half and we didn’t make the same plays in the second half.”

San Diego opened the season 3-1 but have since dropped six of seven – with their only win coming against a 1-10 Kansas City team on Nov. 1.

Things are looking much rosier for Cincinnati.

Back on Nov. 10 the Bengals were a floundering 3-5 team in the midst of a disastrous four-game losing streak. A strong performance against the reigning Super Bowl champion New York Giants ignited things and Cincinnati is now back in the middle of the AFC playoff race as they get ready to visit the reeling Chargers.

Andy Dalton threw three touchdown passes last Sunday and outperformed his predecessor in Cincinnati, Carson Palmer, during the Bengals’ 34-10 win over the Oakland Raiders, the third straight win of more than 18 points by the Bengals.

Dalton, who replaced Palmer at quarterback a year ago following the Southern Cal product’s ugly split with Cincinnati, threw for 210 yards on 16-of-30 attempts for the Bengals, who are tied with the Steelers for the sixth and final playoff spot in the AFC but lost to Pittsburgh earlier in the season.

“Andy played very efficiently,” Lewis said. “He got us in and out of the right things and handled the line of scrimmage very well.”

The red-hot Dalton has nine passing touchdowns with no interceptions during the Bengals’ winning streak.

BenJarvus Green-Ellis carried the ball 19 times for a season-high 129 yards and a score against the Raiders while Cedric Peerman added 61 on eight carries for the Bengals.

“Our ability to run the football really paid dividends,” Lewis said.

The Chargers lead their all-time series with the Bengals 19-12, including one postseason game, the famous 1981 AFC Championship Game won by Cincinnati commonly called “The Freezer Bowl.”

San Diego has also won five of the past seven, although Cincy took the last encounter, a 34-20 win back on Dec, 26, 2010.

WHAT TO WATCH FOR

The Chargers have actually been quite competitive to this point. They rank just 25th in the NFL in offense, a surprise considering Rivers’ previous success, but are a solid 10th in defense.

Though three games under .500 on the season, San Diego has actually outscored its opponents 245-237.

“We have our work cut out for us,” Lewis said. “The Chargers are a talented team with an exceptional quarterback (Philip Rivers).”

The Bengals need to continue to combine a solid rushing attack, which garnered 221 yards against Oakland — the team’s most since 253 versus Cleveland in 2004 — along with stingy third down defense. The Bengals allowed the Raiders to convert only 3-of-12 on football’s most important down last Sunday.

“We’re starting to find the way we like to play, and that style, that attitude, is key,” said Bengals left tackle Andrew Whitworth. “We’ve just got to continue to do it”

Cincinnati is a perfect 7-0 when rushing for at least 130 yards since Dalton arrived for the beginning of the 2011 season. The strong running attack enables the second-year signal caller to use play action and get he ball outside the numbers and down the field. Since Week 10 the explosive Bengals offense is averaging 31 points per game, third-best in the NFL.

“We’ve got to keep this going,” Dalton said. “The running game has done a great job the last two weeks. We’ve got to keep the balance.”

The Chargers enter this week’s contest banged-up after losing strong safety Atari Bigby to a season-ending groin injury against the Ravens. Bigby’s running mate, Pro Bowler Eric Weddle, also suffered a concussion while the team’s leading tackler Donald Butler is also expected to miss the game with a groin injury.

“We’ve lost a lot of guys throughout on offense and on defense, and we have guys that just keep coming in,” said Turner. “Obviously, it affects you in certain situations.”

Weddle is expected to play, however. A key for a Chargers secondary which will have to deal with Bengals star receiver A.J. Green, who’s tied for the NFL lead with 10 TD receptions.

OVERALL ANALYSIS

San Diego is an imposing 18-3 in December under Turner so the Bengals need to keep their focus against a team which could be ready to give up under a lame duck coach. The last time Cincy won three straight, however, they followed that up with four consecutive losses.

“I’ve got to keep pressing and make sure that it’s different this time,” Lewis said. “We can’t have any backslides. What I want to keep seeing is the same resolve I saw in the guys’ eyes (against the Raiders). It’s going to be December when we get to San Diego, and we want to play our best football in December. We’re getting there, and that’s what the great teams do.”

Who Dey Herald

“Defense wins championships” goes the old football maxim. This week’s game against the Chargers will definitely prove that to be true.

San Diego has one of the league’s best run defenses. It’s highly unlikely BenJarvus Green-Ellis is going to get his third straight 100-yard rushing game, and it’s just as unlikely the Bengals will be able to get second-and-short and third-and-short opportunities if they try to run the ball on first down too often.

But injuries to the Chargers’ linebacking corps and secondary should provide some opportunities in the passing game. Cincinnati has to make sure San Diego’s defense doesn’t control this game.

Johnson FliesAt the same time, the Bengals’ D must. Phillip Rivers is a dangerous quarterback if he’s given time. He’ll be playing behind his fourth-string LT, an undrafted rookie. Bengals RDE Michael Johnson has got to make hay in this matchup. He needs to be hitting Rivers and…

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