Showing posts with label Cincinnati Bengals. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cincinnati Bengals. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 22, 2017

The Good, the Sad, the Weird, and the Ugly: Events that Sparked My Interest, Week 11

Week 11 was full of some, let’s say, interesting, plays and moments. While I can’t cover them all in this week’s edition of Events that Sparked My Interest, I can talk about the good, the bad, the weird, and the ugly's of them.


The Good – Larry Fitzgerald moves to Fifth on the All-Time Receiving Yards List

The Arizona Cardinals lost to the Houston Texans 31 to 21 on Sunday, but despite that there was a bright spot. Wide Receiver Larry Fitzgerald continued to move up the all-time ladder when it comes to receiving yards, passing Tony Gonzalez for fifth all time. Fitzgerald now had 15,157 yards and is only 51 yards away from taking fourth from Isaac Bruce. Then, he would need only 84 more yards to pass Randy Moss for third all time.

Speaking of five, Fitzgerald also has the fifth most receiving yards this season, and is five years older than anyone else in the top 15.
Good for him.


The Sad – Dre Kirkpatrick Fumbles an INT Return at the 15 Yard Line

When Cincinnati Bengals cornerback Dre Kirkpatrick intercepted Denver Broncos quarterback Brock Osweiler in the end zone on Sunday, he had a clear, wide open path to the end zone. He took it back, “All… the… w-what?!”



About 15 yards from the end zone, the ball randomly popped out of his grasp and was bobbled. He managed to recover, but not before he was tackled at the one yard line.

QB Andy Dalton managed to throw a quick one yard touchdown after that, but still, his fumble was sad.


The Weird – Seahawks Confusing Fake Field Goal Attempt Backfires

With 7 second left in the first half, Seattle Seahawks head coach Pete Carroll lined his team up for a 35-yard field goal attempt. But, once the ball was snapped to holder John Ryan, he immediately flipped the ball to tight end Luke Wilson, who was pummeled before getting back to the line of scrimmage.



The call didn’t (and it still doesn’t) make any sense. The Hawks were down 7 points, and for the fake field goal to have been beneficial, Wilson would have had to run into the end zone, because there was so little time on the clock.

Why not take the points? This was one weird call.


The Ugly – Nathan Peterman throws 5 first half Interceptions

Last week, Buffalo Bills coach Sean McDermott announced that 5th round rookie backup quarterback Nathan Peterman would start against the Los Angles Chargers over incumbent starter Tyrod Taylor. How did Peterman respond?

Not well.

He managed to throw a mind boggling five interceptions in 30 minutes of football, in one of the worst performances by a quarterback in recent memory. 



It was so bad, that Richard Sherman tweeted – five minutes into the game – that “the guy they bring in has already thrown 2picks with 10mins left in the 1st. Great decision”.

Later he added, “do you cut the new guy after this half.”


His tweets alone are enough of an indicator of how ugly Peterman’s performance was.


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Sunday, September 17, 2017

The Bengals Conundrum

The Cincinnati Bengals are in a conundrum. They went to the playoffs every year between 2011 and 2014, but never won a game. Their QB has been horrific in two games this year having 5 times as many turnovers as touchdowns (the team has no TD’s) and the team would barely have to swallow a financial pill if they were to get rid of him. Their coach has taken the team to those playoff games but has yet to win one. His contract expires on the first day of the new year. What should they do? I’d like to share my opinions about that with you.

Even though a lot of people have written about the way the Bengals played and why people such as Marvin Lewis and Andy Dalton should be looking for new jobs, I want to give my opinion. Why? Because I don’t think they should be looking. Let’s start with Dalton and then move onto Lewis.
Once again supply and demand laws dictate what the Bengals should do with Dalton because there are fewer serviceable quarterbacks in the NFL than there are teams. Therefore, whenever a serviceable QB has two or fewer years left on his contract, their current team rushes to get them to sign an extension. When a QB does hit the market, teams with loads of cap space overpay to sign said QB, once again due to supply and demand; which is why Mike Glennon got a 3 year, $45 million contract in March from the Bears.

While it may not seem this way at this point in the season, Andy Dalton is better than serviceable. His $13.1 million-dollar salary is moving toward the bottom of the NFL’s starting QB pay scale, as demonstrated by the Glennon deal, even though Dalton is much better. Further, he has made it to the playoffs four times in his career, something not many quarterbacks can say they have done.
If he rebounds during the rest of the season, his low salary (even though it will be around $17.5 million in the final year of his contract if he were to stay) makes him worth keeping since they don’t have a replacement and it will take a while to get back to the playoffs without him.
If the Bengals were to cut him between today and June 1, 2018 it would only occur $2.4 million in dead cap next year, a small number. If they cut him any time after June 1, 2018 there would be no dead money.

In terms of Lewis, I believe they should extend him for no more than two years because he has gotten to the playoffs multiple times with the Bengals and while they haven’t won a game, they are close and missing a piece. Is that piece Joe Mixon (who they should be using a lot more) or someone else, I don’t know. But, what I do know is that if they bring in a new coach and don’t promote from within, they could be stuck with having a new coach every year or two while having Dalton (if they don’t cut him) in his prime to go along with A.J. Green in his prime. While it is totally fair to believe that they should have fired him a few years ago (something I agree with), they should keep him for two years max because it will allow the organization to see how Dalton plays and if the team decides to draft a new QB, they can assess how Lewis uses the new rookie.


Regardless, both decisions need to revolve around Green. If they can’t throw him the ball when he is in his prime, they should get rid of him. If they don’t have a coach who is capable of getting him the ball, they should get a new coach because Green is one of the top 4 wide receivers. If they don’t have anyone to throw him the ball nor a game plan to get him the ball, well, then he will most likely want out, and we’ve seen how that’s gone in Ohio before, (hint: the NBA).