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Dalton is GARBAGE!


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Andy Dalton leaves Cincinnati Bengals spinning playoff wheels
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  • By Adam Schein
  • NFL Media columnist
  • Published: Jan. 6, 2014 at 12:50 p.m.
  • Updated: Jan. 6, 2014 at 02:40 p.m.

 

 

I'm not going to brag. I'm not going to boast. I'm not going to point to my column last week, which explained why I absolutely knew the San Diego Chargers would beat the Bengals in Cincinnati during Sunday's AFC Wild Card Game, and say, "I told you so." I'm not going to ask for forgiveness from the Ohio residents who peppered me with -- as it turned out, wrongful -- criticism. I'm not going to ask for an apology from the analysts I work with who thought my take was off.

Actually, this was the rare moment when I was wishing my opinion would turn out to be incorrect.

Cincinnati, undefeated at home in the regular season, was hosting a Chargers squad that needed the aid of referees and two other teams just to make the playoffs -- and yet, the Bengals never, ever had a chance.

Andy Dalton didn't give them one.

I've written this column before. And it needs to be written again, as there was absolutely no excuse for the Cincinnati Bengals to be what was clearly the most inept team on Wild Card Weekend.

Yes, Dalton deserves credit for the regular-season wins he's accumulated in his three-year career. But even in a campaign during which Dalton and Cincy flirted with greatness, you could see the quarterback at his worst, whether via the no-show in Pittsburgh in Week 15 or the bevy of picks he coughed up against Baltimore in Week 17, which flew under the radar only because the Ravens couldn't take advantage. And the inconsistencies that have plagued him in the regular season are especially glaring in the playoffs.

In the first half against San Diego, Dalton was solid. Then, as one NFL Pro Bowler explained via text message on Sunday night, he "pulled an Andy Dalton." This is code for making bad decisions, inaccurate throws and game-changing picks. In the third quarter, Dalton completed zero of three passes, was sacked twice and gave up a gruesome-looking interception. In the fourth quarter -- just for good measure -- he added another mind-numbing pick.

Though Dalton has the kind of offensive talent around him that Tom Brady and Andrew Luck could only dream of, he led the Bengals' offense -- a unit that averaged 42 points per outing over its final five home games of the regular season -- to a paltry 10 points on Sunday. Cincinnati was 1-for-8 on third downs in the second half, which shows a lack of clutch play.

 

 

"He has (Chad) Pennington's arm," one NFL general manager explained to me. "But Chad knew what he could do and what he couldn't do. And Chad was smart and made great decisions. Dalton doesn't do that."

On Sunday, my guys Jim Nantz and Phil Simms wondered aloud during the game broadcast why so many critics were stuck on the ongoing narrative that Dalton can't win in a big spot. This was an hour after they playfully picked on me on CBS Sports Network for predicting a San Diego win due to Dalton's shortcomings.

Count me as a hater -- a badge of honor I'll wear with pride. Even better, of course, you can count me as a realist. Dalton is now 0-3 in the playoffs in his three years as a pro, completing just 56.9 percent of his passes while averaging a skimpy 239 yards per game. He's thrown one playoff touchdown -- and given up six playoff picks. This cannot happen.

But these are stats. These are facts.

The Bengals are more well-rounded than the Chargers, who did not exactly play a crisp game from start to finish Sunday. San Diego sat on the ball after a turnover at the end of the first half -- a failure that led to three Cincy points. The Bolts couldn't put the Bengals away until the very end.

Of course, the Chargers also were playing 12-on-10 football -- with Dalton working for them.

 

I asked another GM for a scouting report on Dalton and to explain why he struggles in big games. The response fascinated me.

"He's an average-to-below-average talent with poor arm strength and physical tools," the GM said. "He needs the team around him to be on target, and when they aren't, he just gets exposed. Dalton is another example of supply and demand. Here's the fact: There aren't many good quarterbacks out there. There's maybe seven or eight right now built for it (the playoffs). He's not one of them."

Think of Josh McCown, who had success filling in for an injured Jay Cutlerwith the Chicago Bears. If McCown were starting for the Bengals, he likely would have performed better than Dalton. McCown likely would have given the Bengals a shot to win -- and he's a backup quarterback.

Under Dalton and Marvin Lewis, the Bengals have lost three consecutive playoff openers, tying an NFL record. And it's easy to assign additional blame to Lewis, who is now 0-5 in the playoffs in 11 seasons as head coach. As one executive told me: "I'd rank him as the fourth-best coach on his staff, behind (Mike) Zimmer, Hue (Jackson) and Jay (Gruden)."

It's tough to win games in the NFL, and I can't pooh-pooh what the Bengals have accomplished in the regular season. But if Cincinnati couldn't make a playoff run this year -- when the AFC is wide open and relatively weak -- when will it happen?

 

 

Yes, the Bengals won the AFC North, but Baltimore was going through a transitional period. Pittsburgh wasn't very good, and Cleveland ended up firing another coach after another awful season. The Ravens and Steelers are great organizations, and you could see them getting better in 2014. The Browns, meanwhile, have a couple of first-round picks and a solid defense.

Dalton is heading into the final year of his contract. It's not hyperbole to call the 2014 season a gigantic one that will determine his future in Cincy. I would expect the Bengals to consider taking a quarterback in the draft -- and they should. They have to know Dalton isn't the one to take them to the next level.

I root for Andy Dalton. I love his competitive fire. But he can't get it done in a big spot. Sunday proved it again -- as if there was any doubt.

Follow Adam Schein on Twitter @AdamSchein.

 

Even though he is a jackass(making a statement that the Miami Heat of last year is the best NBA team ever as one example) he is right here  right on point and believe me he is as irritating as they come and arrogant

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Wait he said "I didn't get it done".

No that can't be he never takes any blame1!!1!1!

I really could care less if he took blame or not.

 

What I would like to see him do is perform well during a playoff game or when the lights in the stadium they are playing in are on.

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I really could care less if he took blame or not.
 
What I would like to see him do is perform well during a playoff game or when the lights in the stadium they are playing in are on.


I think we all would. I just don't think his personality is an issue like some think just because they don't like his performance.
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Dalton needs to quit slidding when hes on the run. Other QB's aren't slidding in the playoffs. They need to tell him to go balls out.

 

This is just dumb. Had he slid he wouldn't have fumbled the ball. He went head first and messed up. I never want my QB not to protect his body, especially in a playoff game.

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