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Expectations shift for Cincinnati Bengals’ season after blowout loss to Tennessee Titans


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Charlie Goldsmith, Cincinnati Enquirer
Sun, Oct 1, 2023, 3:01 PM CDT·7 min read
 
 

NASHVILLE –– When Cincinnati Bengals head coach Zac Taylor brought on the field goal team on 4th and goal from the Tennessee Titans’ 3-yard line, he thought he knew how this game was going to go.

 

The Bengals took the points on their first possession of the game because their defense was supposed to be able to keep them in a low-scoring game. They settled for the field goal because they believed quarterback Joe Burrow would be alright and the offense would get plenty more chances to score.

 

It turned out that Taylor and the Bengals’ expectations, both for the Week 4 game at Nissan Stadium and for the entire first month of the season, couldn’t have been more wrong.

 

The Titans beat the Bengals, 27-3, at Nissan Stadium as the Bengals fell to 1-3 on the season. Tennessee has one of the worst offenses in the NFL, but the Titans still took a 21-point lead into halftime. The Bengals should have one of the best offenses in the NFL. On Sunday, they weren’t even able to pick up a blitz.

 

"Whenever you’re 1-3, you’re going to be frustrated," Burrow said. "You’re going to be angry. You’re going to be wanting to win games. We haven’t been. We’re not going to let that come between us. That’s how you end up having a bad season. We’ve had a bad start. We’ve had a bad first quarter."

Oct 1, 2023; Nashville, Tennessee, USA; Cincinnati Bengals quarterback Joe Burrow (9) is sacked by Tennessee Titans defensive tackle Jeffery Simmons (98) during the first half at Nissan Stadium.

The Bengals look nothing like the contender that they were supposed to be.

 

 

What are the Bengals even good at through four games this season?Burrow, who completed 20 of 30 passes for 165 yards in one of the worst statistical games of his career, is physically limited due to a calf injury. He still isn’t moving comfortably around the pocket or scrambling. Burrow’s deep throws haven’t been accurate, and he struggled diagnosing the Titans’ blitzes before the snap on Sunday.

 

The Bengals were supposed to have an elite wide receiving core, but that hasn’t translated. Tyler Boyd didn’t run fast enough to reel in a deep throw from Burrow. Tee Higgins has had two-or-fewer catches in three of his four games this year, and he left Sunday’s game with a rib injury.

 

"We have to find answers," Boyd said. "We have to find ways to get the matchups. We’ve got guys who can win one-on-one. The whole offense has to be tight. We’ve got to pass block right, catch footballs on the outside. We’ve got to find a rhythm and keep going. We know what teams are going to do against us on third downs. It’s obvious. We just have to capitalize."

Oct 1, 2023; Nashville, Tennessee, USA; Cincinnati Bengals quarterback Joe Burrow (9) loses the ball as he is sacked during the second half against the Tennessee Titans at Nissan Stadium.

The Bengals’ running game kept getting stuffed at the line of scrimmage by the Titans’ defense. When Burrow tried to take aggressive shots down the field, he got tossed around as the Bengals’ offensive line allowed pressure.

 

On one play, Titans linebacker Azeez Al-Shaair ran a straight line at Burrow, pummeled him into the ground and nearly forced a fumble. On another, linebacker Trevis Gipson forced the ball loose and jumped on top of the Bengals’ quarterback.

 

With the Bengals down by 24 points in the middle of the fourth quarter, Taylor probably should have pulled a banged-up Burrow from the game. Instead, Burrow took his eighth and ninth hits of the game with two sacks in the final seven minutes of the game.

 

"We pride ourselves on being the best offense on the field," Boyd said. "We have yet to show it."

Oct 1, 2023; Nashville, Tennessee, USA; Tennessee Titans defensive tackle Jeffery Simmons (98) celebrates after a sack during the first half against the Cincinnati Bengals at Nissan Stadium.

The downfall started Sunday when the Bengals kicked the field goal from the Titans’ 3-yard line to cap off the opening drive. The Bengals opted to take the ball when they won the coin toss as an aggressive move to try to play with the lead. They had a chance to jump out to a 7-0 lead on that 4th down play.

When they drove 72 yards down the field and settled for 3 points to open the game, the Bengals miscalculated how this game was going to go. Over their next seven drives, the offense totaled just 84 yards without scoring a point.

 

"It was a good first drive," Burrow said. "We weren’t able to punch it in the end zone. That’s how the rest of the day went."

 

It’s been a season full of miscalculations for the Bengals, who sit in last place in the AFC North.

 

"We’re not going to sit back and say Joe’s not 100 (percent) so we only put up three points," Bengals center Ted Karras said. "That’s not how we’re going to roll this year. We need to find a way to make some plays."

 

On Sunday, the Bengals’ defense was just as bad as its offense.

 

Cornerback Cam Taylor-Britt got burned at the line of scrimmage and allowed two deep throws over the top. The middle of the Bengals’ defense allowed Ryan Tannehill, who had been in danger of being benched, to pick them apart over the middle of the field. The Titans have one of the worst offensive lines in the NFL, and the Bengals’ defensive line wasn’t generating much of a pass rush.

 

Titans running back Derrick Henry finished the game with 122 yards on 5.5 yards per carry. In the second quarter, he rumbled all the way through the Bengals’ defense on a 29-yard touchdown run that featured at least three broken tackles. And the Bengals’ defense committed senseless penalties that kept the unit on the field.

 

"Not the performance we wanted," safety Nick Scott said. "A lot of the things we suffered from today were self-inflicted. It wasn’t up to our standard. In every area, we had plays we wish we could get back, whether it be penalties, bad eyes or anything like that."

Oct 1, 2023; Nashville, Tennessee, USA; Tennessee Titans running back Derrick Henry (22) breaks a tackle attempt by Cincinnati Bengals cornerback Cam Taylor-Britt (29) during the second half at Nissan Stadium.

On special teams, punter Brad Robbins had a bad punt, and Tycen Anderson committed a penalty. Backup punt returner Trenton Irwin, filling in for the injured Charlie Jones, fumbled on a return.

 

The Bengals brought back the core of last year’s team, which was one of the best in football. With a 1-3 record, the 2023 Bengals at this point are just hoping to get hot in the second half and sneak into the playoffs.

 

Expectations for the entire season have shifted, and the issues start with the franchise quarterback.

 

"Nothing was really clicking today," said Burrow, who had the fourth-fewest passing yards in a game across his NFL career.

 

At a few points on Sunday, Burrow was bending his elbow and testing it out. Burrow’s calf injury has already zapped him of some of his magic, and the most accurate quarterback in NFL history hasn’t been anywhere near as accurate with his passes this season. Burrow didn’t complete a single deep pass, and he isn’t able to extend plays to create more opportunities for big plays.

 

The Bengals don’t look close to finding any concrete solutions with their passing game. They were supposed to have one of the best rosters in the NFL this year, but the season looks like it’s starting to spiral.

 

"There’s a long season ahead still, but we don’t have many disregards left," Karras said. "We can’t just say, ‘forget about that one.’ We need to come out and get (wins)."

 

https://sports.yahoo.com/expectations-shift-cincinnati-bengals-season-200137487.html

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I said this after the Browns game. Is it possible that defenses have finally figured out how to defend our offense?

 

Add in a banged up Burrow and you have a recipe for an ineffective offense, and Zac Taylor and Brian Callahan need to figure out how to counteract this and deal with it.  Otherwise, it's going to be a long and unproductive season. We ran the ball well in the first series, but then typical Zac Taylor, we got away from it and that's what we needed to do to keep Derrick Henry off the field. 

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3 minutes ago, Shebengal said:

I said this after the Browns game. Is it possible that defenses have finally figured out how to defend our offense?

 

Add in a banged up Burrow and you have a recipe for an ineffective offense, and Zac Taylor and Brian Callahan need to figure out how to counteract this and deal with it.  Otherwise, it's going to be a long and unproductive season. We ran the ball well in the first series, but then typical Zac Taylor, we got away from it and that's what we needed to do to keep Derrick Henry off the field. 

The NFL is a constant state of chess. One side adjusts then the other side adjusts, back and forth it goes. 

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1 hour ago, Shebengal said:

I said this after the Browns game. Is it possible that defenses have finally figured out how to defend our offense?

 

Add in a banged up Burrow and you have a recipe for an ineffective offense, and Zac Taylor and Brian Callahan need to figure out how to counteract this and deal with it.  Otherwise, it's going to be a long and unproductive season. We ran the ball well in the first series, but then typical Zac Taylor, we got away from it and that's what we needed to do to keep Derrick Henry off the field. 


NFL defenses will never figure out how to stop dynamic skill players, especially upper echelon types like Chase, Higgins. There is no formula for that. What they can do however is out scheme the offensive minds on the other side and make sure those playmakers can’t make a difference during a game.  Our coaches are helpless to design a scheme where these players strengths are utilized. Even during the success the last 2 years, the offense with its pieces have been objectively underwhelming. Especially in the playoffs. Defense bailing the team out time and time again. How does that happen with Burrow, Chase, Higgins, Boyd, Mixon on the same roster? Mind blowing ineptitude that was overshadowed by team success. 

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13 minutes ago, IKOTA said:


NFL defenses will never figure out how to stop dynamic skill players, especially upper echelon types like Chase, Higgins. There is no formula for that. What they can do however is out scheme the offensive minds on the other side and make sure those playmakers can’t make a difference during a game.  Our coaches are helpless to design a scheme where these players strengths are utilized. Even during the success the last 2 years, the offense with its pieces have been objectively underwhelming. Especially in the playoffs. Defense bailing the team out time and time again. How does that happen with Burrow, Chase, Higgins, Boyd, Mixon on the same roster? Mind blowing ineptitude that was overshadowed by team success. 

 

Or just send the blitz every play because you know the QB can't run and his OL is kinda trash.  Doesn't take much scheming under those conditions.

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2 hours ago, T-Dub said:

 

Or just send the blitz every play because you know the QB can't run and his OL is kinda trash.  Doesn't take much scheming under those conditions.


Competent coaches know exactly what to do in those situations. Bengals aren’t the only team getting blitzed. 

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14 minutes ago, IKOTA said:


Competent coaches know exactly what to do in those situations. Bengals aren’t the only team getting blitzed. 

 

The QB can hardly move and the OL can't block. A lot of the responsibility still lands on the coaches but I don't think it's a scheme issue. 

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6 minutes ago, IKOTA said:


Competent coaches know exactly what to do in those situations. Bengals aren’t the only team getting blitzed. 

This is where I have to fault Karras (or whoever makes the adjustments at the line). He sees the line setup and where the guys cheating towards the line are. More importantly, he would see the gap setups allowing for things like safety blitzes. 
 

Some of it is on the QB naturally…

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Again I would love to see the NFL playbook where only half the OL is required to block at any given time. There are no adjustments to compensate for 2-3/5 guys getting straight up beat physically at the snap. It's not a chess match when the opponent is putting their whole foot in your ass.

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Just now, T-Dub said:

Again I would love to see the NFL playbook where only half the OL is required to block at any given time. There are no adjustments to compensate for 2-3/5 guys getting straight up beat physically at the snap. It's not a chess match when the opponent is putting their whole foot in your ass.

Exactly what I am saying. Cease with the plays calling for shifting line movement. Go back to straight up/man on man or at least a shorter zone scheme. They aren’t that weak that they couldn’t stone a blitz over tackle LB into powder. 

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so literally none of you understand that joe is hurt, so the offense is changed and has then also had to change weekly.

 

none of you?

 

its suddenly magically coaching and this and that?

 

i mean half of you think you can go in at halftime and draw up new plays for the second half so i dont know why im surprised but cmon...

 

sometimes there are just reasons for shit. joe is fucked up and thus the offense has had to be altered each week in planning, so no consistency, limited routes due to limited mobility, and teams have a lot less to worry about and defend.

 

its really that simple. thats it. thats the end. this is the nfl, you cant be at 90% and expect tons of success unless the defense is playing like top 5(which it isnt, at all).

 

 

 

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