Cincinnati
Bengals
Bengals try to get drop on
Eagles
after Cowboys escape
The
Bengals had a one-game lead
over the Steelers with three games to play right in their hands Sunday.
Up
19-10 with 7:15 left. Cowboys
quarterback Tony Romo staring at a third-and-10 from the Cincinnati 42
against
the ravenous Bengals pass rush. The Paul Brown Stadium sellout
delirious with
San Diego's blowout of Pittsburgh coinciding with Cincinnati's fifth
straight
victory.
And
then the Bengals dropped it. A
20-19 loss at the gun on Dan Bailey's field goal.
“We’re
inches away from that game
being a totally different situation," left tackle Andrew Whitworth said
after another Pro Bowl effort against a Pro Bowl rusher in DeMarcus
Ware.
"It’s tough, it sucks, it hurts. The bottom line is that we’ve got
three
games left in the season and we still have a chance to control our
destiny —
win out and give ourselves an opportunity to be in the playoffs. That’s
got to
be the key goal. We’ve got to store this in, let it eat at us and make
people
pay for it.”
Pro
Bowl wide receiver A.J. Green
is already stoking the fire after his two huge drops, one that had
clinching
touchdown written all over it on the first drive of the third quarter.
"It's
going to be in the back
of my head, it's going to drive me to look everything in and make sure
I catch
everything." Green said. "I'm not going to get down on myself, but
it's definitely going to push me."
Two
simple stats indicate why the
four-game winning streak is over. During that run the offense scored 13
touchdowns on 17 red-zone trips and on Sunday it got just one on four
forays.
During the streak, the defense was 13-for-49 on third down. On Sunday,
the
Cowboys nearly got enough conversions for the month with 11-for-19.
But
even with those numbers, the
Bengals will say it came down to one play. Any play. And they only have
96
hours to store the anger because they play in Philadelphia on Thursday
(NFL
Network-8:20 p.m.) still tied for the AFC's final wild card at 7-6 with
Pittsburgh.
As
middle linebacker Rey Maualuga
said, "I guess the good thing about this is it's a short week and we do
have a chance to erase this game and have a solid game against the
Eagles, then
we'll start worrying about our next two after that. … (The Steelers)
lost, too,
so we've still got a chance. When that time comes Thursday, we just
have to go
and get it."
Green
offered, "All we can
control is winning these last three games and see what happens."
And
there were plenty of agonizing
moments the Bengals can use as fuel for the last three games in Philly,
Pittsburgh and the Dec. 30 season finale here against the Ravens.
From
the two stunning misses by
Green. To steel-belted solid rookie right guard Kevin Zeitler pounding
the turf
after Anthony Spencer snaked past him for the third-and-five sack that
turned
out to be Cincinnati's last play.
To
the two almost-picks by former
Cowboys cornerback Terence Newman looking to corral some vindication
that would
have ended it all. To quarterback Andy Dalton throwing late to Green on
the
right sideline for a Brandon Carr interception that set up a touchdown.
To
a Dallas offense that did zilch
until the Bengals used up all their chances and put up 10 points in the
last
6:35. To milking less than three minutes off the clock with 6:35 left
and a
19-17 lead in a five–play drive that was all passes before Kevin
Huber's punt
pushed Dallas to the Cowboys 28 with 3:44 left.
“I
had A.J. on a deep out and I
felt like the corner was off and on his outside, so I tried to put it
on the
inside. I thought if he was going to make a play on the ball, he was
going to
have to go through A.J.," Dalton said of the interception that allowed
Dallas to hang in at 10-10 early in the second quarter. "He just made a
good play on the ball. I took a chance early and it’s another one of
those
plays where you think about if you could have that one back, you
wouldn’t have
taken a chance there and the game would be different.”
That's
what everybody does after a
one-point-one-play-one-call loss.
"I
could have made a
difference," they were saying.
That's
how Green felt Sunday.
Green,
the acrobatic receiver
destined to become the franchise's greatest player who touches the
ball, was
wide open for a touchdown on third-and-goal from the Cowboys 7 on the
first
drive of the second half and he dropped the slant over the middle with
the gap
at the goal line widening. It looked like he was walking in for a 20-10
lead,
but the Bengals had to take the field goal for a 16-10 lead with 9:22
left in
the third quarter.
Then
there was the third-and-seven
from the Dallas 34 on the next series and even though Green had to go
to the
ground at around the Dallas 18, it was a good enough throw and an easy
enough
catch but it bounced off his shoulder pads…
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