Late in an eventual overtime classic win over the Denver Broncos, Cincinnati Bengals running back Chase Brown slid (and got hurt) instead of scoring a touchdown. Clearly, the idea was for the Bengals
Cincinnati's head coach stayed aggressive and an injury threw off a chance to bleed the clock almost all the way down.
Denver sealed Cincinnati's fate, and HBO’s "Hard Knocks," which followed the AFC North teams this season, captured some of the Bengals’ players and head coach Zac Taylor's immediate reactions as they watched it all unfold.
A look at how the clock would have played out if Bengals hadn't scored when they did and how Denver had a chance to tie it either way.
If you found yourself consistently questioning Zac Taylor's decision making throughout Cincinnati's 30-24 overtime victory over the Denver Broncos in Week 17, you weren't alone. Taylor made several head-scratching decisions over the course of the contest ...
The Cincinnati Bengals beat the Denver Broncos in one of the most exciting games of the season. However, all the drama that took place on Saturday at Paycor Stadium was the product
Anyone associated with the Bengals or the team's fans didn't have to scoreboard watch for long on Sunday before the team's playoff hopes were dashed.
David Suggs is a content producer at The Sporting News. A long-suffering Everton, Wizards and Commanders fan, he has learned to get used to losing over the years. In his free time, he enjoys skateboarding (poorly), listening to the likes of Stevie Wonder, Marvin Gaye and D’Angelo, and penning short journal entries.
The Cincinnati Bengals won Saturday evening’s game against the Denver Broncos in walk-off fashion on a play they drew up during the third quarter, NFL insider Ian Rapoport reports.
Former Boise State offensive coordinator Zak Hill is returning to the school as quarterbacks coach and pass game coordinator.
Bengals players are on the couch now, just like us, and disappointment shrouds the city like a heavy heap of shredded cheddar on a cold coney.