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USA Today Sports Media Group
USA Today Sports Media Group
Sport
Chris Roling

Instant analysis after Bengals outlast Dolphins on TNF

The Cincinnati Bengals beat the Miami Dolphins on “Thursday Night Football” by a 27-15 margin.

Outside of the repainted field and alternate helmets it wasn’t a pretty contest for the Bengals. The defense struggled, even against a backup quarterback. Joe Burrow’s offense stagnated hard after a solid opening drive.

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Yet a win is a win, especially after the rough 0-2 start.

Here are some quick notes and stats to know from the game.

 

Quick Hits

— Nine plays, 75 yards and a touchdown on the first drive of the game for the Bengals. That’s similar to what they did in Week 3 when they won the toss and kept it, preferring to play with a lead and dictate pace.

— Bengals defense got very, very lucky on Miami’s first drive. After getting gashed, the Dolphins dropped an easy touchdown in the endzone. This was a critical point, as the Bengals then had a chance to adapt defensively while only surrendering three points.

— Vonn Bell came up with a huge interception. An underthrown ball gave him just enough time to get across the field and make the play.

— Zac Taylor slammed his own play-calling in the days before this game for his goof-up on a fourth-and-short call. He sent it wide and it failed — then he did it again on Thursday night the drive after a turnover. What could have been a huge scoring drive instead produced zero.

— The Dolphins had been daring the Bengals to take a deep shot and they finally did before halftime — Burrow hit Tee Higgins for a 59-yard touchdown.

— Bengals defense oddly collapsed before halftime, coughing up a nine-play, 75-yard drive to backup quarterback Teddy Bridgewater.

— Bengals failed to score a touchdown in short territory and opted for a field goal instead of another try. Zac Taylor opted for a 19-yard field goal to make it 17-15, but the decision didn’t look great at the time.

— The offense had some self-inflicted wounds ruin a drive late and needed to settle for a 57-yard field goal from Evan McPherson. He hit to make it 20-15, but it was another head-shaking setback for what should be an elite offense.

— Vonn Bell all but iced the game late with an interception of Teddy Bridgewater, plus a big return.

 

Key Stat

2.5: Yards per carry for the running game. It’s too predictable and easy to stop, which places even more pressure on the passing attack and defense.

 

Game Balls

WR Tee Higgins: With Ja’Marr Chase blanketed, No. 85 stepped up big with seven catches for 124 yards and the big touchdown.

S Vonn Bell: Not one…but two interceptions for Bell. One where he showed good range on an underthrow and another was a heads-up showing at a critical moment late.

 

Top Takeaway

Ugly: That’s Thursday night games in a nutshell and this wasn’t any exception. The defense got gashed a few more times than usual and the offense was an outright mess after the opening drive. But they’ll take ugly if it means wins, saving the season and getting a chance to correct the issues.

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