
In the quest to find a young tight end to back up Pro Bowler ![]()
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The Bengals began the first of their three fifth-round picks with Iowa cornerback ![]()
Then with the Chad Ochocinco fifth-rounder from New England there was an ironic twist with the selection of speedy California wide receiver ![]()
Then on the very next selection, the last one in the fifth from the Keith Rivers trade, the Bengals went with box safety ![]()
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After that pick, the ESPN draft talent announced no team has had a better draft over the last three days while the NFL Network gave the Bengals draft an A.
The Bengals made their last selection in the sixth round Ohio State running back ![]()
The biggest need for college free agency that starts right after the draft is outside linebacker. By not taking a running back until Herron, the Bengals indicated it wasn't a pressing need with the four they already have.
The Bengals went to the Georgia well one more time as the 6-2, 251-pound Charles becomes the sixth Bulldog on the roster, joining wide receiver ![]()
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"To get this kid, I think he can really help us become that much better of a team," said tight end coach Jon Hayes. "His attitude. His effort. His production. His want-to. He's going to come in here and fit right in."
Charles says he has stayed in touch with Green during the offseason and consulted with him about whether he should come out early and Green advised him that it had to be a family decision.
"What he did teach me was to go hard in every practice; how you practice is how you definitely do in a game," Charles said. "I'm definitely going to be in his pocket trying to work with him and just stay in the film room with him. I definitely have a good tight end I can look up to and (pattern) my game."
Hayes loves Charles's work ethic and had to tell him over the phone to cool his jets. Charles doesn't have to get here until the May 11-13 rookie minicamp.
"Essentially it was in my head I would come up there today and start working with some of the guys on the team and start to get familiar with howCharles had a blip on his radar last month with a DUI after his pro day, but Hayes said he had no character problems before that and Charles vowed in his conference call with the Cincinnati media, "It will never happen again."
"That might have been the worst thing that ever happened in my life," Charles said. "Just having to explain to my brother and what I did and don't follow in my footsteps. My mom and grandma had to leave work. I just put my family and my fans in a bind. I'm never going to put bad substances in my body because I quickly found out it not only hurt me but everybody else in my family and burdening my church and my fans."
Charles admitted that was a tough conversation with his 11-year-old brother.
"He said he understood," he said. "We've just been talking every day.''

