
BALTIMORE - The Bengals defense gave up virtually nothing in the last three games, especially when their backs were against the wall. Such was the case Sunday when they held the Ravens to 199 yards and one short-field touchdown in the 13-7 loss.
They had another red-zone stand in holding the Ravens to a field goal on three shots from the Bengals nine on their first series and with 1:42 left in the game lineman ![]()
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WILL backer ![]()
"Stopping Ray Rice; he's 40 percent of their offense," said Johnson of Sunday's key. "Always keep a set of eyes on him. We know Flacco goes to him when he's in trouble."
And Flacco was in trouble much of the day. If defensive coordinator Mike Zimmer didn't dial up a blitz, the front four delivered pressure. Rookie linemen ![]()
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The pressure was huge because, slot cornerback ![]()
"That was fun," Ratliff said. "They were keeping guys in to block and he was trying to get it out quick. That's a sign the pressure was getting there."
COMING UP SHORT: The Bengals and quarterback ![]()
They failed on third-and-one four times Sunday to finish their season a woeful 28-for-58 on third-and-two or less. On Sunday, Palmer underthrew wide receiver ![]()
Ironically, he got that elusive first down, but in getting it he dove and as he did the ball slipped out of his right hand.
"I did a bad job with ball security," he said.
It has been like that all year. Flashes of brilliance interspersed with brain locks or flubs. Against the elite Ravens third-down defense, the Bengals converted 41 percent (seven-of-17), but four of the failures were a yard or shorter on three runs and a pass.
Palmer sifted the Ravens on 32-of-45 passing for 305 yards and nicked the Ravens for only their 17th red-zone touchdown of the season on a perfect 11-yard pass to wide receiver ![]()
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"They max dropped (eight) and we had two guys out in the route," Palmer said. "I tried to squeeze it in there and it looked like he just wasn’t quite ready yet. It looked like we had him, I thought it was going to be a tight window, a big hit. I'm just trying to squeeze one in right before half and I probably shouldn't have done it."
Last year, Palmer always made the big throw in the red zone late. His touchdown passes in the last 2:03 tied Cleveland and beat Baltimore, Pittsburgh and Kansas City. But not this year. On third down from the 2, Caldwell got knocked off a fade route and the pass went long. On fourth down with 10 seconds left, the Bengals sent three receivers right, and when Palmer couldn't get Shipley coming back inside, he had to scramble, and his late heave to running back ![]()
Palmer is going to take the heat this offseason, but the scheme will no doubt take as many shots. The riddle is going to be, "How did the Bengals go from winning the AFC North with a run-first mentality to Palmer throwing a franchise-record 586 passes?"
Certainly they found out right tackle ![]()
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After getting clogged for 21 yards on nine carries in the first half, running back ![]()
But Benson summed up the short-yardage problems best.
"That's something team this has to work on," he said. "It's one yard. It's easy."




