Updated: 7:50 p.m.
This is Sandra Bullock vs. Susan Boyle.
That big-time Hollywood Vikings defensive line of Jared Allen and the Williams brothers of bash vs. the out-of-nowhere Bengals offensive line that is hoping to blind side the critics in Sunday’s showdown that will be decided low down in the trenches.
“I talked to Marvin (Lewis) last week and tried to put in for a vacation week this week,” said offensive line coach Paul Alexander after Thursday’s practice. “It didn’t go through.”
All kidding aside, Alexander knows how well his guys must play if the 9-3 Bengals are going to clinch the AFC North with a victory over the 10-2 Vikings in the raucous Metrodome. It is like the man said. The man that Alexander calls as good as any left tackle in the NFL.
“This is going to be a line game,” said Andrew Whitworth. “Both sides of the ball. A line game.”
“This is the best defensive line we’re going to play in the toughest situation you can ask for. One way or the other when this game is over, we’ll be better,” Alexander said. “It’s as good a defensive line as I’ve seen in years. You find out exactly where you are.”
Alexander thinks his guys are battle-tested for a dome game after wins on the road in Green Bay, Baltimore and Pittsburgh. “Because we were able to harness that type of inner energy they need.”
But he told his team this week about a trip he made to the Super Bowl a few years ago.
“What was amazing was all the things going on,” Alexander said. “There were all kind of things flying overhead. Fireworks. Celebrities on the sidelines and all over the place. But just being able to focus and play. I think that’s the kind of game it’s going to be. You block your guy. That’s what the game is. If we can go in there and play with that type of poise and focus, we’ll be fine.”
Not only does the Bengals line have to contend with Vikings talent but also with communication issues in one of the loudest venues in the league. Alexander won’t reveal how he’ll combat it, but he says don’t look for his players to hold hands like some lines have been known to do.
Even though this line doesn’t have many games working together, most everyone has had experience in a dome. Center ![]()
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Under Lewis since 2003, the Bengals are 2-4 in domes or stadiums with retractable roofs.
CHASE ENDS '09 CHASE: Bengals rookie tight end ![]()
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Coffman, who admitted Thursday he never got over the broken foot he suffered on the last snap of his college career, has limited range of motion in the ankle that prevented him from being able to push off or plant his foot. Coffman, the most prolific receiving tight end in NCAA history while at Missouri, broke the outside bone of the foot on the Tigers’ last snap in overtime in the Alamo Bowl.
“This is a chance for me to get it back healthy and be 100 percent for the offseason workouts,” said Coffman, who was never active for a game. “The (foot) just healed slowly. The whole process was a rush job, from the bowl game to getting the surgery and trying to get ready for the draft. Now I’m just trying to get it squared away with some time so I can be full go in the spring. It’s been a rough year.”
» With head coach Marvin Lewis taking the Bengals up to Mason, Ohio's indoor facility for a second straight practice Thursday, the conventional wisdom is they'll work outside Friday if the forecast holds up. Thursday's bone-chilling temperatures in the teens whipped by high winds were supposed to give way to 32 degrees Friday. Still brisk, but not windy and Friday is usually a shorter practice not going much past 90-95 minutes.
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» With Brian Kelly leaving the University of Cincinnati for Notre Dame, a name that very well could resurface for the UC job is Ravens quarterbacks coach Hue Jackson, the man that recruited ![]()
» Bengals middle linebacker ![]()
» Percy Harvin, the rookie Vikes playmaker at kick return and wide receiver, missed his second straight day of practice Thursday. ProFootballTalk.com reported he was out with the headaches that have bothered him for most of his life.






