
Armon Binns
Updated: 7:10 p.m.
Wide receiver Armon Binns was claimed off waivers by the Dolphins on Monday, completing a wild ride as a member of the Bengals that saw him go from the practice squad to Opening Day starter and back to No. 6 receiver.
That's where he was Saturday when the Bengals opted to waive him to make room for center ![]()
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The Bengals thought there was a chance they might need tight end ![]()
With the emergence of draft picks ![]()
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"Consistency," Binns said when asked what he learned about his Bengals experience. "I'm looking to get more consistent."
The Bengals were hoping to re-sign him once their kicker situation settled, but it's the second time a Bengals No, 85 has landed in Miami in the last four months and Binns hopes he'll last longer than Chad Johnson. He says he understood the Bengals wanted him back and why they made the move.
"I knew there was a chance just because of the kicker and everything else going on," Binns said. "I know (the Dolphins) are real thin at receiver so it's a chance for me to go out there and make an impact any way that I can, so I'm just ready to go to work.
"(The Bengals) were hoping everything worked out, but there's a chance this can happen."
COOK QUICK TURNAROUND: The Bengals wasted no time getting Cook into the lineup for the first time this season Sunday against the Cowboys and gave him the same amount of snaps as starter ![]()
Robinson, the rookie free agent from Notre Dame, made his sixth straight start but alternated every two series with Cook and the veteran ended up playing in the fourth quarter.
Cook, who had started 50 straight games for the Bengals before undergoing ankle surgery following an injury in the Aug. 23 preseason game against the Packers, was called for a hold on the first series in the fourth quarter that led to a punt. After practicing for the first time all week at full go, Cook was also called for a false start on his second series but on his first snap back drew nose tackle Rob Callaway offside in Callaway's first NFL game.
"I felt pretty good," Cook said. "The first time I got in there everybody else was warmed up but I got into it. It's a shame on that last drive we couldn't do what they did and got some first downs and kept grinding it out and not give them the ball back."
It was a curious last series. The Bengals had a 19-17 lead with 6:35 left and passed it on all five plays before they punted it back to the Cowboys after a possession of less than three minutes.
The Bengals have been grooming running back ![]()
But with the Eagles looming in the Thursday night game (NFL Network-8:20 p.m.), there wasn't much time left for what-ifs.
"That might be a good thing. This one's gone, there's nothing you can do about it," Cook said. "Let's get back to work tomorrow and move forward. We're still in control of our destiny."
The Bengals do go right back to work with a light Monday evening practice before having a Friday-like practice on Tuesday morning. Then they'll have a walkthrough Wednesday morning before heading to Philadelphia in the afternoon.
The Monday night workout was more of a glorified walkthrough, so it was tough to tell who was out there since everybody was in gray sweats. WILL backer ![]()
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Kirkpatrick, who was listed as full go Monday, says it's the second concussion he's had but not as bad as the one he had at Alabama. Also working was left end ![]()
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The Eagles ruled out two starters Monday, tight end Brent Celek and defensive tackle Mike Patterson, and running back LeSean McCoy and quarterback Michael Vick were out of practice with concussions.
ROMO THEATRICS: Cowboys quarterback Tony Romo showed just how good he is on the two biggest throws of the day, the back-to-back bullets over the middle on third-and-10 from the Bengals 42 and then the touchdown to wide receiver Dez Bryant on first-and-10 from the 27.
Defensive coordinator Mike Zimmer pulled out all the stops on third down with a funky five-man rush that featured blitzes by defensive backs ![]()
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On the next snap Zimmer kept mixing it up with a straight four-man rush with Dunlap and Michael Johnson on the edge and ![]()
JAIL BREAK: Bengals cornerback ![]()
"We've got these dudes up front that are like guys who have been locked down in prison for 30 years and get out," Newman said before practice. "They see the quarterback as some hot supermodel. That how's they come off the ball. 'Hey, she's mine.' I'm not saying the quarterback is a female. I'm just saying that's how they come off the ball."

