Dallas Cowboys vs. Cincinnati Bengals

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Cincinnati Bengals One Paul Brown Stadium Cincinnati, Ohio 45202 (513) 621-3550 administrative offices (513) 621-3570 administrative fax (513) 621-TDTD (8383) ticket office www.bengals.com WEEKLY NEWS RELEASE AUG. 2, 2010 Dallas Cowboys vs. Cincinnati Bengals Kickoff: 8 p.m. EDT. Television: NBC national broadcast with Al Michaels (play-by-play), Cris Collinsworth (analyst) and Andrea Kremer (sideline reporter). The game will be aired regionally on NBC affiliates WLWT-TV (Ch. 5) in Cincinnati, WDTN-TV (Ch. 2) in Dayton and WLEX-TV (Ch. 18) in Lexington, Ky. Radio: Coverage on the 28-station Bengals Radio Network, including a triple-cast in Cincinnati on flagships WLW- AM (700) The Big One, WCKY-AM (1530) Homer (all sports) and WEBN-FM (102.7) Broadcasters are Brad Johansen (play-byplay) and Dave Lapham (analyst). Game information Hall of Fame Game Sunday, Aug. 8 at Fawcett Stadium in Canton, Ohio Next up: Preseason Game 2 Aug. 15 vs. Denver forward, and I think that s really a credit to the organization. The only significantly decorated Bengals starter to depart since 2009 has been K Shayne Graham, whose stock dropped with missed FG tries of 35 and 28 yards in the playoff game. Meanwhile, the steps Lewis mentioned include: Signing three veteran free agents at key positions WR Terrell Owens, WR Antonio Bryant and S Gibril Wilson. Retaining four Bengals starters who became unrestricted free agents DT Tank Johnson, TE Reggie Kelly, G Bobbie Williams and S Roy Williams. Completing a draft that included two highly regarded prospects who can fill significant team needs TE Jermaine Gresham (first round) and WR Jordan Shipley (third round). Setting the scene: The Bengals enter 2010 as a defending division champion unbeaten against division foes in 09 and they share the NFL s Hall of Fame weekend spotlight with always high-profile Dallas, taking on the Cowboys this Sunday while the other 30 NFL teams wait until next week for preseason openers. The Dallas game is one of five Bengals contests currently slated for national prime-time television this year, a tie for the franchise record. But despite the vote of confidence from the schedule-makers, Cincinnati is also a team with much to prove in 10. After putting an early stranglehold on the AFC North Division race last season, the club lost four of its last five games, including a Wild Card playoff setback to the New York Jets. It still hurts, Bengals QB Carson Palmer said. I m still not over it. I think about it every day. It had to be one of the most heartbreaking losses we ve ever had. Just because of the expectations. The Jets just barely got in, and we had won the division. You felt a little bit better about it when they went to San Diego and won. They were better than people thought. But that only helps a little. It s on us, on me, to be better. The Baltimore Ravens, beaten twice by the Bengals but in the playoffs as a Wild Card, were the last surviving AFC North team in 2009. The day after the Bengals fell to the Jets, the Ravens upset the Patriots at New England, advancing to a Divisional playoff (loss) the next week at Indianapolis. It s the Ravens who have garnered the greatest share of preseason acclaim as this year s AFC North favorite. Bengals head coach Marvin Lewis returning winner of the Associated Press NFL Coach of the Year award has exuded quiet confidence for 2010, despite a schedule considered one of the NFL s toughest (see It s a tough one in next column). I ve been very pleased with the offseason, Lewis said. Hopefully, the Bengals fans in Cincinnati and around the country were as well. We did the things that we felt were important to help the team get better. We took those steps. When some teams didn t or weren t able to do much, we were still able to move The series: This is the Bengals first preseason meeting against Dallas. In the regular season, Dallas leads 6-4 in a series which has been kind to the home team. The Bengals are 3-1 against Dallas in Cincinnati, but the Cowboys lead 5-1 on their own turf. The last meeting was in 2008 in Dallas, won 31-22 by the Cowboys. The Bengals last victory over Dallas was 26-3 at Paul Brown Stadium in 2004. The winning team has scored more than 30 points in seven of the 10 Bengals-Cowboys games. A complete series recap appears on Page 161 of the Bengals 2008 Media Guide. Starting early pays: This year marks the Bengals third time in the Hall of Fame Game, and the first two appearances wound up as the start to successful seasons. On Aug. 2, 1975, Cincinnati lost 17-9 at Canton to the Washington Redskins, but went on to post an 11-3 record. The.786 winning percentage from that season still stands as the best in club history. The Bengals made the playoffs as a Wild Card team, finishing second behind 12-2 Pittsburgh in the AFC Central Division and fell 31-28 at Oakland in the first round of the playoffs. On July 30, 1988, the Bengals 14-7 Hall of Fame win over the Los Angeles Rams was the kickoff to a 12-4 regular season. Cincinnati won the AFC Central Division championship and went on to capture the AFC title, moving on to Super Bowl XXIII. It s a tough one: Based on opponents aggregate 2009 records, the Bengals 2010 schedule ranks as the NFL s fourth-toughest. Cincinnati s foes played to a combined 138-118 record last season, for a winning percentage of.539. The only clubs whose foes did better are Houston (140-116), Tennessee (140-116) and Dallas (139-117). No team plays more 2010 foes who finished at.500 or better. Cincinnati s total of 11 is tied for the league high. Pittsburgh (126-130) has the weakest opponents record of Page 1

(It s a tough one, continued) the AFC North Division teams. Cleveland s foes played to a 132-124 mark last season, and Baltimore s were 130-126. And then there were seven: With Dallas about to be added to the roster of all-time Bengals preseason opponents, there now are seven franchises that Cincinnati still has yet to meet in a preseason game. Those seven are Baltimore, Carolina, Houston (Texans), Jacksonville, Oakland, San Diego and San Francisco. Dallas is the first new opponent to be added to the Bengals preseason history since 1997, when Cincinnati played its first (and thus far only) preseason game against Seattle. Tough opening test: The Cowboys are one of three teams with 11 or more wins last season on the Bengals preseason schedule. Dallas won the NFC East title at 11-5, ranking second in the NFL on offense and ninth on defense. Also in the preseason, the Bengals will face Philadelphia (11-5, Wild Card) and Indianapolis (14-2, AFC South champion). Bengals-Cowboys 2009 NFL rankings BENGALS COWBOYS SCORING (AVG. POINTS): Points scored... 22nd (19.1) 14th (22.6) Points allowed... 6th (18.2) 2nd (15.6) NET OFFENSE (AVG. YARDS): Total... 24th (309.1) 2nd (399.4) Rushing... 9th (128.5) 7th (131.4) Passing... 26th (180.5) 6th (267.9) NET DEFENSE (AVG. YARDS): Total... 4th (301.4) 9th (315.9) Rushing... 7th (98.3) 4th (90.5) Passing... 6th (203.1) 20th (225.4) TURNOVERS: Differential... 18th (even) T-13th (plus-2) Bengals-Cowboys connections: Bengals S Roy Williams was a first-round Dallas draft choice (eighth overall) in 2002 and played for the Cowboys through 2008, earning five Pro Bowl berths... Bengals WR Terrell Owens played for Dallas from 2006-08... Bengals defensive coordinator Mike Zimmer was on the Cowboys staff from 1994-2006, including 2000-06 as defensive coordinator... Bengals DT Tank Johnson played for the Cowboys in 2007-08... Bengals CB Adam Jones played for the Cowboys in 2008... Four Bengals HB Cedric Benson, WR Quan Cosby, LB Roddrick Muckelroy and WR Jordan Shipley played at the University of Texas; all four are Texas natives, with Benson hailing from Midland, Cosby from Mart, Shipley from Burnet and Muckelroy from Hallsville... Cowboys QB Jon Kitna played for the Bengals from 2001-05... Bengals OT Dennis Roland was originally signed to the NFL by Dallas, as a college free agent in 2006... Bengals HB Bernard Scott is from Vernon, Texas and played in college at Abilene Christian... Bengals OT Anthony Collins is from Beaumont, Texas... Cowboys OT Robert Brewster is from Cincinnati (Wyoming HS, played in college at Ball State)... Cowboys S Akwasi Owusu-Ansah is from Columbus, Ohio (Whetstone HS, played in college at Indiana-Pa.)... Cowboys TEs coach John Garrett was with the Bengals as a WR in 1989 and was on the Bengals coaching staff from 1995-98 and 2000-01... Bengals G Bobbie Williams is from Jefferson, Texas... Bengals offensive coordinator Bob Bratkowski is from San Angelo, Texas...Bengals RBs coach Jim Anderson coached in Dallas at Southern Methodist from 1976-80... Cowboys defensive quality control coach Bobby King is from Louisville, Ky. Red-zone reports: Though Dallas ranked only 23rd in the NFL last season in red zone defensive TD percentage (56.3 percent), the figure is slightly misleading. Opponents chances were limited by the fact that the Cowboys allowed the fewest total red zone opportunities (32) in the league. Bengals 2009 red-zone report OFFENSE DEFENSE Inside-20 poss.: 50 Inside-20 poss.: 40 Total scores: 43 (86.0%) Total scores: 35 (87.5%) TDs: 25 (50.0%) TDs: 19 (47.5%) FGs: 18 (36.0%) FGs: 16 (40.0%) TD% rank: T-18th TD% rank: 11th No scores: 7 (14.0%) No scores: 5 (12.5%) Missed FG: 3 (6.0%) Interceptions: 2 (5.0%) Fumble: 2 (4.0%) End of game: 1 (2.5%) Fumble: 1 (2.0%) Blocked FG: 1 (2.5%) Downs: 1 (2.0%) Fumble: 1 (2.5%) Cowboys 2009 red-zone report OFFENSE DEFENSE Inside-20 poss.: 50 Inside-20 poss.: 32 Total scores: 40 (80.0%) Total scores: 29 (90.6%) TDs: 26 (52.0%) TDs: 18 (56.3%) FGs: 14 (28.0%) FGs: 11 (34.4%) TD% rank: 14th TD% rank: 23rd No scores: 10 (20.0%) No scores: 3 (9.4%) Marvin Lewis is in his eighth season as Bengals head coach, tying for the longest tenure in franchise history, and he takes on the challenge of 2010 as the returning NFL Coach of the Year. Lewis led the Bengals to a 10-6 record and the AFC North Division championship in 2009. He earned the major share of Coach of the Year awards, winning the flagship Associated Press honor (given annually by a national media panel since 1957) while also getting nods from Sports Illustrated and Pro Football Weekly/Pro Football Writers Association. The Bengals were unbeaten in division play (6-0) for the first time in franchise history. Lewis Bengals record is now 56-55-1 in the regular season, 0-2 in postseason and 56-57-1 overall. His record in preseason games is 14-14. He was named the ninth Bengals head coach on Jan. 14, 2003. In 2002, he directed the NFL s fifth-ranked defense with Washington, serving as assistant head coach in addition to his role as defensive coordinator. Prior to his year with the Redskins, he was a record-setting defensive coordinator for the Baltimore Ravens. His six seasons (1996-2001) with the Ravens included a Super Bowl victory following the 2000 season. In the 2000 regular season, Lewis Baltimore defense set the NFL record The head coaches for fewest points allowed in a 16-game campaign (165). Lewis entered the NFL as linebackers coach with Pittsburgh from 1993-95, guiding the careers of Pro Bowl selections Kevin Greene, Chad Brown, Levon Kirkland and Greg Lloyd. Born Sept. 23, 1958, in McDonald, Pa., near Pittsburgh, Lewis played linebacker at Idaho State and earned All-Big Sky Conference honors in each of his three seasons ( 78-80). He began his coaching career as an assistant at Idaho State University in 1981. Wade Phillips is in his fourth year as Cowboys head coach, with a.667 winning percentage at 34-17. In 2009, he led the team to an 11-5 record, winning his second NFC East title and securing the club s first playoff victory since 1996. In 2007, he directed a 13-3 record and the NFC East title. He became the third coach since the 1970 NFL-AFL merger to reach 13 wins in his first season with a club. Phillips has been head coach for five teams, also including New Orleans, Denver, Atlanta and Buffalo. He went 1-3 as New Orleans interim coach in 1985, 16-17 with Denver in 93-94, 2-1 as interim coach with Atlanta in 2003, and 29-21 with Buffalo from 98-00. His overall record is 82-59 (including 1-5 postseason). Page 2

(The head coaches, continued) Over the last 21 years as a head coach or coordinator, Phillips has been a part of only four teams that have had nonwinning records. Phillips is a native of Orange, Texas, and played linebacker at the University of Houston. He coached in college at Houston, Oklahoma State and Kansas. Lewis vs. Cowboys: No previous preseason meetings. Tied 1-1 in regular season. Lewis vs. Phillips: No previous preseason meetings. In regular season, Phillips leads 1-0. Phillips vs. Bengals: Phillips leads, 3-0 (1-0 record while with Denver, Buffalo and Dallas). Lewis needs nine: Lewis Bengals win total (56) ranks second in franchise history, behind Sam Wyche, who won 64 games during an eight-year tenure (1984-91). With nine wins in 2010, Lewis can pass Wyche into first place. Last season, Lewis passed Paul Brown (55 wins) into second place. Could D stand for dominant? In 2007, the Bengals defense was not so good. In 2008, it was much better. And in 2009, it was among the NFL s best units. This week, the defense begins answering the question of whether it can continue the rise to the highest level in 2010. Cincinnati ranked fourth in the NFL last season in fewest yards allowed (301.4) and sixth in points allowed (18.2). The yardage ranking was the best since a No. 1 in 1983, and the scoring ranking was second-best in club history. Coordinator Mike Zimmer, hired after the defense ranked 27th in 2007, certainly has another step up in his plans. If things continue to go as I envision, we ll be a defense that can contend, Zimmer says. We have to get better in some areas, but with the group we have coming back, I feel pretty good. They ll be better because we re not changing a bunch of things. Looking ahead to a possible banner 2010, some Bengals fans have begun calling the unit the Bengals Z-fense. The argument could be made that a healthy Bengals defense could have supported a run through the playoffs last season. When the Bengals lost 24-14 to the New York Jets in the Wild Card round, the defense was missing top sacker Antwan Odom, starting S Roy Williams and starting LB Rey Maualuga. Playing at less than 100 percent were DT Domata Peko and S Chris Crocker, both starters. Palmer rates with greats: Bengals QB Carson Palmer already stands tall in team passing records against Ken Anderson and Boomer Esiason, the Bengals two Super Bowl quarterbacks. Palmer owns the franchise s career records for passer rating and completion percentage, and he holds season marks for TD passes, rating, yards and completions. He also holds the game record for TD passes. Here s how Anderson, Esiason and Palmer compare, with a chart of team records held by each player: Career records (minimum 1000 passes) ANDERSON ESIASON PALMER Attempts (4475) Yds./att. (7.62) Comp. pct (63.2) Completions (2654) 300-yd. games (23) Rating (87.9) Yards (32,838) TD/INT ratio (1.6/1) TD passes (197) Season records (minimum 350 passes) ANDERSON ESIASON PALMER Comp. pct. (70.6) 300-yd. games (5)* Completions (373) TD/INT ratio (2.9/1) Yards (4131) TD passes (32) Rating (101.1) 300-yd. games (5)* * Esiason and Palmer share record. Game records ANDERSON ESIASON PALMER Completions (40) Yards (490) TD passes (6) Comp. pct. (90.9) Longest pass (94) Bengals information The ringmasters: Small-town Georgetown, Ky., has temporarily become a big dot on the national sports map, due to the addition of Terrell Owens to a Bengals WR corps already headed by Chad Ochocinco. A national media blitz and fan frenzy accompanied Owens July 29 arrival for training camp at Georgetown College, an estimable but not outwardly exciting Baptist institution of 1400 students. It s a circus. Him and Chad and them being them, it s fun, said QB Carson Palmer. Training camp is boring and slow and hot, and then you get a little bit of action, a little bit of fun. The circus atmosphere makes it fun, breaks up the monotony of it, and hopefully more fun things happen to make camp not so boring. The longer-term plan is for a 2010 season that will be anything but boring for the defending AFC North Division champions and their fans. I didn t come to town to mess, Owens said. We re looking to be in Dallas on Feb. 6 (for Super Bowl XLIV). I think this team is special. I really feel there is something around the corner for this team. Are there enough airborne footballs to satisfy two receivers with combined career totals of 1690 receptions, 24,903 yards and 206 receiving touchdowns? Add Antonio Bryant, another unrestricted signee for 2010, and the totals climb to 2162 catches, 30,588 yards and 236 TD catches. It s not about that (number of catches), said Ochocinco. It s about winning the darn Super Bowl. Our offense is going to be unfair, but to other teams, not to us. T. (Owens) and I are best friends off the field, and we have the same goal in mind. I think I ve done some great things for this team and this organization, but of course T. is No. 1. He s a Hall of Famer. I give that up out of respect for what he s done in his career. Here s a look at the career total breakdown of the Bengals three most decorated WRs: PLAYER REC. YARDS TD Terrell Owens... 1006 14,951 144 Chad Ochocinco... 684 9952 62 Antonio Bryant... 372 5685 30 Eliminating one headache: Having played most of his career in the NFC, WR Terrell Owens did not have considerable experience against the Bengals in his 14 previous seasons. But in four games, he averaged 108.3 receiving yards, his fifth-highest per-game norm against any NFL team. He averaged 18.8 yards on 23 catches and scored three TDs. In his last outing against Cincinnati, playing in 2008 for Dallas, his 57-yard TD reception in the second half was the gamebreaking play in a 31-22 Cowboys win. When you add his kind of deep threat to your passing game, defenses have to account for it, says head coach Marvin Lewis. We ve witnessed it as a defense playing against him. We ve been through the process of trying to prevent it. I m glad we re on the other side this year. Football time for Chad: WR Chad Ochocinco, far and away the Bengals all-time leader in receptions (684) and receiving yards (9952), is back for a 10th season in stripes, with no thoughts of slowing down. He is 32 years old for the 2010 season. He raised his national profile considerably this past offseason, featured on ABC s Dancing With the Stars and a Page 3

(Football time for Chad, continued) dating show on VH1, but it s not as if he wasn t already known in the NFL. He went to his sixth Pro Bowl last season. Now it s about maintaining myself as one of the best, Ochocinco said. The only difference now is I m no surprise. I m no secret. Being able to play at a high level becomes a lot more difficult when teams are focused on that individual. When I m able to overcome those obstacles and still be successful, I guess that says a lot. Ochocinco has added boxing to his off-season regimen the last two years in an attempt to stay tough physically. The hits I take in the boxing ring allow me to have more of an edge when I play; it s not as big a deal to be constantly getting hit, he said. It sort of gives me an I don t care type feeling during the game. The footwork (in boxing) coincides with football also. No false steps. It all goes hand-in-hand with everything I m doing. It all works together once the season starts. And Dancing With the Stars, he says, was good training to stay tough mentally. It s very disciplining, he said. It s a You-can t-mess-up, you have one shot type of deal. When you re live in front of 20 million you ve got to be on point. I think it can help the discipline in the things I do. Route-running. Just being on point in that one shot I have. It s just being on point every time that ball snaps. Chad s numbers: WR Chad Ochocinco enters the 2010 regular season needing 48 receiving yards to become the 33rd NFL player to get 10,000 for a career. Ochocinco s total is 9952 yards. Ochocinco has had 87 receiving yards in two playoff games, but postseason results do not count in the all-time yardage rankings. Ochocinco has compiled all of his yardage in a Cincinnati uniform, and he is the team career leader by more than 2800 yards over second-place Isaac Curtis (7101). In career receptions, Ochocinco finished last season at a franchise-record total of 684. He now is 154 ahead of the secondplace player, Carl Pickens, who caught 530. By the time he s through, says QB Carson Palmer, these records are going to just be broken. They re going to be shattered. The current top five for all-time Bengals receptions: PLAYERS YEARS SEASONS RECEPTIONS Chad Ochocinco 9 2001-09 684 Carl Pickens 8 1992-99 530 T.J. Houshmandzadeh 8 2001-08 507 Cris Collinsworth 8 1981-88 417 Isaac Curtis 12 1973-84 416 And the current top five for all-time Bengals receiving yards: PLAYERS YEARS SEASONS REC. YARDS Chad Ochocinco 9 2001-09 9952 Isaac Curtis 12 1973-84 7101 Carl Pickens 8 1992-99 6887 Cris Collinsworth 8 1981-88 6698 Eddie Brown 7 1985-91 6134 Chad one short of TD mark: WR Chad Ochocinco has 62 career TD receptions for the Bengals, and his next one will tie him with Carl Pickens (63) for most receiving TDs in Bengals history. Ochocinco had a team-leading nine TDs (all receiving) last season, his most since 2005, when he also had nine. He fell one TD catch short of tying his career high of 10, posted in 2003. Ochocinco holds fourth place in total Bengals TDs (62). The record is 70 by FB Pete Johnson, while Pickens shares second place with RB James Brooks at 64 each. In addition to his 63 receiving TDs, Pickens had one on a punt return as a rookie. For the record: Here s current list of the Bengals records held by WR Chad Ochocinco: Receptions, career: 684. Receiving yards, career: 9952. Receiving yards, season: 1440 in 2007. Receiving yards, game: 260 on 11-12-06 vs. San Diego. 100-yard games, career: 29. 100-yard games, season: Five (tied for record). Consecutive games with reception, career: 120. Benson s ratio is best: Bengals HB Cedric Benson has nine 100-yard rushing games in 23 Cincinnati starts. That s an average of one 100-yarder for every 2.6 starts, better than the ratios posted by Corey Dillon and Rudi Johnson, the players who rank 1-2 in most 100-yard rushing games for Cincinnati. Dillon got his team-record 28 games of 100 rushing yards in 96 starts, an average of one every 3.4 starts. Rudi Johnson got his 19 games of 100 in 59 starts, one for every 3.1 starts. Benson s nine-for-23 is for regular-season games only. He also had a 100-yard game in his only Cincinnati playoff appearance, last year against the N.Y. Jets. His 169 total for that game is a Bengals postseason record. Here s a listing of the 22 players who have hit the 100-yard rushing mark in stripes, with their number of 100-yarders in parentheses: Ten or more games Corey Dillon (28), Rudi Johnson (19), James Brooks (17), Pete Johnson (14). Five-to-nine games Cedric Benson (nine), Harold Green (eight), Paul Robinson (six), Essex Johnson (five), Ickey Woods (five). One-to-four games Larry Kinnebrew (four), Boobie Clark (three), Archie Griffin (three), Jess Phillips (three), Kenny Watson (two), Ki-Jana Carter (one), Virgil Carter (one), Doug Dressler (one), Larry Johnson (one), Marc Logan (one), Bernard Scott (one), Deacon Turner (one), Stanley Wilson (one). Vindicated, and treated like family: Bengals HB Cedric Benson was arrested this past offseason and charged with assault after an incident in an Austin, Texas, night spot. But on July 29, NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell determined that in the league s eyes, Benson was something of a victim of circumstance and not subject to any disciplinary action for his behavior. Benson said after the ruling that he was grateful for the support of the Bengals throughout the situation, and particularly for the support of team president Mike Brown. He s got my back, Benson said of Brown. When I got arrested, I was nervous. But the Bengals took the time to look into the facts. They showed they re invested in me as a person, not just a football player. You can t ask for more than that. It makes you feel at home. It makes you feel good about what you re doing here, working in this town, working for an owner like Mike. It brings out the best in you, truly. Only Chad predates Marvin: WR Chad Ochocinco is the only player on the Bengals roster whose Cincinnati tenure predates the 2003 arrival of Marvin Lewis as head coach. Ochocinco opened in 2001 under head coach Dick LeBeau, as a second-round draft choice (36th overall). Ochocinco became the lone player in this category on Oct. 13 of this year, when the Bengals released LS Brad St. Louis, a 10th-year vet. St. Louis had joined the Bengals in 2000, under head coach Bruce Coslet. Lucky 13? On Sept. 12, when the Bengals open the regular season at New England, they ll be shooting for a 13th consecutive week to hold at least a share of the AFC North Division lead. They had at least a share for the last 12 weeks of 2009, and for eight of those weeks, including the last seven, they were alone in first place. After losing their 09 season opener in stunning fashion to Denver, the Bengals grabbed their first share of the lead on Oct. 4, when they won at Cleveland while Baltimore was losing at New England. Both teams were 3-1. The Bengals took sole possession of first place on Oct. 11, when they won at Baltimore to go 4-1. On Oct. 18, when the Bengals lost to Houston, Pittsburgh pulled into a first-place tie at 4-2 by beating Cleveland for its third straight win. The Bengals and Steelers remained tied until Nov. 15, when the Bengals moved ahead to stay with a win at Heinz Field. Page 4

(Lucky 13?, continued) The Bengals wound up winning the division by one game over Baltimore and Pittsburgh, as the Ravens and Steelers each finished 9-7 to Cincinnati s 10-6. The Ravens earned a Wild Card playoff berth, and the Steelers were eliminated from the postseason via tiebreakers. TV streak at 85: In each of the last 85 TV ratings weeks that have included a Bengals regular-season or postseason game a period dating back to 2004 the Bengals have ruled the Cincinnati airwaves. They have been the top-rated show among all programming in the Cincinnati market, and usually by a wide margin. The streak began on Dec. 5, 2004, when a wild Bengals win at Baltimore outpolled all other programs. The rating number indicates the percentage of market households tuned to the game including those not watching TV at the time. The highest Bengals rating during the streak has been 45.5 for the Pittsburgh playoff game on Jan. 8, 2006. The high rating of Bengals games has occurred despite the fact most games are played in the afternoon, when overall TV viewership is not as high as it is during the evening. Turnover tables turned under Lewis: Over Marvin Lewis tenure as Bengals head coach (2003-09), the Bengals rank fourth in the NFL in turnover differential at plus-40. Cincinnati, however, was only even in turnover differential for 09. Prior to Lewis tenure, Cincinnati had posted a minus differential for five straight years (1998-2002). Here are the top five teams in differential since 2003: TEAM TAKEAWAYS GIVEAWAYS DIFFERENTIAL Indianapolis... 212... 135... +77 New England... 211... 160... +51 San Diego... 198... 153... +45 Cincinnati... 219... 179... +40 Carolina... 220... 189... +31 In Lewis tenure, the Bengals rank fourth in the NFL in takeaways (219). Baltimore is first at 230, and Carolina and Chicago are tied for second, just one ahead of the Bengals at 220. The Bengals have reached 219 with 134 INTs and 85 FRs. In points off turnovers since 2003, Elias Sports Bureau reports that the Ravens lead the NFL with 743, and the Bengals are fourth at 657. A stat that matters: Under head coach Marvin Lewis (since 2003), the Bengals show a 37-6-1 record when posting a plus in turnover differential. That s a winning percentage of.852. With a minus differential, however, the record under Lewis has been almost a mirror image, at 7-35 (.167). When the differential has been even, the results have been about even, with the Bengals at 12-14 (.462) under Lewis. The Bengals experience with turnovers under Lewis is backed up by overall league numbers. Since the start of the 2000 season, here are the records of NFL teams with varying turnover differentials (minus differentials are not included because they are the exact reverse of the plus figure for the same numbers): DIFFERENTIAL W-L PCT. Plus-1... 596-272-1.686 Plus-2... 500-100-0.833 Plus-3... 306-41-1.881 Plus-4... 161-8-0.953 Plus-5 or more... 79-2-0.975 Overall, combining the five differential levels listed above, NFL teams with any plus have a winning percentage of.795 since 2000. The combined W-L record is 1643-423-2. For the 2009 season, teams with a plus posted a 165-46 record, a winning percentage of.782. Bengal bites: Cincinnati s all-time preseason record is 90-96-2... The Bengals are 16-26 in preseason openers... MLB Dhani Jones is shooting in 2010 for his third straight team tackling title. His 142 tackles last season led the team by 41, and his 165 tackles in 2008 led by 53... Bengals offensive linemen are tooling around training camp on Segway people movers, Christmas gifts from QB Carson Palmer... The Bengals have gone two straight regular seasons without allowing a two-point conversion. Cincinnati foes were zero-for-three in 2008 and zero-for-two in 2009... The Bengals have won a franchise-record seven straight games in division play, breaking a mark of six set twice previously. The streak includes a 2008 victory over Cleveland and last season s 6-0 division mark... The Bengals three-game lead (38-35) in their Battle of Ohio series against Cleveland is their largest since the end of the 1992 season, when they led 24-21... The Bengals are 28-1 in 29 regular-season games under head coach Marvin Lewis in which a Cincinnati rusher has carries 25 or more times. The mark includes an 8-0 performance when current starting HB Cedric Benson has reached 25. Head coach Marvin Lewis, on whether this is the most competitive preseason roster in his eight years on the job: People say it is, I guess. I think we have some depth in some spots. We have a lot of competition, and that s a good thing. But we didn t get beyond our first goal (winning a division championship) last season. There is a lot more for us to accomplish this season. QB Carson Palmer, looking ahead to the regular season: We ve got some poise. We ve been to the playoffs. We ve done it before. We re more mature now. The thing we have to do now is win the games we re supposed to win. Win the games where we re the better team. We can t lose a game like last year at Oakland. It was a down year for them but we let them find a way to beat us at their place. I m excited. I don t think it s a question of talent. It s being professional and having the right guys, and this may be our best mix of that. Palmer, on whether the team is equipped to handle the addition of flamboyant WR Terrell Owens: I think so. We ve been through a lot here. A lot of ups and downs, a lot of personalities, a lot of egos. He s definitely got a big personality. I ve had a chance to practice with him (in personal offseason workouts), and he s been very easy to work with. Coachable and very knowledgeable. He s played in a lot of Bengals quotes different systems and he was very willing to shed light on the information he has. G Bobbie Williams, on the team s offseason moves: It just shows we are building this team to go all the way this year; that s all you can ask the organization to do. They re getting the players that are in demand. We certainly feel like this is the year. They re showing more signs to get more top name players in to help give us a better chance.... Hey, they even brought me back (as an unrestricted free agent). WR Terrell Owens, on fan frenzy over his arrival at training camp: I m used to it. I know these fans have been following me through my career, starting in San Francisco. I wouldn t be where I am without the fans. It just shows you the appreciation they have for my body of work. Honestly, it gives you chills. It gives you hope. It makes you get ready for the season. Owens, on his thoughts on one day making the Hall of Fame: I don t overwhelm myself with that. My numbers speak for themselves. The only thing I don t have as an accolade is the Super Bowl trophy. That s pretty much my reason for coming here, knowing that we have something special here and we re on the cusp of doing something great. Page 5

(Bengals quotes, continued) Owens, on his relatively modest receiving numbers in Buffalo last season: People fail to mention I had three different quarterbacks, two different head coaches and a new offensive coordinator right at the beginning of the year. We had a rash of injuries. We probably had the most guys on injured reserve. So all those factors hurt the team production. Not just myself. They don t want to talk about that. They want to say, He s declining. Palmer, on facing the Bengals defense in practice: If we get to the end of the season and we ve been going against the No. 1 defense in the league all year, I won t be surprised. They ve got a chance to be. Why not? We don t look a mess out there, but they make it difficult for us. We have to work hard for every yard and first down we get. It s good for us. We play in a very tough defensive division. Lewis, on QB Carson Palmer: Carson wants to win very badly. During the offseason, Carson will message me once a week about something. He wants to know what s going on. He s invested in the team. In 2003, when he visited here, I told him he was going to be our pick and that he and I were going to be joined at the hip, and he took that seriously. He knew what that meant. A lot of people would think that was idle conversation, but he knew right then and there what that meant. I value his opinion, and he understands when things don t break his way. Sometimes the player doesn t see the whole picture. I try and involve him in that. I tell him, Sometimes I m going to make a decision that you re not going to feel good about, but don t ever let that preclude you from coming to me. Lewis, on the switch of second-year pro Michael Johnson from DE to LB: We ve been very pleased with what we ve seen, but I knew he could play linebacker when I switched him there (during offseason workouts). We saw glimpses of it in practice last year. He s the most talented guy I ve had as far as making that switch. WRs coach Mike Sheppard, on early work with Terrell Owens: He s asking all the right questions. A lot of guys come in to a new system, and they don t know the questions to ask. You ve got to teach them everything. I don t think that s true with him. Palmer, on first-round draft pick Jermaine Gresham: I don t know if there s anything that any tight end in this league does that he can t potentially do. Not that he s mastered anything yet. Not that he s got everything down. But I don t see a weakness. If he had to play in Pittsburgh s offense and block a guy every single time and run little quick seam routes, out routes, he could do that. If he played in Denver s offense and got to run a lot of routes, he could do that. Position-by-position roundup Quarterbacks: Holder of multiple club passing records, eighth-year pro Carson Palmer provides the Bengals with an offensive leader that few clubs can match. A two-time Pro Bowl selection, Palmer led Cincinnati to a division title last season, starting every game. He got the team off to a strong start by directing a remarkable early string of comebacks, as in four of the first five games, he led drives of 70 or more yards to gain either a lead or a tie in the last two minutes. Palmer stands as the fifth-fastest passer in NFL history to reach 100 TDs, hitting the century mark in 2007 in his 59th game played, and he opens 2010 with 128 career TDs. Opening the preseason at No. 2 on the depth chart is eighth-year pro J.T. O Sullivan. He was in the No. 2 role for every game last season and played in three contests. In 2008, he started eight games for San Francisco. Also competing for the No. 2 job is third-year pro Jordan Palmer. He was in uniform for every game last season as the designated third QB, but did not see regular-season game action. He is Carson Palmer s younger brother. Halfbacks: The Bengals return their successful 2009 trio of halfbacks, led by sixth-year pro Cedric Benson. Though he played fully in only 12 games last season, Benson rushed for 1251 yards and tacked on a club postseason record of 169 yards in the playoff game against the N.Y. Jets. He averaged 102.4 rushing yards in his 12 full games, and he set a club record for 100-yard games (six). Back for his second pro season is quick and elusive Bernard Scott, who has proved to be a bargain from the sixth round of the 2009 draft. Scott rushed for 321 yards last season with a 4.3 avg. In his first game as a primary rusher, filling in for the injured Benson on Nov. 22 at Oakland, he logged 119 rushing yards and the team s second-most yards from scrimmage (151) on the season. He also made a late-season move into the No. 1 KOR role and averaged 31.5 yards, including a 96-yarder for at TD in a key win at Pittsburgh. Completing the incumbent trio is resourceful fourth-year pro Brian Leonard, who led the RBs in receptions (30) last season and proved a clutch performer on third down. Looking to crack the roster are first-year pro Cedric Peerman, who played in two games for Detroit last season, and college free agent Cordera Eason of Mississippi. Fullbacks: Second-year pro Fui Vakapuna opens preseason in the No. 1 spot. He was on the roster for the second half of last season, but did not play. Looking to make a preseason impression is college free agent Joe Tronzo of Louisville. Wide receivers: The Bengals are looking to improve their overall WR production in 2010, and the ingredients seem to be in place. The leader is Chad Ochocinco, now in his 10th Bengals and NFL season. Ochocinco last year garnered his sixth career Pro Bowl selection, leading the team by wide margins in catches (72), receiving yards (1047) and TDs (nine). He is the Bengals leader by wide margins in career receptions (684) and receiving yards (9952), and he needs 48 receiving yards to become the 33rd NFL player to hit the 10,000 mark. But new to the Bengals this preseason are two decorated veterans. The most prominent is of course Terrell Owens, signed as an unrestricted free agent on July 29. In 14 previous NFL seasons with San Francisco, Dallas, Philadelphia and Buffalo Owens has career accomplishments that include 14,951 receiving yards (third in NFL history), 144 TD receptions (third) and 1006 receptions (sixth). He has received six Pro Bowl selections and six All-Pro selections. The other key veteran addition is eighth-year pro Antonio Bryant, an unrestricted free agent signee from Tampa Bay. At age 29 for the 2010 season, Bryant already has 106 games NFL experience, with 82 starts, and he has 372 career receptions for 5685 yards. He had a career-high 1248 yards for Tampa Bay in 2008. Andre Caldwell is a candidate for a breakout year in 10 after consistently upgrading his performance in his first two Bengals seasons. He ranked second on the team last year in receptions (51) and was third in receiving yards (432). His three TD catches included two game-winners with less than a minute to play. Jerome Simpson, an explosive college star at the FCS level, is back for his third season after two years in a learning mode. Second-year pro Quan Cosby contributed on offense late last season after excelling all year as the club s primary punt returner. Free agent signee Matt Jones has 166 career receptions and 15 TDs from prior action with Jacksonville, including 65 catches in 2008. Jordan Shipley, a thirdround 2010 draft choice, left Texas as the school s all-time receptions leader (248), and he ranks second in receiving yards (3191) and TD catches (33). First-year pro Maurice Purify played in five games last season. Dezmon Briscoe, Cincinnati s sixth-round 2010 draft pick, took just three seasons to become Kansas all-time leader in receiving yards (3240) and TD catches (31). Tight ends: The Bengals look for a big upgrade at TE in 2010. Back in the No. 1 spot is Reggie Kelly, a punishing blocker and a team leader who missed all of last season due to a training camp Achilles tendon rupture. Kelly has 152 career NFL games with 133 starts. Seeking to upgrade the offensive explosiveness of the TE spot, the Bengals used their top 2010 draft pick (21st overall) on tough and talented Jermaine Gresham of Oklahoma. Gresham was not yet signed to a contract as of Aug. 2. A 2008 first-team All-American by The Sporting News, Gresham missed his 2009 college season due to a knee injury, but he has fully recovered and took part in all the Bengals offseason drills. He scored 25 TDs in his last 28 college games and has all the tools to be both a top receiver and blocker. Second-year pro Chase Coffman was a record-setting receiver at Missouri. He worked last year on his blocking, and has the size (6-6, 250) to improve greatly in that department. He split last season between inactive status and the Reserve/Injured list. Fourth-year pro Daniel Coats has played FB as well as TE during his Bengals career. He has 30 career catches and missed only one game over his first three seasons. Darius Hill spent most of last season on the practice squad after signing as a college free agent. He played in one game last year. Clark Harris works with the tight end group, but his primary role is as a long snapper. Offensive linemen: The Bengals got a solid line Page 6

(Position-by-position roundup, continued) performance last year from a unit that featured only one starting player in the same position as 2008. All the top hands are back, so a year s work together figures to pay dividends this season. The 2009 line helped Cincinnati finish ninth in the NFL in rushing (128.5 yards per game) and in fewest sacks allowed (29). A club record was posted with eight games by individual backs of 100 or more yards. The leaders of the unit are LOT Andrew Whitworth and RG Bobbie Williams. Whitworth enters his fifth Bengals season and has been a key player on the line since his rookie campaign. His 54 career starts include 29 at OT and 25 at G. He was voted a team captain last year. He started every game last season, and so did Williams, who is now in his 11th season. Since joining the Bengals in 2004 as an unrestricted free agent, Williams has not missed a start for any football-related injury. His only missed time was caused by an emergency appendectomy in 2006, and he returned from the operation after missing just three games. The 2009 line saw the starting debut of a promising new performer at center in Kyle Cook. He started every game, brought improved power to the center of the line, and was praised for his command of line calls. The LG position was shared last season by Nate Livings and Evan Mathis. Livings, a third-year pro, opens camp in the No. 1 spot, but Mathis, a sixth-year vet, is again back to contend for playing time. Dennis Roland, a third-year player in 2010, held the No. 1 ROT spot for the last 11 games of 2009, plus the Wild Card playoff. Looking to mount a challenge to Roland is Andre Smith, Cincinnati s top pick in the 2009 draft. Smith played in only six games last year, held back by extended contract negotiations and a foot injury. Rehab from the foot injury has prevented Smith from participating thus far in training camp. OT Anthony Collins has 23 games played with 13 starts as he heads into his third season. He started Games 1-5 at ROT last season. Also looking to crack the roster at a tackle spot are college free agents Gabriel Manns and Andrew Mitchell. Reserve guards looking for playing time are veteran free agent signee Isaac Sowells and sixth-round draft choice Otis Hudson. The race for the No. 2 center spot is between second-year vet Jonathan Luigs and seventh-round draft choice Reggie Stephens. Defensive linemen: The Bengals welcome back all the major performers from a line that helped lead Cincinnati to a No. 4 NFL defensive ranking in 2009, and prospects for further improvement look excellent. The most significant addition to the line figures to be DE Antwan Odom, who was with Cincinnati last season but played only five full games, felled early in Game 6 by an Achilles tendon rupture. Odom s eight sacks were tied for the league lead through five games, and he also had a blocked field goal. Odom and DE Robert Geathers are both in their career primes, as seventh-year players. Geathers has twice led the Bengals in sacks, including a 10.5 total in 2006 that stands as the most by a Bengal since 1983. Last season, Geathers led the line in tackles (56) and led the team in QB pressures (13). Opening preseason in the No. 3 DE spot is sixth-year pro Jonathan Fanene, who proved himself a starting-quality player while stepping in for the injured Odom last year. He was second on the team in sacks (six) and second on the line in tackles (49). DE Frostee Rucker is a fifth-year player who has been productive in spots throughout his Bengals career but has had trouble avoiding injuries. Adding to the club s high potential at DE is second-round draft choice Carlos Dunlap, a top playmaker the last two seasons in the elite Florida program. Looking for the right break to secure a roster spot at DE is college free agent Rahim Alem of LSU. At DT, the Bengals welcome back the three players who saw most of last year s playing time. Domata Peko and Tank Johnson are the starters, and third-year pro Pat Sims has seen plenty of action as well. Peko figures to contribute more in 2010 than in 2009, as he weathered the first injury problems of his career last season, missing five games and less than 100 percent for several others. He led the line with 108 tackles in 2008. Johnson brought a veteran brand of toughness and competitiveness to the line when he signed as an unrestricted free agent for 2009, and he re-signed with Cincinnati as a UFA this past offseason. Sims played in every game last year and made eight starts as an injury replacement. Also in the mix at DT are third-year pro Orien Harris, who played in four games last season, second-year pro Clinton McDonald and fourth-round draft pick Geno Atkins of Georgia. Linebackers: Two-time returning team tackling leader Dhani Jones and a number of productive younger players lead the Bengals LB corps. MLB Jones is in his 11th NFL season and his fourth with the Bengals. He has the team in tackles by wide margins each of the last two years, posting 165 in 2008 and 142 last season. He has been voted a team captain in each of his three previous Cincinnati seasons. The starting WLB is Keith Rivers, Cincinnati s No. 1 draft pick in 2008. Though he missed three games last season with a calf injury, Rivers finished second on the team in tackles, with 101. Rivers played in college at USC, and another former Trojan, Rey Maualuga, opens preseason in the starting SLB role. As a rookie second-round draft choice last season, Maualuga ranked fifth on the team in tackles (80) and led the club with three forced fumbles. Though Rivers and Maualuga have both played well for the Bengals, both are considered to still have a considerable upside to develop. Backing up the outside LB position is fifth-year pro Brandon Johnson, who has performed like a starter the last two years when called upon. He played in every game last season and started three, finishing seventh on the team with 67 tackles. In 2008, he started nine games and finished second in tackles (112). Secondyear pro Michael Johnson moves to an outside LB position this season after showing great promise last year as a DE. Michael Johnson has exceptional athletic talent for his size (6-7, 268) and has tremendous potential as a playmaker. Another solid vet in the OLB mix is fifth-year pro Rashad Jeanty, but he has missed early training camp work due to a leg injury. He played mostly on special teams last season, but in 2008, he made 15 starts and logged 97 tackles. OLB Dan Skuta is a secondyear pro who showed promise last year as a college free agent, and also looking to crack the roster at OLB is college free agent Vincent Rey. Cincinnati s No. 2 MLB as camp opens is fifth-year pro Abdul Hodge. He played in every game last season on special teams and saw brief action with the defense. Poised for a challenge in the MLB competition is fourth-round draft pick Roddrick Muckelroy of Texas, the tackling leader on Longhorn teams that finished 25-2 the last two seasons. Cornerbacks: Two recent Bengals first-round draft picks Leon Hall (2007) and Johnathan Joseph (2006) are in their NFL prime and back to man the starting positions in 2010. They were crucial contributors in the defense s rise last season to a No. 4 NFL ranking. Hall, entering his fourth season, leads the team in INTs (14) and passes defensed (64) over the past three seasons. Joseph tied Hall last season for the club INT lead, with six, and was able to display his talents in a 16- start season for the first time in his career, fulfilling a pledge to stay injury-free. He had a crucial INT return for a TD in a home win over Pittsburgh. He has scored a TD in each of the past three seasons, two on INT returns and one on a fumble return. Competition for the Nos. 3 and 4 CB spots should be spirited. Morgan Trent was a significant rookie contributor last year, playing in every game and logging 25 tackles while leading the secondary in QB pressures. Adam Jones, a fourthyear pro, was signed by Cincinnati in May as a free agent and is looking to re-start his career after not playing in 2009. He was the sixth overall pick (by Tennessee) in the 2005 NFL draft. A top new talent joining the club is third-round draft pick Brandon Ghee, rated among the most physically impressive prospects of the 2009 college crop. He was clocked in 4.39 seconds in the 40-yard dash at the 2010 Scouting Combine. Fourth-year pro David Jones opened last preseason with much promise, in the No. 3 CB spot, but he suffered a foot injury that held him back. He played in 14 games with seven starts last year and had 44 tackles and seven passes defensed. Also looking to crack the roster is college free agent Johnny Sears, who has shown himself to have NFL-level skills but had limited college experience. Safeties: The Bengals have a deep pool of veteran talent at safety. A key in 2010 could be getting a full season of production from SS Roy Williams, a five-time Pro Bowl selection while playing for Dallas. Williams opened his first Bengals season as the starter last year, but wound up being limited to four games due to a forearm injury. The No. 1 free safety as preseason begins is eighth-year pro Chris Crocker. He had 56 tackles and two INTs last year and ranked third on the team in passes defensed (11). Challenging for playing time at SS will be fourthyear pro Chinedum Ndukwe, a late seventh-round Bengals draft selection in 2007 who has been a significant contributor and playmaker over his first three seasons. He took over for Williams last season and finished third on the team in tackles (91). A key addition at FS is seventh-year vet Gibril Wilson, a free agent signee with 80 career starts for three previous NFL clubs. Wilson has aided successful defenses in the past, as he also has six career postseason starts. Looking to make headway against the aforementioned foursome will be third-year pro Kyries Hebert, first-year pro Rico Murray, second-year player Tom Nelson and college free agent Jeromy Miles. Special teams: For the first time since 2003, when Shayne Graham and Neil Rackers battled, the Bengals have a preseason competition for the place kicker job. Signed as free agents during the offseason were veterans Mike Nugent and Dave Rayner. Nugent, a Centerville, Ohio, native who played at Ohio State, is a sixth-year NFL player with two 100-point seasons on his resume (as a New York Jet). He saw brief action last season with Tampa Bay and Arizona. Rayner, from Michigan State, is a fourth-year player who has seen action with five teams, including briefly with the Bengals last season as an injury replacement. He scored 109 points for Green Bay in 2006. There is also a competition at long snapper. Clark Harris handled the duty for the last 11 games of 2009 and did not have an unplayable snap, but also in the picture for 2010 is Mike Windt, college free agent signee from the University of Cincinnati. At punter, the Bengals have high hopes for the second season of Kevin Huber, who was the first kicking specialist chosen in the 2009 draft. Huber played in every game last season, and his 43.2-yard average tied the Bengals second-best figure since 1999. Page 7