Cape Breton Post

Bengals losing sleep over historical­ly bad start

- BY JOE KAY

CINCINNATI - Weary and bleary, coach Marvin Lewis tried to sum up his team’s horrific start. What was supposed to be a special season has quickly soured. Words are as elusive as a good night’s sleep or a simple touchdown.

“Um, the uh, you know, hmmm. Not a, you know, not a spot where we thought we’d be, but we are,” a bleary-eyed Lewis said Friday afternoon.

They’re sleepless in Cincinnati after two historical­ly bad games to open their 50th season. Changes are in the works already, although it could be too late to make enough of a difference. The Bengals have to win back fans and forestall an implosion that would reverberat­e through the organizati­on.

“We have to start winning, and start winning now,” quarterbac­k Andy Dalton said.

Lewis is in the final year on his contract, making him vulnerable. There have been more than 10,000 empty seats for each of the first two home games. And the offence — the focus of off-season moves — has been historical­ly bad, leading to change already.

The Bengals fired offensive co-ordinator Ken Zampese on Friday, a few hours after they again failed to get into the end zone during a 13-9 loss to the Houston Texans .

Quarterbac­ks coach Bill Lazor was promoted to coordinato­r, although there’s not much time or room to put an imprint on the offence.

“Things happened very fast,” said Lazor, who was the Dolphins’ offensive co-ordinator in 2014-15.

And the trend is bad.

The Bengals’ run of five straight playoff appearance­s — and five straight first-round losses — ended last season with a 6-9-1 finish. Three of their top playmakers — A.J. Green, Tyler Eifert and Giovani Bernard — were hurt for much of the season, contributi­ng to a significan­t slide in the offence.

All three are back, and receiver John Ross and running back Joe Mixon were drafted to help fix the issues on offence.

Instead, they’ve made little positive impact. The offence has been an unmitigate­d mess, leading to Zampese’s firing. Cincinnati has failed to score a touchdown in 25 possession­s, the first NFL team since the 1939 Eagles to open with a pair of home games and fail to get into the end zone.

The previous team to open with two home games and so few points was the 1949 Packers.

This was supposed to be one of the franchise’s most notable years. The Bengals are celebratin­g their 50th season by bring back their greatest players for halftime honours at games. The big year got off on a bad foot when linebacker Vontaze Burfict was suspended by the NFL for three games and cornerback Adam “Pacman” Jones for one.

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