Bengals send Broncos to another loss
Denver drops its sixth straight as Elway calls team a bit soft
DENVER — Andy Dalton and the Cincinnati Bengals only made things tougher on the Denver Broncos 48 hours after their boss labeled them as soft.
Dalton’s three touchdown throws and a defense that contributed two takeaways helped the Bengals beat the Broncos 20-17 Sunday for their first win in Denver since 1975, when franchise founder Paul Brown was their head coach.
“No, I don’t remember that,” cracked A.J. Green, who wasn’t born until 1988. “I don’t keep up with history a lot.” Denver’s dive is reaching historic proportions. Not only did the Broncos see their 10-game home winning streak against Cincinnati (4-6) snapped, but they lost their sixth straight game, their longest skid since 1990.
“This isn’t the culture here,” lamented quarterback Brock Osweiler, who just two years ago helped as the Broncos won Super Bowl 50. “The standard here is to win championships, get to the playoffs every year and contend for Super Bowls, and right now we’re not playing football like that. So, it’s very frustrating.”
The Broncos (3-7) have been outscored by 100 points during their skid that led general manager John Elway to suggest over the weekend that “we got a little bit soft” after a 3-1 start that followed a perfect preseason.
“I was initially offended, but in some aspects he’s right,” said Broncos rookie coach Vance Joseph, who also received a vote of confidence from Elway, who suggested it was up to the players, not the coaching staff, to pull Denver out of its doldrums.
Players’ reactions to Elway’s insult ranged from anger to acceptance.
“None of us are soft,” fumed Brandon Marshall.
“He was telling the truth,” allowed Von Miller.
“He’s the boss,” shrugged Derek Wolfe. “If that’s how he feels, then we have to make sure he doesn’t feel that way.”
Trailing by a field goal, the Broncos got the ball back with 1:52 left on their 20-yard line, and on fourth-and-4 Osweiler’s low throw to Emmanuel Sanders was broken up by Dre Kirkpatrick, whose big play in the first half set the tone for Cincinnati’s historic win.
Kirkpatrick’s interception return nearly covered 102 yards. But he fumbled the ball at the Denver 15-yard line before smothering it at the 1.
“I’ve got to punch that in,” lamented Kirkpatrick.
Dalton had his back, connecting with Tyler Kroft for the score three plays later.
Because his first completion had lost a yard, Dalton had this oddball stat line: zero passing yards but one TD throw.
Dalton only ended up throwing for 154 yards while completing 15 of 25 passes, but he had a 29-yard TD toss to Alex Erickson for a 13-7 halftime lead, and an 18-yarder to Green, which made it 20-10 with just under nine minutes remaining.
Demaryius Thomas’ 17-yard touchdown catch pulled the Broncos within 20-17 with five minutes left.
But cornerback Bradley Roby, burned for the last two touchdowns, committed a crucial pass interference call on a thirddown incompletion to Green which allowed the Bengals to burn off more time.