Dayton Daily News

Starter: Backups:

-

Starter:

Andy Dalton AJ McCarron, Jeff Driskel

Dalton enters his seventh year as the starter while McCarron heads into his fourth — and what he hopes is his final — season as a backup. The Bengals like Driskel’s potential, which is why they kept him on the 53-man roster all year, protecting him from being claimed on waivers. But will they be willing to use a valuable roster spot on a third quarterbac­k for the second year in a row?

Jeremy Hill Backups: Giovani Bernard, Joe Mixon, Cedric Peerman, Ryan Hewitt (H-back), Tra Carson, Jarveon Williams, Stanley Williams, Darrin Laufasa (fullback)

Mixon looked as advertised in OTAs and minicamp, but there was nothing he could have done to change the fact Hill will go into training camp as the starter. And the same will be true heading into the Sept. 10 opener against Baltimore.

The team is hopeful Bernard can get some work in during camp and be ready to play sometime in the first month of the season, avoiding starting the year on PUP. That means the first five listed above will be on the 53, while the others battle for a spot on the practice squad.

Starters:

A.J. Green, Brandon LaFell, Tyler Boyd (slot)

Backups:

Cody Core, Alex Erickson, John Ross, Josh Malone, Jake Kumerow, Alonzo Russell, Chris Brown, Monty Madaris, Karel Hamilton

Even though John Ross was a first-round pick, he falls farther down the depth chart because he not only couldn’t participat­e in any offseason work due to labrum surgery, but he was away from the team for five weeks waiting to graduate. But expect him to make up for lost time the way he does a lot of things — quickly.

There are 12 receivers competing for what likely will be seven spots on the 53-man roster. The line of demarcatio­n is between Malone and Kumerow at the moment, but this will be Kumerow’s third year in the system, and Russell could be a dark-horse candidate.

Starter: Backups:

Tyler Eifert

C.J. Uzomah, Tyler Kroft, Mason Schreck, Cethan Carter

Eifert missed the entire offseason following back surgery, but he’s locked in as the starter with the expectatio­n he’ll be ready to go for the first practice of camp.

Uzomah appears to have edged past Kroft, but rookie seventh-round pick Schreck could be in the mix as well. Schreck didn’t do anything to stand out this spring, but with a solid camp he could steal a spot from Uzomah or Kroft.

Starters:

Cedric Ogbuehi, Clint Boling, Russell Bodine, Andre Smith, Jake Fisher

Backups:

Eric Winston, T.J. Johnson, Trey Hopkins, Alex Redman, Christian Westerman, J.J. Dielman, Landon Lechler, Kent Perkins, Dustin Stanton

Nothing changed this spring to alter the starting five, but Smith’s spot is tenuous. Offensive line coach Paul Alexander said Smith’s move to guard is still a work in progress, so camp will be especially important for him.

Winston gets the nod as the top backup based on his experience, but it’s fair to question how much the 34-year-old has left and whether the team might be better suited to keeping an unproven younger player with upside.

Hopkins, a natural guard, played all five spots in the spring. If he continues to prove to be a competent backup at tackle, and if Smith loses his starting guard spot and reverts to a backup tackle, Winston could be expendable, especially with the team knowing it could probably bring him back at any time should there be an injury.

Starters:

Carlos Dunlap, Michael Johnson

Will Clarke, Wallace Gilberry, Jordan Willis, Chris Smith, Ryan Brown

Johnson gets the nod on the right side based on his experience, but Clarke, who is entering his contract year, will have a chance to win the job in camp.

The real battle will be for second-team snaps between rookie third-rounder Willis, who has been impressive this spring, Gilberry and either Johnson or Clarke.

Backups: Starters:

Geno Atkins, Andrew Billings

Backups:

Brandon Thompson, Pat Sims, Marcus Hardison, DeShawn Williams, Ryan Glasgow, David Dean, Josh Tupou

Sims is hardly a lock for the 53-man roster, but if he does make it, don’t be shocked if the Bengals list him as the starter on the first depth chart, based solely on experience.

But it would be somewhat of a surprise to see anyone other than Billings lining up next to Atkins on Sept. 10 vs. the Ravens. He’s fully recovered from the knee injury that cost him his entire rookie season, and performed well while getting a long look this spring.

Thompson, who also is fully recovered from the ACL injury he suffered in the 2015 season finale, could give Billings a push in camp.

Starters:

Vontaze Burfict, Kevin Minter, Nick Vigil

Vinny Rey, Carl Lawson, P.J. Dawson, Marquis Flowers, Jordan Evans, Bryson Albright, Hardy Nickerson Jr., Brandon Bell

Vigil looks like he not only will be a starter in base but should be the guy alongside Burfict in nickel packages. Last year’s third-round pick got valuable experience in December due to injuries and the Bengals being out of the playoffs, and he built on that this spring.

Lawson has been one of the more impressive players this spring and should get plenty of looks during camp to see if he can be as effective a pass rusher once the pads go on and the offensive linemen can get physical with him.

If the Bengals keep seven linebacker­s, there is a real chance one of them could come from the undrafted group of Albright, Nicker- son and Bell as time appears to be running out on Dawson and Flowers. Nickerson

Backups:

 ?? AP PHOTOS BY JOHN MINCHILLO ?? First-round draft pick John Ross has some catching up to do after missing spring workouts. Third-round DE Jordan Willis (99) will compete for snaps behind veterans Carlos Dunlap and Michael Johnson.
AP PHOTOS BY JOHN MINCHILLO First-round draft pick John Ross has some catching up to do after missing spring workouts. Third-round DE Jordan Willis (99) will compete for snaps behind veterans Carlos Dunlap and Michael Johnson.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States