Dayton Daily News

5 things to watch in offseason, as Bengals try to turn things around

Franchise has plenty of work in comingmont­hs as it looks to improve.

- ByLaurelPf­ahler

Cincinnati Bengals coach Zac Taylor said this week it was too early to tell if the team needs another overhaul or just some tweaks.

Regardless of howtheorga­nization attacks the offfffffff­fffseason, there is plenty of work to be done as the Bengals seek to turn a 4-11-1 record into a winning campaign in 2021.

The Bengals are keeping Taylor on board for a third yearwith the expectatio­nhe canturnthi­ngs around after showing some progress in an injury- riddled second season. Taylorwill use thisimport­ant offseason to get off on the right foot.

Here are fifive things to watch this offfffffff­fffseason:

1. Coaching changes

The Bengals don’t normally

announce departing assistants, but they’ve already removed a handful offff names and bios from the staffff list on the team website. They will be looking for replacemen­tsover thenext severalwee­ks.

Among those gone are offfffffff­fffensive line coach Jim Turner, running backs coachJemal Singleton, wide receivers coach Bob Bicknell, defensive line coach Nick

Eason and defensive assistant Gerald Chatman. Singleton left to become the running backs coach at the University of Kentucky.

“Whenyour recordiswh­atyour record is nothing was ever good enough,” Taylor said Monday.

All three coordinato­rs are expected to remain with Lou

Anarumo and Brian Callahan also getting a third year alongside Taylor and special teams guru/associate head coach Darrin Simmons set to return for a 19th season.

The Bengals named Frank Pollack offensive line coach and run game coordinato­r Saturday. Pollack returns after spending the last two seasons with the Jets.

2. Pending free agency

The Bengals have 28 players who are set to become free agents, most of them unrestrict­ed. Amongthe biggest names on that list are wide receivers A.J. Green and John Ross, cornerback­s William Jackson and Mac ken si eA lex an der, defensive end Carl Lawson, safety Shawn Williams and linebacker Josh Bynes.

Green played on a franchise tag this season and will remain a big storyline until his future is determined, as hewas once looking to finish his career with the team that drafted him fourth overall in 2011. Ross is expected todepart after an injury-plagued four seasons and requests for a trade this season, and Jackson wasn’t as consistent as one could have hoped for so it seems likely the team could be satisfied moving on from him.

Lawson made a good case for a new deal after a productive season going from a third-down pass rusher to a starter and leading the team in sacks and pressures. Bynes, the team’s main middle linebacker, served as a much-needed veteran presenceam­onga youngposit­ion group and said hewould like to return to settle “unfinished business.”

Williams still played an important role on special teams despite less playing time on defense, but he’s the team’s second most expensive pending free agent, followed only slightly by Alexander.

Sorting through free agency is the first order of business, Taylor said.

3. Where do new additions come from?

The Bengals were more active in free agency interms of spending to bring in experience­d newplayers than in past offseasons, but it will be interestin­g to see the approach this year. In Taylor’s first year, hewas forced to rely on the draft to begin his rebuild.

Cincinnati, which has the fifth pick in the 2021 draft, will have an estimated cap space amount of $34.3 million, according to Spotrac. com.

“Yeah, we’ll continue to see where the cap is at and have those conversati­ons moving forward in the next coupleweek­s,” Taylor said.

The biggest needs in free agency and/or the draft will beon theoffensi­ve line, wide receiver, cornerback and defensive tackle. Cincinnati needs better protection in front of Joe Burrow, and it’s possible the Ben gals will need to replace Green and Alex Erickson in the wide receiver unit. Itwouldn’t be surprising for the team to move on from32-year-oldGenoAtk­ins, though he remains on contract through 2022, so they will need a replacemen­t to pair with D.J. Reader.

Ideally, the organizati­on will fill some of those needs with free agents, but some earlymockd­rafts predict the Bengals take either Oregon offensive tackle Penei Sewell or LSUwide receiver Ja’Marr Chase at No. 5.

4. Burrow’s progress

Bengaldom will be anxiously trying to followalon­g with Joe Burrow’s rehab process this offseason as he tries towork back fromDec. 2 surgery to repair a tornACL and MCL in his left knee. He suffered the injury 10days prior in the third quarter of a loss atWashingt­on after he threw a pass and had two defenders collapse on him.

Burrow posted a video of himself walking without crutches Dec. 25 and indicated in his first interview since the injury — appearing on FS1’s “TheHerd” with Colin Cowherd on Thursday — that he thinks he will be ready for the start of the 2021 season.

“I think I’ll be ready — I think I’ll be just fine,” Burrow said when asked about his thoughts on some speculatin­g he might not be ready for the opener.

Burrow was just passing the five-week mark on his recovery fromsurger­y at the time of that interview.

5. Offseason workout program?

Last year, the offseason workout program was shifted to virtual meetings because of the COVID-19 pandemic. It is still unknown what this offseason will look like, but the NFLPA recently made a push to abandon offseason workout programs for good, citing a successful 2020 season despite not having organized team activities.

Taylor is hoping the team can meet in person at least for part of the offseason.

“We’ll take every rep we can get every day that we get in there with them,” he said. “We’ll see what informatio­n comes out as the next weeks unfold just because the pandemic is still ongoing. Certainly, I love having the players around. I’ll take every minute we get with them face-to-face. That will be a nice change hopefully in the near future having those guys face-to-face and continue to teach that way, and we’ll eat up all the reps we can get on the field. We’ll just see howthat plays out.”

 ?? KEITH SRAKOCIC / AP ?? Bengaldomw­ill be anxiously trying to followalon­g with Joe Burrow’s rehab process this offffseaso­n as he tries to work back fromDec. 2 surgery to repair a torn ACL andMCL in his left knee.
KEITH SRAKOCIC / AP Bengaldomw­ill be anxiously trying to followalon­g with Joe Burrow’s rehab process this offffseaso­n as he tries to work back fromDec. 2 surgery to repair a torn ACL andMCL in his left knee.

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