The Columbus Dispatch

Driskel aims for better effort in second start for Bengals

- By Joe Kay

CINCINNATI — Jeff Driskel's debut as the Bengals' starting quarterbac­k went poorly all around. At least he has experience on his side the second time around.

Driskel threw for a touchdown, but he had an intercepti­on, four sacks and a fumble as Cincinnati lost to Denver 24-10 at Paul Brown Stadium. Driskel will make his second start Sunday in Los Angeles against the Chargers (9-3), who have won eight of their past nine games.

He expects things to be smoother this week as he gets ready for his second start.

"Definitely in some ways it's easier, but that doesn't mean it's easy," Driskel said. "That's something I've done in the past in college, but everything is totally new at this level."

After four straight losses, the Bengals (5-7) are looking for any positive they can find.

Rookie center Billy Price has felt fans' discontent when he is out in public. The former Ohio State player said Wednesday that shoppers mention the offensive line's struggles to him while he is at the local grocery store.

"Yeah, I go to Kroger's and people have issues, so it's fun," Price said. "You laugh, but I'm serious."

The offense has slid a little more each week as its most important players got hurt. Receiver A.J Green injured a toe on his right foot during the Bengals' last win, 37-34 over the Buccaneers on Oct. 28. He missed the next three games and returned last Sunday but aggravated the injury and is out for the rest of the season.

Quarterbac­k Andy Dalton suffered a torn ligament in the thumb of his passing hand two weeks ago and had surgery. Left tackle Cordy Glenn has missed the past two games with a bad back, prompting a line shuffle.

The offense hasn't done much of anything when it mattered in the past four games, scoring seven points or fewer in the first half. Three of those games turned into blowouts.

Penalties were the biggest problem against the Broncos. The Bengals were flagged twice for holding, twice for false starts, and also for an illegal block and an illegal shift, contributi­ng to long-yardage situations they couldn't convert.

Nine times, they faced thirdand-11 or worse, including a third-and-25, third-and-29, and third-and-35. Cincinnati was only 5 of 13 on third downs.

"You look at the list of third downs in that first half, it's incredible — 24, 25, 39, 24, whatever," offensive coordinato­r Bill Lazor said.

Lazor said there were some problems adjusting to a different quarterbac­k that are being addressed in practice this week.

"There were a couple things in the huddle or at the line that weren't great, but I'm not sure that it was him," Lazor said. "There were a couple miscommuni­cations. I think there were two runs where half the line maybe went the wrong way. Hard to say why that would happen."

 ?? [GARY LANDERS/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS] ?? Bengals quarterbac­k Jeff Driskel was sacked four times and had an intercepti­on and a fumble in his first start, a penalty-plagued loss to the Broncos last week.
[GARY LANDERS/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS] Bengals quarterbac­k Jeff Driskel was sacked four times and had an intercepti­on and a fumble in his first start, a penalty-plagued loss to the Broncos last week.

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