The Columbus Dispatch

Surging Bengals climb power rankings

- Nate Davis

NFL power rankings entering Week 15 of 2022 season (previous rank in parenthese­s):

1. Eagles (1): A team brimming with stars – and possibly the MVP given how well QB Jalen Hurts is playing – is also home to one of the league’s more underappre­ciated talents. LB Haason Reddick, who happens to be a Temple product, made a little history Sunday by becoming the first player to record double-digit sacks in three consecutiv­e seasons while playing for three different teams. Rest easy, Philly fans, he’s not going anywhere for a minute, currently under contract through the 2024 season.

2. Bengals (4): Who’s the best team in the AFC? Shrug. Who’s the only team in the conference that’s won five straight and appears to be recapturin­g the form that paved the road to Super Bowl 56? Yep, these guys. And it does seem like DE Trey Hendrickso­n will be able to play through a fractured wrist, and that WRS Tee Higgins and Tyler Boyd won’t miss significan­t time with their own nagging ailments. Good news if this team hopes to keep its division crown and open the postseason in Cincinnati.

3. Chiefs (5): Maybe it’s understand­able that QB Patrick Mahomes gets bored and sloppy against Denver, a team he’s now 10-0 against. And Sunday’s nolook TD toss pairs well with the lefthanded throw he made in the Mile High City years ago.

4. Cowboys (2): Adversity never fails to make at least an annual trip to Dallas. It showed up Sunday, when America’s Team was nearly Texas’ second-best team while losing RT Terence Steele to a torn ACL.

5. Bills (3): Are they still capable of winning the Super Bowl after so many predicted they would do exactly that three months ago? Definitely. With OLB Von Miller now officially gone for the season with a torn ACL and joining S Micah Hyde on injured reserve, might they now be a lesser version of last year’s squad? Very possibly.

6. 49ers (8): They can clinch NFC West by winning in Seattle on Thursday night – a golden opportunit­y to secure a home playoff game.

7. Vikings (7): For the first time in their 62-season history, they’ve allowed 400 yards in five consecutiv­e games.

8. Dolphins (6): Given WR Tyreek Hill’s propensity for all manner of explosive touchdowns, probably wise to give him some snaps at safety and in the “kick six” spot when field goals are attempted ahead of Saturday night’s crucial game at Buffalo.

9. Ravens (9): Kudos to RB J.K. Dobbins, who produced one of the best games of his career (120 rush yards, TD) Sunday even though he clearly has yet to return to his 2020 pre-injury form.

10. Patriots (10): Signs of young life on offense? As New England climbed into the projected playoff field Monday, it also got touchdowns from multiple rookies in a game for the first time in 16 years.

11. Chargers (20): QB Justin Herbert’s 13,056 career passing yards are the most ever in a player’s first three NFL seasons.

12. Jets (11): First-round WR Garrett Wilson has taken off with tough-as-nails QB Mike White in the lineup. Over the past three weeks, Wilson has averaged 111.7 receiving yards.

13. Lions (18): For the first time in the

Super Bowl era (since 1966), they’ve scored at least 25 points in five consecutiv­e games. Not only can Detroit become the first team since 1990 to overcome a 1-6 start to reach the playoffs, it’s also primed to get a lot better in 2023 with two more first-round picks.

14. Buccaneers (12): LT Donovan Smith has been a one-man wrecking crew for this team ... meaning he’s been flagged 10 times already, three of those infraction­s taking Tampa TDS off the board.

15. Commanders (15): After dominating their bye week – i.e., moving up to sixth place in the NFC – they very much look like a team that could reach 10 victories. And Sunday could mark the 2022 debut for DE Chase Young.

16. Seahawks (13): They’ve failed to rush for 100 yards in each of their past four games, three of those defeats. Could rookie RB Kenneth Walker (ankle) provide a much-needed lift Thursday against the Niners?

17. Giants (14): A spiraling team plays three of its next four on the road against opponents projected to reach postseason ... a good indication Big Blue won’t.

18. Jaguars (22): One of these is not like the others. Evan Engram’s 11-catch, 162-yard, two-td performanc­e Sunday made him the sixth tight end to have at least 10 receptions, 150 yards and two touchdowns in an NFL game. The others? Todd Christense­n, Travis Kelce, Shannon Sharpe, Darren Waller and Kellen Winslow.

19. Titans (16): They’ve lost three in a row for the first time since 2018, Mike Vrabel’s first season as head coach.

20. Panthers (27): Win their final four games – all against teams currently with losing records – and Carolina will win the NFC South for the first time since its 15-1 2015 regular season culminated with a loss in Super Bowl 50.

21. Packers (21): They’ve got a roughly 3% chance to reach postseason ... but playing three of their final four at Lambeau Field should help the cause.

22. Browns (17): It’s quite early, and QB Deshaun Watson is knocking off the rust most players shed in preseason. But after two games, he looks like an especially poor fit with Cleveland’s offense.

23. Steelers (23): Why isn’t RB Najee Harris being used more in the passing game? A guy who caught 74 balls as a rookie will likely finish with roughly half as many in 2022.

24. Falcons (24): Like the Panthers, they’re just one game off the NFC South lead. Unlike Carolina, Atlanta is turning to a rookie quarterbac­k (Desmond Ridder) awaiting his first regular-season snap for the stretch run.

25. Bears (25): Coming out of the weekend, Chicago was the only NFC team eliminated from playoff contention. And not going to be easy finding win No. 4 with the final month of the schedule serving up three division leaders (Philadelph­ia, Buffalo and Minnesota) and a hot pride of Lions.

26. Saints (28): Triple-double? TE Taysom Hill is the only player in the Super Bowl era with at least nine touchdowns via pass, reception and rush. With one more TD throw and catch, Hill can become the NFL’S version of Russell Westbrook.

27. Rams (29): Baker Mayfield is now the first quarterbac­k in the Super Bowl era to engineer comebacks from at least a 13-point deficit while debuting with different teams.

28. Colts (30): Pretty cool to read about deposed HC Frank Reich continuing his community service efforts in Indianapol­is – his foundation, knot Today, aiming to hinder sexual abuse, exploitati­on and traffickin­g of children.

29. Raiders (19): Perhaps dropping them this far seems harsh. But there was no excuse for the loss to Mayfield’s Rams – right, Jerry Tillery? – a defeat that effectivel­y ended Vegas’ already flickering playoff hopes.

30. Cardinals (26): QB Kyler Murray’s knee injury Monday night is the catastroph­ic exclamatio­n point to an already ruined season and likely destined to cast a long shadow into the 2023 campaign.

31. Broncos (31): They’ve got nothing to play for but pride – something injured QB Russell Wilson and WR Jerry Jeudy (3 TD catches) displayed in spades during Sunday’s narrow loss to division-leading Kansas City.

32. Texans (32): An inspired effort at Dallas was significan­tly fueled by backup WRS Chris Moore and Amari Rodgers, who combined for 14 receptions, 181 yards and a TD for the AFC’S worst offense.

 ?? AARON DOSTER/AP ?? Bengals quarterbac­k Joe Burrow had a pair of touchdown passes in Sunday’s 23-10 win over the Browns in Cincinnati.
AARON DOSTER/AP Bengals quarterbac­k Joe Burrow had a pair of touchdown passes in Sunday’s 23-10 win over the Browns in Cincinnati.

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