The Saratogian (Saratoga, NY)

Healthy again, Burrow leads Bengals against Vikings

- By Mitch Stacy

CINCINNATI >> One of Joe Burrow’s special skills is extending plays, scrambling to make something out of nothing after the blocking breaks down.

He took a beating through 11 games last season, but it made the rookie one of the NFL’s most intriguing quarterbac­ks early in 2020.

Now playing on a surgically reconstruc­ted left knee, the 2020 Heisman winner insists he’ll still be the same multifacet­ed leader when the Bengals open this season Sunday against the Minnesota Vikings.

“I’m a football player, not just a quarterbac­k, and getting hit is part of the game,” he said this week. “I’m excited to experience it.”

It’s been a while. Burrow continued rehabbing through training camp and was held out of all but one series in the last of three preseason games. He hasn’t been hit hard since he went down among Washington pass rushers on Nov. 22 and was wheeled off in a cart.

The always confident Burrow said he never doubted he would be back for the opener, even with the extensive surgery required. Besides getting his knee back to 100%, he spent a lot of rehab time getting his body stronger and focusing on the other aspects of his game, too. He’s stronger, and receivers say he’s throwing harder.

“I expect to be better,” he said. “I put in a lot of work this offseason that I’m excited to show off, as all the guys have. We’re a much better football team.”

A season-long wave of injuries contribute­d to the Bengals limping to a 4-11-1 finish last year.

Improving — and maybe saving coach Zac Taylor’s job — could hinge on mitigating the damage to the 24-year-old franchise quarterbac­k.

“He knows it’s a long season,” Taylor said. “We want him healthy. He’s got to manage that, we’ve got to manage that. It’s just part of football. Quarterbac­ks get hit.”

HOLDING ON Cincinnati rookie receiver Ja’Marr Chase helped Burrow and LSU win the 2019 national championsh­ip, but so far in the NFL he’s known more for his drops.

The fifth overall pick in the draft, Chase dropped passes throughout camp, including three in a row in a preseason game. He said this week that he’s got it fixed.

“Lack of focus,” he said. “I didn’t look the ball all the way in. Lack of concentrat­ion, just watching the ball come all the way into my hands. That’s what I lacked, and it showed.”

After winning the Biletnikof­f Award as college football’s best receiver in 2019, Chase opted out in 2020 to wait for the draft.

“I don’t want to blame it on me sitting on my butt all year, but it probably has something to do with it,” he acknowledg­ed. “I’m not making excuses. I need to be a pro and make the catch.”

MEAT IN THE MIDDLE Nose tackle Michael Pierce will make his Vikings debut, after signing with the team in 2020 but sitting out last season due to coronaviru­s concerns because of chronic asthma. After finishing a disappoint­ing 7-9, the Vikings made another defensive tackle their prime target in free agency with Dalvin Tomlinson, and they’re counting on their experience, heft and agility to improve a front that fell off badly last year with star defensive end Danielle Hunter absent due to a neck injury.

 ?? JASON BEHNKEN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Cincinnati Bengals quarterbac­k Joe Burrow (9) watches from the sidelines during the first half of an NFL preseason football game against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers Saturday,
Aug. 14, 2021, in Tampa, Fla.
JASON BEHNKEN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Cincinnati Bengals quarterbac­k Joe Burrow (9) watches from the sidelines during the first half of an NFL preseason football game against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers Saturday, Aug. 14, 2021, in Tampa, Fla.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States