Raiders, Bengals looking to end long playoff droughts
CINCINNATI » Either the Raiders or Bengals will win a playoff game on Saturday, and that will be news in itself.
Postseason success has been elusive for both teams for a generation. The frustration for one will end Saturday when they meet for an opening-round playoff game in Cincinnati.
The Raiders’ most recent postseason win was 19 years ago, a conference championship before they lost to Tampa Bay in the Super Bowl. Since then, they’ve managed just one playoff appearance, a one-and-done wild-card game after the 2016 season.
The Bengals face significant pressure to end their lengthy playoff victory drought.
Cincinnati is in the playoffs for the first time since the 2015 season, but hasn’t gotten out of the opening round since the 1990 season.
Cincinnati flailed along for 15 more years before making it back in 2005. Seven postseason trips since then failed to produce a win, including five straight from 2011 to 2015.
“That’s all we constantly hear,” said Cincinnati’s record-breaking rookie receiver Ja’Marr Chase.
“We’re not worried about that,” quarterback Joe Burrow insisted.
The Bengals (10-7) won the AFC North with Chase — the fifth overall pick in the 2021 draft — and other young stars, behind the unflappable Burrow, the top overall draft pick in 2020.
“(The Raiders) have to be ready for everything,”
Burrow said. “We’ve got Joe Mixon and that offensive line that can move people in the run game, and that’s a big part of who we are as an offense and as a team. So teams have to prepare for that, as well as the freak shows we have on the outside.”
The Raiders (10-7) had to overcame several troubling off-the-field issues.
Coach Jon Gruden resigned after racist, anti-gay and misogynistic comments in emails were leaked. Receiver Henry Ruggs III was cut after being charged with DUI resulting in a death. Defensive back Damon Arnette was released after a social-media video appeared to show the 2020 first-round pick threatening someone’s life while brandishing multiple guns.
Under interim head coach Rich Bisaccia, the Raiders won their last four games — each decided by four points or fewer — and snagged a wild-card spot with an overtime win over the Chargers in the season finale.