Guymon Daily Herald

BENGALs GEt sHOt OF CONfiDENCE in stunning win over Steelers

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C I N C I N N AT I (AP) — Few saw what the Cincinnati Bengals were capable of Monday night, least of all the playoff-bound Pittsburgh Steelers.

The Bengals got their third win of the season, this one on a primetime stage against a hated divisional rival that was looking to stop a twogame skid and get back on track before the postseason.

Before kickoff, it looked to be a snoozer and another inevitable setback in another disappoint­ing season for Cincinnati.

Instead the Bengals (3-10-1) turned the tables.

Taking advantage of the sloppy, inept Steelers offense, Cincinnati forced turnovers and built a 17-point first-half lead on the way to a stunning 27-17 win.

It was a feel-good night for the Bengals in what has been a another disappoint­ing season dragged down by multiple injuries to key players. The biggest was rookie quarterbac­k Joe Burrow, who was lost to a season-ending knee injury on Nov. 22.

The Steelers outgained the Bengals overall 244-230, but the turnovers were the difference.

“It’s tough because we all have these expectatio­ns and they haven’t gone the way we wanted,” said running back Giovani Bernard, who ran for a touchdown and caught a pass for another scor e. “When we have a game like this it means so much to the players, the coaches. You see the guys that continue to put in the work every single day.

“Quite frankly it’s not easy to come in here after a close loss two, three, four five weeks in a row, whatever it may be. It’s not easy for coaches to keep encouragin­g us, but they continue to and I’m thankful.”

WHAT’S WORKING

The Bengals’ defense has been decent for much of the season as the offense struggled. The unit was outstandin­g on Monday night, with safety Vonn Bell forcing a fumble with a hard hit on Juju Smith-Schuster after a reception, and cornerback Mackensie Alexander picking off Ben Roethlisbe­rger. They held the Steelers (11-3) to 86 rushing yards and allowed just 4 thirddown conversion­s on 16 tries.

“We’ve been doing what we’ve been doing all year,” Bell said. “We really were just executing at a high level. We didn’t have any mistakes, no dropped coverages or anything like that. Communicat­ion was on point. We were just doing what we were supposed to do.”

WHAT

HELP

The Bengals’ passing game has suffered since Burrow went down with an injury. Brandon Allen started the previous three games, but was out Monday with a knee injury from last week’s loss to

NEEDS the Cowboys. Ryan Finley started for the first time since the 2019 season and was 7 for 13 for 89 yards as the Bengals stuck to a ground attack. STOCK UP

The unimpressi­ve passing numbers aside, Finley threw a touchdown pass to Bernard and made the offensive play of the game. With the Bengals’ lead cut to 7 points, Finley ran untouched around the left side for a 23-yard touchdown to push it to 24-10 with 11:21 left in the game. STOCK DOWN Kicker Randy Bullock was a healthy scratch again as the Bengals gave Austin Seibert a try. Seibert was 2 for 3 on field goals, including a 34-yarder in the first quarter and a 33-yarder with 12 seconds left that put an exclamatio­n point on the Cincinnati win. He also made all three of his extrapoint attempts. INJURIES

Tyler Boyd, the Bengals’ leading receiver, left the game with a concussion in the first quarter and was ruled out.

KEY NUMBER 3 — Number of Bengals wins, which is one more than last season when they finished 2-14.

NEXT STEPS Build on the win and get Finley ready to play the Texans two days after Christmas and then the Ravens on Jan. 3. Another win could help convince the organizati­on to stick with coach Zac Taylor for another year.

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