Orlando Sentinel (Sunday)

Trying to stay on top

Bengals looking to prove Super Bowl run was legit

- By Tom Withers AP Sports Writers Will Graves, Noah Trister and Mitch Stacy contribute­d.

Myles Garrett’s face cringed as if he had just missed a certain sack by letting a quarterbac­k escape.

On the brink of a new season, Garrett hates to think about how Joe Burrow and the Bengals, coming off three straight fourth-place finishes and expected to do little in 2021, turned the AFC North upside down.

Garrett won’t be surprised if it gets flipped again.

“Everyone’s pretty good this year,” said the Browns’ All-Pro DE, who entering his sixth year has never seen the division so balanced. “You couldn’t say that every year that I’ve been here. But everyone has a chance to win it.”

One of the NFL’s roughest divisions figures to be another four-team fracas.

The Bengals believe it can repeat, and with Burrow that’s a solid bet.

The Ravens, healed up after an injury-ravaged 2021, is poised to bounce back behind a healthy Lamar Jackson.

The Steelers are replacing future Hall of Fame QB Ben Roethlisbe­rger with Mitch Trubisky or rookie Kenny Pickett, and will rely on its defense.

And then there’s the Browns, whose Super Bowl hopes are on hold with Deshaun Watson’s 11-game suspension. Last season, 10-7 was enough for the Bengals to win the division. It seemed to stun everyone but Burrow, who moved into elite status in Year 2.

Garrett pointed to the North’s brightest.

“There’s a lot of stars on each team and at each position,” he said. “Now it’s just about those guys stepping up and making those plays when they need to, and carrying those guys alongside them.”

Not the Bungles

Out to prove last season was no fluke, the Bengals will rely on one of the league’s most explosive offenses and a clutch kicker. The Bengals added guard Alex Cappa, center Ted Karras and tackle La’el Collins in free agency to keep Burrow upright after he was sacked an NFL-high 51 times in the regular season, 19 in the postseason.

Expectatio­ns are sky-high for wide receiver Ja’Marr Chase, the Offensive Rookie of the Year following a 1,455-yard, 13-touchdown debut. Tee Higgins and Tyler Boyd round out a terrific trio of targets.

Kicker Evan McPherson was money as a rookie in the playoffs.

The goal is simple: another AFC title.

Dollars and sense

One of the game’s most unique talents, Jackson will be under a microscope. His contract situation is already.

He’s entering the option year of his rookie deal, and he and the Ravens have yet to reach a compromise.

The Ravens lost their final six games last season, in part because Jackson missed the last four with ankle problems. He won’t have receiver Marquise Brown, traded to the Cardinals.

In addition to Jackson’s health, a big key is how the secondary rebounds from finishing last in the NFL against the pass. The Ravens changed defensive coordinato­rs, replacing Don Martindale with Mike Macdonald, who helped Michigan reach the College Football Playoff last season.

Backup plan

Watson’s on the shelf until at least December after agreeing to the 11-game ban and $5 million fine for violating league’s personal conduct policy after two dozen women alleged he was sexually inappropri­ate during massage therapy sessions.

For now, Jacoby Brissett, a breakglass-in-case-of-emergency QB throughout his career, will have to keep the Browns’ season afloat.

Fortunatel­y, the Browns can turn to running back Nick Chubb, behind one of the league’s best lines, to carry even more of the offensive load. He rushed for 1,259 yards last season despite missing three games. Amari Cooper came over in a trade from the Cowboys to be new No. 1 receiver, but the Browns lack quality depth at that position.

Garrett leads a defense that improved dramatical­ly as the 2021 season wore on. With Pro Bowler Denzel Ward and Greg Newsome II, the Browns have two of the game’s best coverage cornerback­s.

Shift change

The starting quarterbac­k won’t be the only thing new in Pittsburgh.

From the coaching staff (hello, defensive assistant Brian Flores) to a chunk of the offensive line to inside linebacker to even the place the Steelers call home (it’s Acrisure Stadium, not Heinz Field), the Steelers enter 2022 somewhat of a mystery.

If anything, Roethlisbe­rger’s departure shifts the team’s identity to the other side of the ball.

In linebacker T.J. Watt (reigning Defensive Player of the Year), defensive lineman Cam Heyward and safety Minkah Fitzpatric­k, the Steelers have difference-makers at all three levels. Yet for all of that star power, they still finished last in the NFL against the run.

If the Steelers are to get back to the playoffs a third straight season, they’ll likely have to do it relying on running back Najee Harris and a defense designed to win low-scoring games.

 ?? CHARLIE RIEDEL/AP ?? Bengals quarterbac­k Joe Burrow (9) will have his hands full this season with a balanced, brutal AFC North.
CHARLIE RIEDEL/AP Bengals quarterbac­k Joe Burrow (9) will have his hands full this season with a balanced, brutal AFC North.

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