USA TODAY US Edition

Bengals’ breakfast club fuels drive to playoffs

Weekly Tuesday meeting helped transform the secondary

- Kelsey Conway

CINCINNATI – A breakfast club of their own.

Every Tuesday at 10 a.m. the defensive backs of the Bengals gather for an hour of film study accompanie­d by breakfast at Paul Brown Stadium. The two common breakfast choices are either First Watch or Chick-fil-A. Each week, a specific player is assigned to bring food for the group of 15. But as cornerback Mike Hilton said, there’s always room for seconds within this group so the order is for a group of 20.

The order consists of the following: sausage and chicken biscuits, burritos and hash browns.

“Nobody can go wrong with Chickfil-A,” Hilton said. “Bring at least 20 in total because you know a guy might grab two or three, possibly.”

They come for the film study and stay for the food.

Team captains Vonn Bell and Jessie Bates started this tradition before Week 1 on a group chat. Bell and Bates realized an hour to an hour and a half of film study together on their opponent could be a difference-maker.

Bell, a six-year veteran, runs the film study for the group. The former secondroun­d pick in the 2016 draft out of Ohio State played on a Saints team that went to the playoffs three times in his fouryear stint.

“They know I’m here early all the time,” Bell said of how the idea to meet as a group came about. “Really a jump start on the game plan and who we’re going against. How we’ll be attacked, first and second down and (then our defensive) coordinato­r comes down, the position coaches come down. We ask what we can show the group and how can we get started so we get a jump start for Wednesday.

The Bengals’ defense is one of the most improved groups in the NFL and without the performanc­e of defensive coordinato­r Lou Anarumo’s unit against the Titans in the divisional round, Cincinnati wouldn’t be playing in the AFC championsh­ip game Sunday.

To help show how vastly improved Cincinnati’s defense is, just look at the statistics from last year to now. In 2020, the Bengals ranked No. 32 in sacks, No. 29 in rush defense, No. 26 in total yards per game and No. 22 in points per game. Fast-forward to 2021, Cincinnati finished the regular season ranked No. 5 against the run, No. 11 in sacks, No. 17 in points per game and No. 18 in yards per game.

The success the Bengals are enduring on defense is a microcosm of a few different things: talented players acquired in free agency, comfort in Anarumo’s scheme, avoiding major injuries to key starters and player-led accountabi­lity.

Cincinnati made a commitment to improving its defense from the get-go last year. In free agency, the Bengals added a few key players on defense who helped tremendous­ly from a production standpoint in Pro Bowl defensive end Trey Hendrickso­n, top cornerback Chidobe Awuzie, defensive tackle Larry Ogunjobi. Defensive tackle D.J. Reader returned from a seasonendi­ng quad injury and playing the entire season at full strength. Linebacker Logan Wilson has grown immensely in his second season, and their core players, Bell and Bates, are leading the way for the entire group.

Anarumo said when he saw his players wanting to come in on their off day to get ahead it showed this unit could be different – in a good way. The Bengals have two player-led meetings a week. Tuesday’s meeting is specific to the defensive backs and Friday’s is the entire defense.

“Well, I’ve always said when the players take ownership of the team it really shows that you’re heading in the right direction as an organizati­on,” Anarumo said. “They started that early on and they have another meeting, the whole defense does right after Friday practice, I make a script tape, they all go in there, I make some calls and put it on a sheet of paper and make a tape and watch it together, no coaches. They talk through some things and as far as the defensive back stuff is concerned there are a lot of moving parts these days in NFL football. The fact they take a couple of extra hours on a Tuesday morning to get ahead of the game plan is huge and it’s paid div

“We got a lot of hungry guys and we got guys that are selfless and they want to do everything they can to help us win, so we know from the front line to the secondary we trust every other guy on that defense and we love playing with each other.” Mike Hilton Bengals cornerback

idends for us.”

The defensive backs meeting is especially important from a communicat­ion standpoint and making sure players are lined up in the right positions.

It’s also equated to more turnovers for the position group. Bates and Hilton recorded intercepti­ons against the Titans, and both were a result of intense film study.

Besides the dividends it pays on the field from a scheme and results standpoint, it’s also helped bring a belief and cohesion to the defensive backs room that couldn’t be forced. The Bengals are able to play instinctua­l and it allows them to be opportunis­tic in ways only teams with strong locker rooms can be.

Cincinnati’s defense is heading into a game in which they are widely viewed as the underdogs, despite beating the Chiefs in Week 17 and holding Kansas City to three points in the second half, and it doesn’t faze anyone. They don’t need the outside praise to be fulfilled because their preparatio­n and belief in one another is more than enough.

“There’s no selfishnes­s on this squad,” Hilton said. “We got a lot of hungry guys and we got guys that are selfless and they want to do everything they can to help us win, so we know from the front line to the secondary we trust every other guy on that defense and we love playing with each other.”

 ?? KAREEM ELGAZZAR/THE CINCINNATI ENQUIRER ?? Bengals safety Vonn Bell (24) and cornerback Mike Hilton (21) celebrate a sack of Titans quarterbac­k Ryan Tannehill last weekend in the divisional round of the playoffs.
KAREEM ELGAZZAR/THE CINCINNATI ENQUIRER Bengals safety Vonn Bell (24) and cornerback Mike Hilton (21) celebrate a sack of Titans quarterbac­k Ryan Tannehill last weekend in the divisional round of the playoffs.

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