Wapakoneta Daily News

Up-and-down Bengals ready to make a playoff run?

- By MITCH STACY

CINCINNATI — D.J. Reader knows

maturity and resilience matter when it comes to winning games down the

stretch in a long, arduous NFL season.

The veteran defensive tackle — like every other Bengals player performing

self-analysis during the team’s off week —

is still trying to figure out how Cincinnati managed to follow a solid 5-2

start with two particular­ly bad losses.

The more important question is whether this team has developed

enough in coach Zac Taylor’s third season to be ready for the consistent­ly high level of playmaking required in the second

half of the schedule to get to the playoffs — and make an impact.

“I don’t know that I would say it’s just growing pains and

chalk it up to that,” Reader said of the inconsiste­ncy. “You don’t want to be passive and think it’s just that. I think it’s just more so everyone needs to understand that week to week, you have to

bring your lunch pail and you got to be ready for whatever the assignment is, and you have to go

out there and play. Week to week, anybody can beat anybody in this league.”

Reader said he thinks it’s a matter of

instilling in younger players the importance of every single

practice, every single week, every single game, every single play.

“I think it’s very tough for young guys to understand,”

he said. “Especially coming from college, you might just be

beating teams every week and you might

just be able to outathlete those guys every week.”

In the NFL, he added, “you have to go out there and earn those wins.”

Cincinnati (5-4) has already topped its victory total in

each of the first two years of Taylor’s tenure. The Bengals

have beaten AFC

BENGALS,

North rivals Pittsburgh (5-3) and Baltimore (6-2), but were

smashed by the Cleveland Browns (54) 41-16 last week. The

division is up for grabs, and the Bengals are in it — a rare

situation for a team that has finished last for three straight seasons.

Second-year quarterbac­k Joe Burrow is

among the league leaders in touchdown passes with 20, but

his 11 intercepti­ons tie him with Carolina’s Sam Darnold for most in the league. Rookie receiver Ja’marr Chase has the makings of a superstar but wasn’t a factor in the last two losses and has

dropped potential touchdown passes. Rookies have been pressed into service

on the offensive line with varied results.

Reader and the others have talked up the Bengals’ exceptiona­l locker room

culture and the fact that even the younger

players are holding themselves accountabl­e, looking inward and not pointing fingers when the team stumbles.

“To be honest, it’s all about the mentality that we’ve got up in here,” said running

back Joe Mixon, one of the team captains. “We know the players that we have, we

know the talent that we’ve got, and sometimes you can get carried away with everything being so big, and you just forget about the little things. And that’s kind of what it came down to”

in the Browns loss last week.

That debacle came on the heels of a baffling 34-31 loss to the

then-1-5 New York Jets.

“Two losses can sometimes feel like 10,” Taylor said. “But we’ve got a mature

enough team to handle it right and push us through this little

bit of adversity, go on the road (after the

break) and get a win and set ourselves

back on the direction that felt like we were

in a couple weeks ago.”

The Bengals will have to traverse a rugged road to make the playoffs for the first time since 2015. Cincinnati faces Las Vegas next, on Nov. 21, before returning home to play the

Steelers, winners of four straight. The Bengals host Baltimore after Christmas and finish the season at Cleveland on Jan. 9. Mixed in are matchups with the Chargers and the Chiefs,

both battling the Raiders for NFC West supremacy.

Reader said he sees everybody on the team, regardless of tenure, working hard enough to win.

“I don’t think it’s a lack of preparatio­n or lack of effort from

anybody,” he said. “That’s not the case. It’s just execution. So

that’s really a case of what it is, and just knowing that no one

is going to feel sorry for you. You’ve just got to go out there

and make the next play, and that’s OK.”

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