In fact, Zac Taylor's defense has been historically bad. According to CBS Sports Research, this is the sixth loss where the Bengals have allowed 25 or more points this season, the fourth loss where they've allowed at least 33 points,
When the Bengals started the season with three straight losses, there was a lot of talk about how they rebounded from slow starts in the past and winning four of their next six games seemed to suggest they could turn things around again this year.
Steelers linebacker TJ Watt appeared to twist Bengals quarterback Joe Burrow's ankle as he tackled him on a second-quarter strip-sack Sunday.
Cincinnati Bengals quarterback Joe Burrow made his entrance to Paycor Stadium before his team's Week 13 game against the Pittsburgh Steelers. Burrow is 3-2 against the Steelers in his NFL career. The Bengals (4-7) are coming off their bye week and the Steelers (8-3) lost to the Cleveland Browns in Week 12.
Joe Burrow's cleats support his foundation and efforts to address food insecurity and childhood mental health in Cincinnati, SE Ohio and Louisiana.
Russell Wilson outduels Joe Burrow, Eagles-Ravens rockfight + More | PTP
Cincinnati Bengals quarterback Joe Burrow became the NFL's first 3,000-yard passer this season with a completion to receiver Andrei Iosivas during the fourth quarter of their NFL Week 11 loss to the Los Angeles Chargers on Sunday Night Football at SoFi ...
Conventional wisdom in the NFL is that if you have a franchise quarterback playing at an MVP level, you are probably going to have a real chance to win the Super Bowl. The Cincinnati Bengals are throwing that conventional wisdom in the trash can this season.
Joe Burrow leads the league in touchdowns, but his Cincinnati Bengals continued to disintegrate in a Week 13 that saw a costly mistake get another coach fired.
Bengals quarterback Joe Burrow walked with a heavy limp after Sunday's loss to the Steelers, Ben Baby of ESPN reports.
For those who’ve been watching Steelers football for decades, former defensive player and CBS Sports analyst Bryant McFadden summed it up pretty well. “Once upon a time, we lived in a world where it would take three games for a Pittsburgh-led offense to score 40-some points,