What's old hat for the Pittsburgh Steelers is new world for the
Cincinnati Bengals.
The Steelers are accustomed to playing games for first place in
the AFC North. They just aren't used to having the Bengals as the
opponent. Nor is Cincinnati acclimated to such heights.
Yet if the Bengals win at Heinz Field on Sunday, they will take
a stranglehold on the division after having swept the Super Bowl
champions.
And they believe they have the offense and, in particular, the
defense to do it.
''I think Baltimore and Pittsburgh have set the tone for the AFC
North and were the ones to come up with the formula, which is good
solid defense, run the football and control the field-position
game,'' quarterback Carson Palmer said. ''I think that is something
we have turned into.''
The Bengals also have specialized in late-game rallies,
including coming up with most of the big plays in 23-20 home
victory over Pittsburgh Cincinnati's first at Paul Brown Stadium
against the Steelers in nine tries.
That was Pittsburgh's second straight loss. Guess what: The
Steelers have won five in a row since. They've been particularly
impressive against the Vikings and Broncos, two of the elite teams
in the season's first half.
Don't look for the Steelers to flinch. That means the Bengals
will have to ignore all those Terrible Towels and take this game
away from James Harrison, Ben Roethlisberger, Troy Polamalu, Hines
Ward and Mike Tomlin.
Also Sunday, it's New England at Indianapolis in what has become
almost an annual high-profile matchup; New Orleans at St. Louis;
Dallas at Green Bay; Philadelphia at San Diego; Denver at
Washington; Seattle at Arizona; Detroit at Minnesota; Atlanta at
Carolina; Jacksonville at the New York Jets; Buffalo at Tennessee;
Tampa Bay at Miami; and Kansas City at Oakland.
Baltimore visits Cleveland on Monday night.
The weekend began with San Francisco's 10-6 victory over Chicago
on Thursday night. Each team is now 4-5.
Off this week are Houston and the New York Giants, the final
byes for the season.
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^New England (6-2) at Indianapolis (8-0)=
If it seems these two meet every year, well, they have played
each season since 2003 and also met in the playoffs three of four
Januarys. The tally since 2003: New England 5, Indy 4.
And if it seems as if it's always a feature attraction, well, it
usually lands on national TV.
And why not? This would be great entertainment even if the Colts
weren't unbeaten and the Patriots weren't revving it up since a
mediocre first month.
Peyton Manning has the look of an MVP. How can we tell? Hey,
he's already won three of them and he's performing at that level.
Tom Brady is starting to resemble the quarterback against whom
all winners are measured.
Both are surrounded by supreme talent, and both have defenses
that are more than complementing the offenses.
The one added element: Tony Dungy retired as Colts coach and
successor Jim Caldwell has the best record for a rookie coach since
1931. Now he gets to match wits with Bill Belichick.
^New Orleans (8-0) at St. Louis (1-7)=
The Saints have looked beatable the last three weeks, yet remain
spotless. This doesn't appear to be the spot where their first
defeat comes, even if the Rams won for the first time two weeks
ago, then got a bye.
Drew Brees, the league's top-rated passer (106.1) faces the No.
28 defense with all his key personnel healthy. Rams fans who don't
want to show up to watch their team might want to take in Marques
Colston, Pierre Thomas, Jeremy Shockey, Reggie Bush and company.
^Dallas (6-2) at Green Bay (4-4)=
Is the Pack still smarting from the two beatdowns by Brett Favre
and the Vikings? Sure looked that way last week at Tampa, where the
Buccaneers rallied to beat Green Bay for their first victory.
''You've got to go on and move forward, go on to the next
game,'' wide receiver Greg Jennings said. ''If you let a loss like
that linger, it will affect you into the next week. I don't think
that's what happened. We just went down there and didn't get the
job done, especially in that fourth quarter.''
If Green Bay doesn't find a way to protect Aaron Rodgers
(trapped an astounding 37 times already), any wild-card aspirations
will be sacked, too.
Dallas is among the hottest teams in the NFL with four
consecutive wins as the offense has awakened and the pass rush has
surged. Which means: Watch out, Aaron!
^Philadelphia (5-3) at San Diego (5-3)=
What to make of the Eagles? Or the Chargers?
The Eagles can look like world-beaters one week, such as against
the Giants in a 40-17 romp to begin the month. Or they can get
beaten up physically, as in last week's loss to Dallas.
The Chargers struggled to take down Oakland two weeks ago and
were about to fall at the Meadowlands until the Giants got
conservative in the final minutes. Now, San Diego has won three
straight, yet still doesn't have the aura of a championship
contender.
A win here could change that perception.
^Denver (6-2) at Washington (2-6)=
Denver needs to end a two-game slide right here or else its
sensational early season comes into serious question. Suddenly, the
Broncos have the Chargers right behind them in the AFC West and a
defense that often was dominant looked pedestrian in the second
half against the Steelers.
Then again, the Redskins' offense might not have anyone who
could start for Pittsburgh or maybe 20 other teams. Washington is
minus-8 in turnover differential, meaning Champ Bailey and Andre'
Goodman could have some fun in D.C. even if the Redskins rank first
in pass defense.
^Seattle (3-5) at Arizona (5-3)=
In a near-total reversal, the Cardinals have been dynamic on the
road (4-0) and so-so at home.
''After 2 1/2 years of being here and just getting killed for not
being any good on the road, it's certainly nice to play better on
the road,'' coach Ken Whisenhunt said. ''Now, we have to play
better at home. If we can do that, maybe we are on to something.''
Seattle isn't on to much of anything this year as injuries have
ravaged the lineup.
^Detroit (1-7) at Minnesota (7-1)=
Hey, Brett, if you want extra time off following last weekend's
bye, the Vikings probably can handle this one without you.
Minnesota has been as impressive as any team, Favre has looked
like he did in his prime, Adrian Peterson is the game's best
running back, and the receiving corps gets better all the time.
Only the defense has lagged behind, yet the Vikes are cruising in
the NFC North.
The Lions? They blew a 17-0 lead and lost at Seattle. Enough
said.
^Atlanta (5-3) at Carolina (3-5)=
Carolina is one of the league's better also-rans, for what
that's worth. The Panthers played the Saints very tough in New
Orleans last week, but also lost key linebacker Thomas Davis with a
wrecked knee.
DeAngelo Williams and Jonathan Stewart are a sweet running
tandem and the Falcons struggled to stop the rush. Of course, they
also have their own standout back in Michael Turner, who is seventh
in the league, two spots behind Williams.
^Baltimore (4-4) at Cleveland (1-7) Monday=
With two losses to Cincinnati, the Ravens are a long shot for
any divisional hopes, even though they still have a pair of
matchups with the Steelers. Their defense no longer sets the tempo
in games, although EVERY defense seems to do that against chaotic
Cleveland.
The Browns come off a bye and have not been competitive in their
last three games. Coach Eric Mangini is turning back to Brady Quinn
at quarterback. Is Brett Ratliff next up?
^Jacksonville (4-4) at N.Y. Jets (4-4)=
The Jets lead the league in rushing and the Jags are vulnerable.
That should mean lots of work for Thomas Jones, eighth in yardage
on the ground (704). New York must take the spotlight off rookie
quarterback Mark Sanchez and let him grow, and Jones provides a
great alternative.
Two spots ahead of Jones in league rushing is Jaguars RB Maurice
Jones-Drew, who leads the NFL with 11 touchdowns. He's been the
brightest spot in Jacksonville's inconsistent season.
^Buffalo (3-5) at Tennessee (2-6)=
With Vince Young at QB, the Titans are 2-0. Most of the credit
should go to Chris Johnson, who leads the NFL in rushing with 959
yards, just short of a 2,000-yard pace, and a superb 6.7-yard
rushing average. While the Titans' playoff hopes are long gone, a
respectable recovery is within grasp.
Trent Edwards didn't exactly light up the scoreboard before
suffering a concussion that sidelined him the last two games. He'll
start, but could be without Terrell Owens (strained hip). Not that
T.O. has done much for the Bills.
^Tampa Bay (1-7) at Miami (3-5)=
You want the Battle for Florida? Try Gators vs. Hurricanes.
The Bucs got their first win only last week, stunning Green Bay
behind top pick Josh Freeman's three TD passes in his starting
debut. The Bucs also made big plays on defense and special teams,
including a blocked punt for a touchdown.
Miami was mediocre against the Jets two weeks ago and won, then
mediocre at New England and lost. Mediocre should be enough for the
Dolphins this time.
^Kansas City (1-7) at Oakland (2-6)=
Hardly the classic matchup this once was, and surely not a way
to celebrate the 50th anniversary of the founding of the American
Football League, where these teams originated. The guys who did the
founding were called ''The Foolish Club.'' Wouldn't be a stretch to
apply that name to the Chiefs and Raiders lately.
(Copyright 2009 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)