The NFL Most Deceiving Record Debate – Fear Not, They Are STILL the Bengals

September 30, 2009

Read Sports Geek’s argument and Loyal Homer’s arguments about the which team in the NFL has the most deceiving record.



It was not that long ago that many people (myself included) were discussing the fact that Marvin Lewis, head coach for the Cincinnati Bengals, was in danger of losing his job. What a difference three weekends can make!

After losing to the Denver Broncos on a last-second play during the season opener, Lewis and the Bengals responded by defeating the Green Bay Packers and the Pittsburgh Steelers. As a result, the Bengals sit at 2-1 and are only one game behind the AFC North leading the Baltimore Ravens. It is safe to assume that fans in the Queen’s City are very excited about football again, and Lewis can sleep comfortably at night knowing that the temperature on his seat has been turned down (for the time being).

Leave it to Bleacher Fan to rain on the parade! Call it pessimism, cynicism, or any other kind of “ism” you can think of – I am not buying the hype.

It is fun to jump on a bandwagon, especially when those riding look like they are having fun! ESPN.com is on board, as they list the Bengals as the 11th best team in the NFL, moving them all the way up from 24th since their last power rankings. In similar fashion, CBSSports.com lists the Bengals as the 12th best team, and Sports Illustrated ranks them 13th.

As I was breaking down the Bengals’ performance over the first three weeks of the season I found the hype is the only thing the Bengals have going for them right now (well, that AND being fortunate enough to play in the SOUTHERN half of Ohio, not the NORTHERN half).

Week One – Cincinnati LOSES to the Denver Broncos by a score of 12-7

The only relevance from this game came in the final 11 seconds, when wide receiver Brandon Stokley caught a deflected ball to give the Broncos the win. It is true that the Bengals were leading in this game, and if not for that miraculous final play by Denver, it would be the Bengals – not the Broncos – sitting at 3-0 right now.

The fact remains, however, that the Bengals LOST this game. It does not matter how unlucky the team was, and it does not matter how competitive the team made the game. The Bengals allowed the Broncos the opportunity to win, and the Broncos capitalized. As for the caliber of Denver team that beat the Bengals three weeks ago, Cincinnati is still boasted as Denver’s most impressive win.

The Bengals LOST to the Denver Broncos.

Week Two – Cincinnati takes a page out of Denver’s book

The only difference between this game and the Denver game is that Green Bay was charged with a false-start penalty in the closing seconds. If not for that penalty, Green Bay was potentially on their way to attempt a game-tying touchdown that would have forced overtime. Instead, the Bengals were the beneficiaries of a lucky break, and BARELY won the game by a score of 31-24.

Week Three – Cincinnati BARELY beats a group of people dressed in Pittsburgh Steelers Uniforms

Pittsburgh deserves more blame for this game than the Bengals deserve credit.

The Steelers came into week one of their season buying a little TOO much into their own hype. They committed costly errors, and played a little too reckless and cocky. As a result, they NEARLY lost a game it SHOULD have had well in hand against the Tennessee Titans, and safety Troy Polamalu was injured in the process.

The Steelers have been paying for that overconfidence ever since. They lost to the Chicago Bears the following weekend, and allowed the Bengals to score a game-winning touchdown in the final seconds of the game (sound like a pattern yet?) during the week three matchup.

I have news for Bengals fans… if Troy Polamalu was on the field, this game would not have been close! The mistake that football fans and analysts everywhere are making is that they are reacting as if the Bengals defeated the 2008 Pittsburgh Steelers, not the 2009 version that is playing without one of their star players.

Stars have not performed, offensively

In three games this season, quarterback Carson Palmer has only thrown for 615 yards, and has thrown four touchdowns to four interceptions. His passer rating is a bleak 76.2!

Wide receiver Chad Ochocinco is tied for 30th in the NFL with only 14 receptions on the year, and has only caught one touchdown pass.

Running back Cedric Benson ranks at 21st in the NFL in yards per carry, averaging only 4.4 yards each time he touches the ball. He has rushed for 293 yards on the season, but 141 of those yards came in a single game against the Packers, who are among the bottom-ten in the NFL in rushing defense.

The current formula does not equal long-term success

The Bengals have failed to convince me that they are a legitimate contender in the NFL. They have yet to establish a comfortable lead of any kind in a game, and their offensive playmakers have underperformed thus far in the season.

Although the Bengals will most likely defeat the Cleveland Browns this weekend – moving to 3-1 on the season – the Bengals have an upcoming schedule that includes two games against the Baltimore Ravens, another matchup against the Steelers (who should have Polamalu back), the New York Jets, and the Minnesota Vikings. Luck has gotten the Bengals this far, but they are going to need a lot more than luck to survive the 2009 season. I just do not see it!

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The NFL Most Deceiving Record Debate – Andy Reid Uses Misdirection, Fools Fans, League

September 30, 2009

Read Loyal Homer and Bleacher Fan’s arguments about which team they believe has the most deceiving record in the NFL.



The headline fits. Andy Reid is putting together one heckuva a coaching job so far in the 2009 season. He signed quarterback he did not need in Michael Vick, he unexpectedly lost a quarterback he DID need with Donavan McNabb’s injury, and he is getting much more of a quarterback he was not sure he even wanted in Kevin Kolb.

After a 1-3 preseason (like THAT matters), the Philadelphia Eagles have looked quite solid with a 2-1 record as the team enters its bye week. The Eagles are currently second in the NFC East behind the New York Giants. The team has overcome the potential distraction of Michael Vick’s presence as McNabb seems to remain the team’s leader despite his injury.

Everything seems to point to a great season for the Eagles, right? Wrong. The Philadelphia Eagles have the league’s most deceiving win-loss record.

After the team returns from the bye week it will host the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, a team that is thanking its lucky stars the Cleveland Browns are so bad. Then the Eagles hit the road to face the 1-2 Oakland Raiders and the 1-2 Washington Redskins – you know, the team that just lost to the DETROIT LIONS. It is hard to imagine an easier schedule in the entire league. It is very possible that the team ends up 5-1 after the first two months of the season are in the books.

But, that is when the wheels will fall off the Eagles’ first class train ride to Miami for Super Bowl XLIV.

When the calendar turns to November, the season becomes more difficult and the team’s true nature will be revealed. The Eagles play five games in November, starting by hosting the New York Giants and Dallas Cowboys before hitting the road to face the San Diego Chargers and the Chicago Bears. The final game of the month is at home against the struggling Redskins. November may change the Eagles 5-1 fortunes as they play much tougher defenses and offenses that will test the team’s limits.

The season does not get any easier in December, either. The Eagles play the Atlanta Falcons in Atlanta – think they will boo Michael Vick? – then the Giants in New York before hosting a resurgent San Francisco 49ers and the league’s best defense to date, the Denver Broncos. Then they play at Dallas to end the season.

A strong start is vital if the team believes it has any chance to make the playoffs. The Eagles must bank early victories against subpar teams to ready itself when the schedule becomes more difficult when the weather turns colder.

The Eagles also struggle with injuries year in, year out. Running back Brian Westbrook has never avoided injured reserve for an entire season. McNabb has been injured more often in recent years, too. The Eagles have already lost four players for the entire season are playing with a depleted linebacking corps and secondary.

The Eagles also play in a very difficult division where the Cowboys and Giants are two of the elite teams in the entire league. The Wild Card spots are more uncertain than ever before, too, considering the emergence of the NFC North as a decent division and the strength of the Falcons and New Orleans Saints in the NFC South. For the Eagles to have a shot at returning to playoff glory, early wins must be combined with the capacity to survive the season physically and emotionally.

With a depleted, injury-riddled team and an increasingly difficult schedule on the horizon, the Philadelphia Eagles have the most deceiving record in the NFL.

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The NFL Most Deceiving Record Debate – Undefeated but Still Aways To Go

September 30, 2009

Read Sports Geek’s argument that Philadelphia’s record is the most deceiving, while Bleacher Fan argues that the record of the Bengals is the most deceiving.



The NFL is arguably my favorite sports league, as my passion for it has taken off in the past eight years especially due to fantasy football. I watch and read about the NFL as much as I possibly can. There are some teams that appear to be for real (New Orleans and Baltimore come to mind quickly) and there are some teams that appear headed for long, miserable seasons (Cleveland and St. Louis qualify for that category). But today, The Sports Debates is looking at which NFL team has the most deceiving record. After taking a quick look up and down the standings, I have determined that the 3-0 record of the Denver Broncos is the most deceiving.

The Broncos entered the season with a firestorm of controversy. First, new head coach Josh McDaniels and quarterback Jay Cutler failed to get on the same page and Cutler was traded to Chicago. Then, there was all of the off the field controversy with wide receiver Brandon Marshall. When the season finally began the Broncos were trailing late in the first game… VERY LATE… when the other Brandon, Mr. Stokely, grabbed a tipped pass and raced 87 yards for a touchdown in the waning seconds to defeat the shocked Cincinnati Bengals.

The Broncos then followed that miracle with a 27-6 victory over the high-powered Cleveland Browns (9.7 points per game through three games… only the St. Louis Rams at eight points per game are worse)! To follow that up, the team had a tough road game in Oakland Raiders (12 points per game). The Browns, Rams, and Raiders appear among the league’s worst teams. But do not get too comfy out there, Denver fans! The next five games are against Dallas, New England, at San Diego, at Baltimore, and against Pittsburgh.

I am not trying to hate on the Broncos. They have a decent team. I am not sure Kyle Orton is the answer at quarterback. Sports Geek would probably agree with me on that (editor’s note: Sports Geek DOES agree. Enthusiastically). But the Broncos do have two solid running backs in Correll Buckhalter and Knowshown Moreno, a rookie out of Georgia. And Denver still has Marshall at wide receiver, which is a good thing (when he is a law abiding citizen).

Does anyone see Denver winning the AFC West? I do not. I believe the Chargers are the class of the AFC West and could very well be 4-4 after the next five games. However, for the time being, the Broncos should enjoy being one of the seven teams in the NFL with a 3-0 record even though no one seems to believe they are one of the seven best teams. Enjoy it while you can, Denver, because rough times are ahead!<br

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