That’s how the Cincinnati Bengals drew it up.

Joe Burrow not getting harm and connecting with Ja’Marr Chase. Check.

Evan McPherson persistently making subject targets. Check.

The defense making opportunistic performs and doing simply sufficient to provide Burrow and Chase the prospect to win the sport. Check.

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It all labored so superbly – lastly – in Cincinnati’s 32-14 shocking win in Baltimore on Thanksgiving night.

Most stunning of all for Bengals followers, Burrow returned from a 10-week harm absence, threw for 261 yards and two touchdowns and put the NFL on discover that Cincinnati’s 2025 season isn’t fairly useless but. And amazingly, the league’s worst defense pressured 5 fumbles, commonly pressured the quarterback and stored the working sport in verify.

Then it was McPherson going 6-for-6 on subject targets, providing a gradual dose of factors to maintain the AFC North rival Ravens in a gap since late within the second quarter.

“That was the primary all-around sport we’ve performed all season,” Bengals coach Zac Taylor told reporters after Cincinnati snapped the Ravens’ five-game winning streak. “It’s by no means too late to get going.”

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It most likely is too late for Cincinnati’s playoff hopes, but nonetheless this is what Bengals fans have been waiting on for nearly two years. They’ve waited even longer than that for a win in Baltimore, where Cincinnati snapped a three-game, primetime losing streak.

Joe Burrow, returning after being out since Week 2, completed 24 of 46 passes for 261 yards, two touchdown and no interceptions in the 32-14 victory over the Ravens Thanksgiving night.

Joe Burrow, returning after being out since Week 2, completed 24 of 46 passes for 261 yards, two touchdown and no interceptions in the 32-14 victory over the Ravens Thanksgiving night.

The Bengals were again without injured edge rusher Trey Hendrickson. But guys who seemingly had disappeared for the season showed up and made big plays. Defensive end Joseph Ossai – remember him? – had two sacks and created havoc for quarterback Lamar Jackson all game.

Safety Jordan Battle – a model for the defensive ineptitude all season – busted his butt to track down Isaiah Likely and strip the ball out of his hands just before he crossed the goal line. It turned a Ravens, second-quarter, go-ahead touchdown into a Bengals touchback.

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Then little-known, third-string cornerback Jalen Davis stripped the ball out of Zay Flowers’ arms late in the game, ensuring the Ravens wouldn’t mount a comeback.

Edge rusher Joseph Ossai created havoc for Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson all night, including registering two sacks.

Edge rusher Joseph Ossai created havoc for Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson all night, including registering two sacks.

Where’s all that been?

The moment is undoubtedly exciting for the Bengals, who’d lost 8 of their previous 9 games. They played with energy, feeling a boost with the return of Burrow. The Bengals play with more “urgency” when Burrow is on the field, said Chase, who caught seven passes for 110 yards. It was fun to watch Burrow and his teammates munch on turkey legs and smile during the postgame interview on NBC.

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“It felt nice,” Burrow told reporters.

But a game like this also can be maddening for Bengals fans. It leaves them wondering “what if.”

What if the front office had put even an average defense on the field the past two seasons? Why couldn’t the Bengals do this to the Ravens last season? Both games vs. Baltimore in 2024 underscore the Bengals’ problems the past two seasons. The Bengals scored 38 and 34 points in games against the Ravens last season – and lost. Those losses helped spoil MVP-level play by Burrow and kept the Bengals home for the playoffs.

That inability to make stops and holds leads has plagued the Bengals again this season, against good and bad teams.

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As well as the Bengals played on Thursday, it should also be a cautionary tale. The front office cannot look at the game and say: See, we have a good defense. We don’t need to make changes. That’s always a concern with the Bengals’ front office, because owner Mike Brown and player personnel director Duke Tobin believe the team is perpetually close.

The Bengals’ five-game winning streak to end 2024 left the front office believing the defense was close and not needing to spend money to make major changes.

The defense is not close. The Bengals still need a complete overhaul at every level of the defense. One good performance doesn’t mask two seasons of poor play – and several years of inept draft picks.

Contact columnist Jason Williams at [email protected]

This article initially appeared on Cincinnati Enquirer: Joe Burrow, Bengals dominance leaves fans wondering ‘what if’



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