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You wanted Jordan Palmer; Ravens got him | Chick Ludwig At Large
 

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You wanted Jordan Palmer; Ravens got him

JORDAN PALMER CHEERED,

THEN REALIZATION SETS IN

THAT HE ISN’T QUITE READY

The biggest ovation from Bengals fans came with 3:20 to play in Baltimore’s 34-3 victory on Sunday.

That’s when quarterback Jordan Palmer trotted onto the field, replacing starter Ryan Fitzpatrick.

“It felt good for a couple seconds,” Palmer said, “until the hammer came down.”

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Jordan Palmer

After handing off to Cedric Benson for a 7-yard gain, Palmer threw an errant pass that strong safety Jim Leonhard intercepted and returned 35 yards for a touchdown.

Palmer thought tight end Reggie Kelly was going to break to the outside. Instead, Kelly curled inside.

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palmerJordanact.jpg

“Reggie and I just weren’t on the same page,” Palmer said. “But I threw it and it’s my fault. As a quarterback, you’re responsible for wherever the ball goes. and that’s on me.”

What about the ovation?

“Not deservedly so,” he said. “The backup quarterback in every town is the most popular guy. That’s just how it is. It gave the fans something to cheer about. It was frustrating out there today.”

BOILING POINT

Bengals head coach Marvin Lewis stopped short of blowing his stack.

“That was a very disappointing loss,” he said. “We got ourselves into a bad situation in the first quarter when we were behind in the field position battle, and continued to move back.

“We allowed two really big plays in the passing game that broke our backs in the second half. They were able to control the clock from there, and we were never able to get anything going offensively all day. We weren’t very good. When you get your head kicked in like we just did, I’m not going to be happy about anything.”

SLIPPERY SLOPE

Lewis was asked if he can endure another year like this.

“No, our football team won’t have to go through another season like this, nor will our fans … believe me,” he said. “We’ve got a youthful team. That’s what we’re playing with. We didn’t play very well. It comes back on me and us. We’ve got to do a better job of preparing them, understanding and executing.

“We need to make sure we do that because we did not execute very well. Three points doesn’t get it done in an NFL game.”

THICK PLAYBOOK

The Ravens, who ran 75 offensive plays to Cincinnati’s 53, threw everything at the Bengals.

There was wide receiver Mark Clayton’s 32-yard TD pass to Derrick Mason. Backup quarterback Troy Smith rushed three times for four yards on plays in which starting QB Joe Flacco lined up as a receiver.

“They dialed up everything they had,” Bengals defensive tackle John Thornton said. “They had Troy Smith in there and were running reverse passes and stuff. We got to see their whole playbook, we were out there so much.”

ROOM SERVICE

Fitzpatrick completed an 18-yard pass to Chad Ocho Cinco on the first play from scrimmage. The Bengals totaled two yards on their next 19 plays.

“We’re obviously in a funk, and we have personnel that’s better than the statistics,” Fitzpatrick said. “We have guys that can make plays. It’s just a matter of getting the ball in their hands and getting them space.”

LONGEST PASS

Fitzpatrick’s 46-yard pass to T.J. Houshmandzadeh at 0:38 of the second quarter set up the Bengals’ only score, a 27-yard Shayne Graham field goal as time expired in the first half.

It was the longest pass play of the season, surpassing the 36 yarder from Carson Palmer to DeDe Dorsey — a useless dump-off on the final play of the first half against Tennessee in Week 2.

PRAISING CLAYTON

Ravens coach John Harbaugh said he had faith that Clayton would connect with Derrick Mason on a 32-yard TD pass and catch by his star receivers.

“We saw it in practice,” Harbaugh said. “We knew (Clayton) could do it. That may have been the best he’s thrown it. He’ll be lobbying for more throws now. He’s as hard a worker as we have on our team. Between him and Mason, they kill themselves in practice and it shows up in the game.”

QUICK HITTERS

• Entering the final drive of the first half, Baltimore had 248 yards (170 passing, 78 rushing) to the Bengals’ 20 (3 passing, 17 rushing).

• Clayton’s 70-yard TD was the longest reception of the season against the Bengals, surpassing a pair of 57 yarders by Dallas’ Terrell Owens and Philadelphia’s Hank Baskett.

• Outside linebacker Brandon Johnson led the Bengals with 13 tackles (5 solos) and 1.5 sacks.

QUOTE MACHINE

“This is the NFL. These are the best players in the world. No wins, one win, whatever. We know every time you take the field, you better bring your ‘A’ game, regardless of records.” Ravens WR Mark Clayton on staying focused against a one-win team.

Permalink | Comments (1) | Post your comment | Categories: Bengals

Comments

By psychostats

December 1, 2008 1:01 AM | Link to this

Oh cripes, Marvin Lewis will have that quote thrown in his face a million times in the coming years: “No, our football team won’t have to go through another season like this, nor will our fans … believe me.” And Sisyphus just keeps pushing that boulder up the mountain…
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