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Cincinnati Bengals
Location: Cincinnati, Ohio | Stadium: Paul Brown Stadium (65,535) | President: Mike Brown | Business Manager: Bill Connelly
Coach: Marvin Lewis | League Championships: 0
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Shedding problems, Bengals dump reinstated LB Thurman

CINCINNATI -- Less than a month after the NFL reinstated Odell Thurman from his two-year suspension, the troubled linebacker is out of a job.

 

The Cincinnati Bengals staunchly supported Thurman during his suspension for violating the league's substance abuse and conduct policies. When he didn't show up for voluntary workouts that represented a chance to catch up, they decided they've had enough.

Thurman was waived on Monday, leaving his once-promising career at the crossroads again.

"Everything was fine two weeks ago," agent Safarrah Lawson said in a phone interview shortly after Thurman was released. "He left for a week to deal with the death of his grandmother, and he didn't make it back."

Now, his road back to the NFL will have to go through some other team.

Thurman failed to attend the team's three voluntary on-field workouts last week, when he was in Georgia following the death of his grandmother. The Bengals are installing a new defense, and wanted him to practice.

"I was just told by coach (Marvin) Lewis that he hadn't been in the building enough since his reinstatement, and they decided to go in a different direction," Lawson said.

In the past two months, the Bengals have finally cut ties with their most-punished players.

Receiver Chris Henry was released on April 3 after he was arrested for the fifth time. Henry had already served multiple suspensions from the NFL, including missing the first eight games of last season.

Now, one of his best friends is gone from the team, too.

Thurman, a second-round draft pick from Georgia, showed promise as a rookie in 2005, when he led the team in tackles and led all NFL rookies with five interceptions. He was suspended for the first four games of the 2006 season after failing to show up for a drug test.

Commissioner Roger Goodell extended the suspension to a full season when Thurman was arrested for drunken driving; Henry was a passenger in the vehicle, but wasn't charged. Goodell later extended Thurman's suspension through the 2007 season as well, setting conditions for his return.

Thurman met them and was on his way to full reinstatement when Goodell allowed him to start working out at Paul Brown Stadium in January. He was fully reinstated on April 21, and had been working out.

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