Forgot Log-in ID / Password? | Help Not a member, Register Now!

 

Bengals home free only if Ochocinco keeps it buttoned up

PITTSBURGH -- Only Chad Ochocinco can screw this up for Cincinnati.

And you know what I'm talking about.

The Bengals finished off a season sweep of Pittsburgh on Sunday, beating the Steelers 18-12 to move into sole possession of first place in the AFC North. With pending home games against the dregs of the NFL -- Cleveland, Detroit and Kansas City -- Ochocinco looks to be the last remaining danger on the Cincinnati schedule.

If the Bengals win those three gimmes, and then win just one of their remaining four road games -- I'm thinking the trip next week to Oakland -- they would finish 11-5 with a perfect record in the division. Those are the credentials of a playoff lock.

But the Bengals can't be called a playoff lock yet, because they still have to traverse the mental minefield that is Chad Ochocinco.

I tried to traverse it after the game Sunday, and it didn't go so well.

First, the background. And not the deep background, like his trade demands of 2007. Or the punch Ochocinco threw at a member of the coaching staff at halftime of the Bengals' only playoff game in the past 19 years, a January 2006 loss to Pittsburgh. At halftime the Bengals were winning 17-14, but that wasn't good enough for Ochocinco, then known more humbly as "Chad Johnson." He was having a quiet day (he finished with four catches for 59 yards and no scores) and at halftime he went after a coach in the locker room, a much-rumored confrontation that was confirmed years later by then-teammate Shaun Smith. After that loss, the once-rising Bengals dropped to 19-28-1 from 2006-08, disappointing seasons marked by the increasing distraction of the receiver formerly known as Chad Johnson.

But that's not the background I'm talking about. That's old history. I'm talking about Sunday's game, which Ochocinco spent catching just two passes for just 29 yards, but with a team-high amount of screaming at his quarterback and pouting on the sidelines. I saw it. Saw it all. Carson Palmer made Laveranues Coles his favorite target Sunday, and No. 3 receiver Andre Caldwell caught twice as many passes as Ochocinco, and Ochocinco's body language got uglier and uglier as the game wore on.

Bengals-Steelers video

NFL Today Postgame Show: Bengals' D

Recap: Nantz, Simms in Pittsburgh

Bernard Scott talks about the victory

More Bengals-Steelers links

Recap: Bengals 18, Steelers 12

Injuries: Steelers' Polamalu | Bengals' Benson

Postgame reports: Bengals | Steelers

Playoff Race | Week 10 scores and recaps

Community

Thread: Steelers-Bengals game thread

Thread: Congrats, Bengals

Thread: Steeler fans disgusted

Thread: Pittsburgh: Good, bad & ugly

Boards: NFL | Bengals | Steelers

Twice, after third-down passes intended for other receivers fell incomplete, Ochocinco walked off the field and never looked back, even as kicker Shayne Graham was trying -- successfully -- to kick field goals for the tie or the lead. Field goals might be good for the team, but what's in it for Ochocinco? He wasn't about to watch that crap.

That's the stuff I wanted to talk to Ochocinco about -- his state of mind. His history of being moody, of being a distraction, of being selfish. Was this the wrong time to bring it up? I don't think so. Ochocinco disagreed.

It started fine, with Ochocinco clearly not in a talkative mood but still answering my question about Bernard Scott's 96-yard kickoff return for the game's only touchdown. Ochocinco even answered my next question about his own impact, or lack thereof, on the game.

"I never have a big impact in games when we're up against these guys," he said. "They throw the whole house on me. But it's not always going to be about me. It was a team win today."

He went on, and was complimentary about the Pittsburgh defense, but I asked one more question, and that's where it went south. And don't look at me like that. I knew what I was going to write after this game -- read my first sentence again; I wrote it right after the game ended, before I went to the locker room for interviews -- and I wanted Ochocinco's thoughts on the topic.

Me: "As the season goes along -- you guys are 7-2, first place in the division -- are you going to be OK if it stays 'not about you'?"

Him: "Sure I am -- wait. What? Why are you so interested in talking about me?"

Me: "Because you're so interested in talking about you. And that interests me."

There's no telling how long Chad Ochocinco will accept being in the background while other Bengals are more involved. (Getty Images)  
There's no telling how long Chad Ochocinco will accept being in the background while other Bengals are more involved. (Getty Images)  
Him: "You need to get out of here."

Those are the highlights. Or lowlights. And for the record, my next stop was the Pittsburgh locker room, where I asked safety Ryan Clark what the Steelers had done to bottle up Ochocinco.

"We didn't do anything special for him," Clark said. "We didn't roll much coverage to him or anything."

Interesting. But what's really fascinating is that the Bengals could beat Pittsburgh without much production from Ochocinco, and the way they went about it. Cincinnati out-Steelered the Steelers, controlling the line of scrimmage with its defensive front to eliminate the Pittsburgh running game and sack Ben Roethlisberger four times. The Bengals also intercepted him once and knocked down several passes at the line and knocked down Roethlisberger himself on others. He came into the game tied for first in the NFL with a completion rate of 70.6 percent, but he was 20 for 40 on Sunday.

This wasn't one or two plays going Cincinnati's way. This was domination, and the score would have more accurately reflected that -- say, 22-12 -- had the Bengals not blown an extra point try and seen a field goal hit the upright. For the Bengals to dominate one of the best teams in the NFL on the road, and to do it without getting much of a contribution from their most explosive receiver? That's making a statement.

"This was a statement game," Cincinnati safety Chris Crocker said. "Beat Pittsburgh two times. Beat Baltimore two times. Now everyone [in the AFC North] is looking at us from behind."

And everyone in the AFC North should stay behind them. The Bengals' health has been cooperating. Their depth has been cooperating. Their schedule definitely will cooperate. Near as I can tell, only one question remains:

Will Chad Ochocinco continue to cooperate?

 
For more from Gregg Doyel, check him out on Twitter: @greggdoyelcbs
 

Talk Back
Reputation:85
Level:All-Star
Since:Aug 2, 2009

November 16, 2009 10:43 am

Doyel is right about one thing: There is no doubt that Ocho was pouting on the sidelines. His demeanor totally changed from the beginning of the game and the end. He was clearly not happy that he wasn't a bigger part of the victory, unlike the rest of the team...all of whom were just happy about the victory.

HOWEVER, Greg makes an awful lot of assumptions in his article, not to ment ...(more)

Reputation:98
Level:Superstar
Since:Sep 4, 2007

November 16, 2009 12:37 pm
...in fact, I usually defend them because I know it's not an easy job.  That said, Doyle, you must have watched a different game, or hopefully, this is the first Cincy game you've watched all year.  Chad was awesome yesterday, just awesome.  They had him bracketed all game and he still got wide open at least four or five times when Carson flat out missed him.  Every quarter ...(more)
Reputation:80
Level:All-Star
Since:Dec 5, 2006

November 16, 2009 2:00 pm

I occasionally read the sports "journalism" that Doyel puts out and I began to wonder just how good he actually is as a sports prognosticator and reporter. CBS offers a wonderful archive of his past "articles" (more like provocative rants than articles really...) that made this a pretty straightforward task. What I found will not surprise many but here a ...(more)

Reputation:93
Level:All-Star
Since:Jan 29, 2008

November 16, 2009 12:48 pm
Just the title of this article made me laugh. Did Chad have anything to do with the defense holding the Steelers to 12 points and getting turnovers or the kick return? If he was on the sidelines in a clown suit it wouldn't have made a lick of difference. Cinci is going to be a good team regardless. They have a bigtime defense with 2 great y ...(more)
Reputation:98
Level:Superstar
Since:Feb 28, 2009

November 16, 2009 3:56 pm

has anyone heard Doyel when he is on the Steve Czaben show...First Team on Fox out of DC...on at 6-9 in the AM. Anyways, he has a regular slot. Sometimes I catch it, and I really wish Czaben would put something else in that slot. I've never listened to a more self absorbed, narcisitc, contriving journalist...period. And that's the god points about him.

The sad part is, his stories ha ...(more)

Reputation:94
Level:All-Star
Since:Feb 25, 2007

November 16, 2009 1:17 am
Here Gregg Doyel is trying to make Chad Ochocinco look like a moody premadonna, but all he does is show what a jackass Doyel is himself.

That's real professional ***hole, baiting Chad to give you a negative answer. The funny thing is, he gave a rather professional answer of "you better get out of here" to y
...(more)
Reputation:95
Level:Superstar
Since:Jul 10, 2008

November 16, 2009 4:27 am

I have been reading sports articles my whole life.  I never have taken the time to post anything negative about someones work until I started reading articles at this site.  Now it has become routine.  These writers are so horrible, I feel obligated to sports fans everywhere to bash on these idiots.  The only reason why he wrote this stinkin' trash article was to let ev ...(more)

Reputation:95
Level:Superstar
Since:Oct 20, 2006

November 16, 2009 7:37 am

This is about the absolute WORST example I have even seen in over 50 years of a sports reporter trying to create a negative story while totally missing 20 other truer and more engaging story lines.  Just because you piss people off and they reply does NOT make a story any good.  Doyle --- this story is truly asinine and pathetic.   ...(more)

Reputation:99
Level:Superstar
Since:Sep 4, 2006

November 15, 2009 11:34 pm
I had heard bad things about Gregg Doyel before, and now I have lost all respect for him.

This was nothing but a slam article because a writer was mad he got slammed by an athlete he was trying to bait into saying something controversial.

Get over yourself, Chad should have told you to get lost. It's funny that some writers like Doyel thinks its their right that the playe
...(more)
Reputation:94
Level:All-Star
Since:Jul 31, 2009

November 16, 2009 12:59 pm

This is possibly the least professional piece of journalism I have ever read.  The writer goes to an interview with a biased opinion (he said he had even written some of this garbage), asks leading questions, and then gets mad when he is told to take a hike?  Chad Johnson gave Doyle an extremely professional answer about the game not being about him, and how it was a good win for the ...(more)

Reputation:86
Level:All-Star
Since:Sep 3, 2009

November 16, 2009 1:49 am
Your trying to make it all about you. First with your hack article about Ohio State yesterday. Then This garbage. You write some terrible article building up your showdown with Chad....then he actually says all the things a good teammate should say.....so you try to bait him into saying something bad. That isnt credible journalism. That is National Enquirer garbage.
Reputation:98
Level:Superstar
Since:Aug 16, 2006

November 15, 2009 9:23 pm

You ae sp proud you had the relevance to talk to an NFL player of noteriety. He took you to task yo liettle snivel bag. Tossed you out.

You dumb Doyel think it is all about Cinco. But Mr Ocho is only a player. lt is insulting to the Bengals and their fans that yuou think one player could drag them down. If Dr Cinco is so impor ...(more)

Reputation:82
Level:All-Star
Since:Nov 9, 2008

November 15, 2009 7:56 pm
Ocho is a player that demands the ball because he is a playmaker. When reporters try to bring up stupid questions because of what has happened in the past, they should get lost. Bengals are playing very well right now and the offense looks renewed. Ocho will have his day, he is a competitor and he wants to contribute. Next time leave the st ...(more)
Reputation:99
Level:Superstar
Since:Aug 18, 2006

November 15, 2009 7:53 pm
Greg Doyle you are an embarrassment to your profession.  You tried to make up a non-story about the OSU Buckeyes yesterday and you just wrote a non-story about the Bengals today.  Sure it makes since that this might be an angle to play "Will Ochocinco's big mouth derail the Bengals great season?"  But when there is no story y ...(more)
Reputation:95
Level:Superstar
Since:Nov 29, 2006

November 16, 2009 11:26 pm
Say what you want about Chad, but he has yet to do anything like leave the field, head to the locker room, and abandon his teammates before the game is over. He doesn't take most plays "off".  Why is it that OchoCinco and T.O. are constantly beat up by the media, while Randy Moss is adored?
 
 
 
 
Gregg Doyel
Recent Columns
 
Headlines
 
 
 
CBS Sports Store