Buried in last place and facing the possibility of moving forward without star quarterback Joe Burrow, the Cincinnati Bengals have plenty of obstacles to clear if they’re to reach the postseason for the third year in a row.
Burrow sprained his right wrist in Thursday night’s 34-20 loss to Baltimore. He left in the second quarter and was in too much pain to return.
Worse, he could be sidelined for a while.
Burrow left shortly after throwing a touchdown pass to Joe Mixon that put the Bengals ahead 10-7.
“It looks like he sprained his wrist. Felt it on that touchdown pass,” Taylor said.
Burrow was 11 of 17 for 101 yards and a touchdown when he left. Backup Jake Browning replaced him with the Bengals down 14-10. Burrow was back on the sideline as halftime ended but did not return to the game when Cincinnati started the third quarter with the ball. He was ruled out around then.
Burrow dealt with a calf injury earlier this season, but he hasn’t missed a game this year. He’s been sidelined for only one game since the start of the 2021 season while leading Cincinnati to back-to-back AFC title games and a Super Bowl appearance.
Now, it’s unclear if Burrow will be available when the two-time defending AFC North champions try to rebound at home against Pittsburgh on Nov. 26.
Burrow’s injury is yet another blow to the Bengals (5-5) in a topsy-turvy year in which they opened 1-3, then rattled off four straight victories before falling 30-27 at home Sunday against Houston.
Now, Cincinnati trails Baltimore (8-3) by 2 1/2 games in the division, a deficit even more daunting because the Ravens swept the season series.
Yet in the wake of this lopsided loss, Taylor remained confident that Bengals have what it takes to rebound — with or without Burrow. Cincinnati, after all, was 5-4 in each of the previous three seasons before roaring back.
“In a long season like this, what you’ve got to do is be able to regroup,” Taylor said. “We’ve done this kind of situation before. We’ve got to rally these last seven weeks. Great opportunity at home against Pittsburgh to get started on that track.
“Don’t get it twisted on what kind of team we have,” he added. “We have a chance to regroup. All the things that we really want to do are still in front of us. We control our own destiny at this point.”
The 27-year-old Browning made his NFL debut earlier this season during a loss at Cleveland. That was his only appearance until Thursday.
The former University of Washington standout went 8 for 14 for 68 yards and a score.
“I felt calm all the time, felt like I threw the ball where I wanted to,” Browning said. “But obviously there were too many three-and-outs; put our defense in a tough situation.”
If he is pressed into a starting role against the Steelers, Browning hopes to pull from the experience he received from playing against the Ravens.
“Having a short week and then playing the first non-preseason game since like, the 2020 (actually 2019) Rose Bowl, I definitely got some stuff to build on,” he said. “I’m going to prepare like I’m the guy, just like I do every week.”