cincinnati bengals history

Buy Cincinnati Bengals Tickets

cincinnati bengals history

Buy Cincinnati Bengals tickets. Do it. Do it right now. This team is on the verge of becoming very good, which has the Cincinnati faithful rushing around looking to secure their Bengals football tickets. When the Bengals turn it around - and it will very likely happen this year - Cincinnati tickets will be hotter than Carson Palmer's statistics at USC. This is a team that is on the verge of something big. They have the right coach in Marvin Lewis; the right quarterback in Palmer; and a defense that looks like it is ready to dominate in 2005. These are not your father's Bengals. They are tough mentally and physically, and they are ready to explode onto the NFL this year. So don’t miss out on what could be a historic season in Cinncy – Get your Cincinnati Bengals tickets right this instant.

The Bengals history harkens back to 1968, when coaching legend Paul Brown made it his personal mission to start an NFL franchise in Cincinnati. The team burst onto the scene, winning its first two games before imploding. One bright spot was Paul Robinson who ran his way to rookie of the year honors. The rookie of the year award stayed in Cincinnati the following year, as quarterback Greg Cook took the honors while leading the Bengals to a respectable 4-9-1 record.

The Bengals scratched their way into the playoffs the following year, losing in the first round, but letting everyone know that their new home, Riverfront Stadium, would not prove friendly to strangers.

1975 marked another step forward for the Bengals, as upstart quarterback Ken Anderson led the team to a 10-4 record and an AFC Central title. The season ended with more post-season woes, but the exemplary campaign was a fitting swan song for Brown, who retired after the season.
After years of mediocrity, the roar was back in the Bengals in 1981, as NFL MVP Anderson and company punched the Bengals ticket to their first Super Bowl. They came up short against San Francisco, as missed opportunities and costly turnovers doomed Cincinnati efforts throughout the game.
The Bengals would not return to the Super Bowl until 1988, when their new gunslinger, Boomer Esiason, led Cincinnati into another match-up verse the San Francisco 49ers. At Esiason's side was a rookie running back named Ickey Woods, whose touchdown dance - known as the "Ickey Shuffle" - became a national craze. It took the last second magic of one Joe Montana to deny the Bengals that day. Montana's pass to John Taylor with seconds remaining endures as one of the quintessential moments in Super Bowl history.
The Bengals never really recovered from the heartbreak of Super Bowl XXIII, as they fell to the bottom of the NFL feeding pile until recently. Bad draft picks and questionable personnel moves conspired to make the Bengal synonymous with losing.

Let the record show that Bengals’ troubles are in the past. Let the record also show that the new Bengals do not want to hear about the past. The past was about finding excuses for why they lost. The present is about having reasons for why they will win. The whole attitude of the team has. Palmer and company are capable of winning and winning now. Losing is not an option, and the city of Cincinnati knows it. They are ready to make Cincinnati Bengal tickets the hottest commodity this side of Green Bay. When that happens, remember where you heard it first. And remember to be thankful that you got your Cincinnati Bengals tickets early.

 

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