Terrell Owens
- WR
- ,
- 51
- 224 lbs
- 6' 3"
- 5
Week 13 Projection
- Week 13 Projection
- Dfs Projection
Latest news
Joe Reedy - Twitter
·Aug 04, 2010 · 10:12 AM EDT
Profile team related news
No data to display
Terrell Owens put some bite back into the Bengals' offense.
Owens caught a 43-yard pass along the sideline, setting up the only touchdown by Cincinnati's starting offense Friday night in a 22-9 preseason victory over the Philadelphia Eagles that showed he's still got a lot left.
"According to sources and anybody that analyzes talent or what-have-you: I'm 36, I've slowed down, I don't have it anymore,'' Owens said. "I'm a different person. I'm very talented, I keep myself in shape. So everybody can think I've slowed down. If they want to play me like that, that's fine."
The Eagles couldn't keep up with him.
Owens had three catches for 67 yards in the first half, and ran 1 yard on a reverse.
"He's as good as anyone when he gets on top of a corner,'' Palmer said. "We're going to take shots when we get opportunities."
So far, he's been the Bengals' top receiver.
Philadelphia's main goal was to get a touchdown out of its starters. In the preseason opener against Jacksonville, quarterback Kevin Kolb led the Eagles down the field on two possessions, but they had to settle for field goals.
Same thing again in Cincinnati. Six possessions, two field goals.
The Eagles kept their starting offense on the field for the entire first half and got less-than-desired results. Kolb was 11 of 17 for 126 yards, most of them in two drives at the end of the half when the Bengals began substituting. The most glaring disappointment: Philadelphia failed to score against a defense full of reserves after driving to a first-and-goal at the 7-yard line.
"We've got to be better than that,'' Eagles coach Andy Reid said. "You can't have the penalties in the red zone that we did."
Kolb was disappointed at the lack of a touchdown.
"It's the same story,'' he said. "We need to do better."
David Akers kicked field goals of 40, 25 and 48 yards. Cincinnati's Mike Nugent was short on a 59-yard attempt at the end of the first half, and Dave Rayner missed a 34-yarder. They're competing for Cincinnati's kicking job.
Now that Terrell Owens has come and gone, Lee Evans finds himself facing an all-too familiar question with the Buffalo Bills receiving group going through yet another transformation.
Who, Evans is left wondering, will emerge as the latest in a long string of No. 2 receivers who will line up opposite him once the season opens? There have been so many during Evans' previous six seasons in Buffalo, he's having trouble remembering them all.
There's Steve Johnson, a 2008 seventh-round pick, who opened camp at the No. 2 spot as a reward for his performance during spring practices. He's followed by James Hardy, the 2008 second-round pick, who's career has so far been derailed by injuries. Also in the mix is Chad Jackson, a 2006 second-round pick, who was a flop in New England, and signed by the Bills this offseason.
It's a list that doesn't include speedster Roscoe Parrish, the fifth-year player, who is expected to be primarily used in the slot in place of Reed, who was not re-signed this offseason.
Evans is barely on the fantasy radar, rated 40th at 4for4.com with an ADP of the 13th round. Whoever wins the number-two job probably won't have much of a fantasy impact at least early on.
If Antonio Bryant regains his health, he will start ahead Jordan Shipley.
With Chad OchoCinco and Terrell Owens, the Bengals #3 WR will have limited impact. (regardless of who it will be)
Balance.
That’s what Cincinnati offensive coordinator Bob Bratkowski is preaching in the days after the Bengals signed Terrell Owens, giving them a Hall of Fame wide receiver to go with the team’s all-time receiver in Chad Ochocinco, and a former franchise player with two 1,000-yard seasons in Antonio Bryant.
But Bratkowski knows that Cedric Benson and a running game that finished ninth in the league in rushing was at the top of the food chain last year. It shortened the wins in Pittsburgh and both wins over Baltimore to take the game of attrition. It kept the Bengals close enough to survive meager offensive outputs at home by the 26th-ranked passing offense against the lowly Browns and Chiefs. It almost pulled out the playoff game.
And Bratkowski knows that in order to win a playoff game, his ecosystem of formations and the evolution of his playcalling must be balanced.
"If we get in the top 10 in both running and passing," Bratkowski said, "then we’ve got something. I’d like to see how many teams have done that and how they ended up."
It doesn’t happen every day. Elias Sports Bureau says three teams have done it in the last three seasons. Last year the Cowboys and Saints did it. Before that, it was the Eagles in 2007. The Saints won it all. The Cowboys won their first playoff game in more than a decade. That Eagles team finished last in the NFC East at 8-8.
It doesn’t guarantee anything, but most of the time it has meant big things in Bengals history, too. Since the 1970 merger, the Bengals have finished in the top 10 in both running and passing four times. They only made the playoffs once (1973), but their one losing season with it was that aberration called the 1987 strike. The ’86 team won 10 games but missed the playoffs and the ’89 team went 8-8 and missed the playoffs on the last day.
Bratkowski will say that a lot of three wide-receiver sets isn’t the best thing for the running game.
"You can’t have a steady diet of it, but it’s going to be a part of what we do. It’s always been a part of what we do. Some years more than others and we’ve done quite a bit of it," Bratkowski said. "Yet in the run game, when you’re committed to the run, very few of the top running teams are one back, three wides. You don’t see that very often. We’ll still do our fair share."
Cincinnati's offense has become quite compelling to fantasy owners. Right now, we have Carson Palmer as a top-15 quarterback, Cedric Benson as a top-20 running back, and Chad Ochocinco and Terrell Owens as top-20 receivers. There's young talent in Jermaine Gresham and Jordan Shipley, and certainly Antonio Bryant can make a difference if he's healthy enough to take the field. It's going to be a fun ride in the Queen City.
No data to display
4for4 Fantasy Football. Copyright © Intense Industries, LLC. All rights reserved.