Being a Cincinnati Bengals fan is not always the easiest
thing. Aside from having to deal with the constant reminder that the Bengals
have not won a playoff game since 1990, you also have to deal with internal
conflicts and wars of words amongst fellow members of Who Dey Nation. There are
constant debates of whether or not Marvin Lewis should be fired or if AJ McCarron should be the starting quarterback over Andy Dalton. While these
internal arguments seemed to decrease within the last five years, the 2016
season has seen a resurgence of these debates. The conflicts are again raging
on with the topic of whether or not Ken Zampese should remain offensive
coordinator being thrown into the mix. But why are these arguments once again
the main focus of Bengals fans? It is because the team will not make the
playoffs for the first time since the 2010 season.
After a very disappointing 2010 campaign in which the team
finished with an abysmal 4-12 record, the franchise was essentially forced to hit
the reset button. Star quarterback Carson Palmer refused to come back to the
team, and the question of who would be behind center for the Bengals was a
topic hot discussion during the offseason. In response to Palmer’s poor display
of team leadership, the Bengals drafted Texas Christian University quarterback
Andy Dalton in the second round of the 2011 NFL draft. Dalton was paired with
Bengals first round draft pick A.J. Green, a wide receiver out of the
University of Georgia. Together the duo helped lead the Bengals to a 6-2 record
through the first nine weeks of the 2011 season which prompted the team to
trade Palmer to the Oakland Raiders for two future draft picks. The 2011
Bengals finished the season with a record of 9-7 and qualified for the playoffs
as a wildcard team.
2011 marked the first of five consecutive years in which the
Bengals qualified for the playoffs. They qualified as a wildcard team in 2011,
2012, and in 2014 and qualified as division champs in 2013 and in 2015. Bengals
fans began to expect the team to become a yearly contender. Instead of hoping
for the team to make the playoffs, fans began to hope that the team would find
postseason success. Questioning if the team would make the playoffs became
laughable. This state of mind was shared by nearly every member of Who Dey
Nation including me.
I had no doubt that the team would once again reach the
playoffs at the end of the 2016 season. In my Bengals 2016 season preview
video, I predicted that the team would reach the postseason and win in the
first round. That will not happen. I, like so many other Bengals fans, took
playoff qualification for granted. What us fans have to realize is that making
the playoffs is not a guarantee. Each game during the NFL season has huge
consequences when it comes to the playoffs, and members of Who Dey Nation are
getting an unpleasant reminder of those consequences this year.
I have come to terms with the fact that the Bengals will not
be playing for a chance to win the Super Bowl this season. I have also realized
that the opportunity to play for a Super Bowl title is not a guarantee. The
2016 season has proved that playoff qualification should not be taken for
granted and that the five-year stretch of success the Bengals had could be difficult
to duplicate in the future. I have learned my lesson, and I hope all Bengals
fans as well as the entire Bengals franchise has learned their lesson as well.
Hopefully 2017 will be a rebound year that will include a valuable trip to the
playoffs.
Who Dey!
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