Kalpana Kalpana (Editor)

2005 Cincinnati Bengals season

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Head coach
  
Marvin Lewis

Home field
  
Paul Brown Stadium

Division place
  
1st AFC North

Owner
  
Mike Brown

Record
  
11–5

Playoff finish
  
Lost Wild Card

The 2005 Cincinnati Bengals season was the team's 38th year in professional football and its 36th with the National Football League.

Contents

2005 was the team's first season with a winning record, playoff berth, and division title since 1990. In the fourteen years and 224 games in between (1991–2004), the Bengals' record was 71–153, a 0.317 winning percentage. It would be the Bengals' lone playoff appearance in a span of 18 years (1991–2008). QB Carson Palmer got off to a strong start on his way to a solid 3836 yard season with 32 Touchdown passes, earning a trip to the Pro Bowl. Receiving many of Palmer's passes was Chad Johnson, who followed teammate Palmer to the Pro Bowl in Hawaii, racking up an impressive 1,432 yards in receiving with nine TDs, many of which were followed by unique celebrations that made him a regular star on the spots highlight shows.

Following a 42–29 win over the Baltimore Ravens, the Bengals faced the Steelers again this time in Pittsburgh, where the Bengals offense continued to fly behind Carson Palmer who had three Touchdown passes and 227 yards passing in an impressive 38–31 win that gave the Bengals first place in the AFC North at 9–3. The Bengals would not relinquish first place winning the next two games to clinch the division with two weeks to go. On December 18, with a 41–17 win over the Detroit Lions, the Bengals clinched a playoff spot. After clinching the division the Bengals played cautiously and dropped their final two games to finish with an 11–5 record, beating out the eventual Super Bowl champion Steelers, who finished with an identical record, on a tiebreaker situation.

Week 1

  • Rudi Johnson 26 Rush, 126 Yds
  • Postseason

    On January 8, 2006, the Cincinnati Bengals took on the Pittsburgh Steelers in the opening round of the playoffs making it the Bengals first playoff appearance of the decade. Disaster started early for the Bengals when Steelers lineman Kimo von Oelhoffen accidentally hit Bengals quarterback (Carson Palmer)'s knee, resulting in a tear of his ACL (Anterior cruciate ligament). Backup quarterback Jon Kitna took over and did very well, giving Cincinnati leads of 10–0 and 17–7 at points of the game. All seemed well for the Bengals until the Steelers dominated with 24 unanswered points and knocked the Cincinnati Bengals out of the playoffs with a final score of 31–17. This is known in Bengals Lore as the We-Dey Game. The Steelers went on to win the Super Bowl.

    Pro Bowl Selections

  • Carson Palmer QB, AFC Pro-Bowl Selection
  • Rudi Johnson RB, AFC Pro-Bowl Selection
  • Chad Johnson WR, AFC Pro-Bowl Selection
  • Willie Anderson RT, AFC Pro-Bowl Selection
  • Deltha O'Neal CB, AFC Pro-Bowl Selection
  • All-Pro Award

  • Chad Johnson WR, 1st Team All-Pro
  • Willie Anderson RT, 1st Team All-Pro
  • Deltha O'Neal CB, 1st Team All-Pro
  • Milestones

  • Carson Palmer's first six starts of the season, combined with his last three starts of 2004, made him only the second passer in NFL history to post nine straight games with a passer rating of 100 or more (Peyton Manning, 2004)
  • Carson Palmer led the NFL in three major passing categories – TD passes (32), completion percentage (67.8) and TD-INT differential (32–12)
  • Rudi Johnson, 2nd 1000 yard rushing season (1,458 yards)
  • Chad Johnson 4th 1000 yard receiving season
  • Tab Perry, 1st 1000 yard return season (1,562 yards)
  • Records

  • Cincinnati Bengals Chad Johnson and T.J. Houshmandzadeh set Bengals records for most receptions (175) and receiving yards (2,388) by a duo.
  • The Bengals established a home season attendance record of 526,469 to break the mark of 524,248 set a season earlier.
  • References

    2005 Cincinnati Bengals season Wikipedia