2004 Cincinnati Bengals season

2004 Cincinnati Bengals season
Head coach Marvin Lewis
General manager Mike Brown
Owner Mike Brown
Home field Paul Brown Stadium
Results
Record 8–8
Division place 3rd AFC North
Playoff finish did not qualify
Cincinnati visits Washington in week 10 of 2004

The 2004 Cincinnati Bengals season was the team's 37th year in professional football and its 35th with the National Football League. The Bengals began to focus on the future, trading All-Pro running back Corey Dillon to the New England Patriots. That cleared the way for Rudi Johnson to start at running back. Carson Palmer was given the starting quarterback job. Palmer and the young Bengals would struggle early, losing five of their first seven games. As the season wore on, the Bengals began to hit their stride, as they climbed back to .500, at 6–6, before a sprained knee sent Palmer to the sidelines during a 35–28 road loss to the eventual Super Bowl Champion Patriots.

With wins in their final two games the Bengals would finish 8–8 for the second year in a row. Rudi Johnson finished sixth in the NFL in rushing with 1,454 yards, giving Bengals fans hope for the future.[1]

This season would see the Bengals make their first appearance on Monday Night Football since 1992, a win at home against the Denver Broncos on October 25.

Offseason

NFL Draft

2004 Cincinnati Bengals draft
Round Pick Player Position College Notes
1 26 Chris Perry  RB Michigan
2 49 Keiwan Ratliff  CB Florida
2 56 Madieu Williams  S Maryland
3 80 Caleb Miller  LB Arkansas
3 96 Landon Johnson  LB Purdue
4 114 Matthias Askew  DT Michigan State
4 117 Robert Geathers  DE Georgia
4 123 Stacy Andrews  OT Ole Miss
5 149 Maurice Mann  WR Nevada
6 183 Greg Brooks  DB North Texas
7 218 Casey Bramlet  QB Wyoming
      Made roster       Pro Football Hall of Fame    *   Made at least one Pro Bowl during career

[2]

Personnel

2004 Cincinnati Bengals staff
Front office

Head coaches

  • Head Coach – Marvin Lewis
  • Assistant Head Coach/Offensive Line – Paul Alexander

Offensive coaches

Defensive coaches

Special teams coaches

Strength and conditioning

  • Strength and Conditioning – Chip Morton
  • Assistant Strength and Conditioning – Ray Oliver

Roster

2004 Cincinnati Bengals final roster
Quarterbacks

Running backs

Wide receivers

Tight ends

Offensive linemen

Defensive linemen

Linebackers

Defensive backs

Special teams

Reserve lists


Practice squad


Rookies in italics
53 Active, 16 Inactive, 7 Practice squad

Regular season

The 2004 season constituted the first time since 1991 that the Bengals played the Washington Redskins, and the match produced their first ever away win over that franchise.[3] The reason for this is that before the admission of the Texans in 2002, NFL scheduling formulas for games outside a team’s division were much more influenced by table position during the previous season.[4]

Schedule

Week Date Opponent Result TV Attendance
1 September 12, 2004 at New York Jets L 24–31 CBS
77,230
2 September 19, 2004 Miami Dolphins W 16–13 ESPN
65,705
3 September 26, 2004 Baltimore Ravens L 9–23 CBS
65,575
4 October 3, 2004 at Pittsburgh Steelers L 17–28 CBS
62,402
5 Bye
6 October 17, 2004 at Cleveland Browns L 17–34 CBS
73,263
7 October 25, 2004 Denver Broncos W 23–10 ABC
65,806
8 October 31, 2004 at Tennessee Titans L 20–27 CBS
68,932
9 November 7, 2004 Dallas Cowboys W 26–3 FOX
65,721
10 November 14, 2004 at Washington Redskins W 17–10 CBS
87,786
11 November 21, 2004 Pittsburgh Steelers L 14–19 CBS
65,780
12 November 28, 2004 Cleveland Browns W 58–48 CBS
65,677
13 December 5, 2004 at Baltimore Ravens W 27–26 CBS
69,695
14 December 12, 2004 at New England Patriots L 28–35 CBS
68,756
15 December 19, 2004 Buffalo Bills L 17–33 CBS
65,378
16 December 26, 2004 New York Giants W 23–22 FOX
64,606
17 January 2, 2005 at Philadelphia Eagles W 38–10 CBS
67,074

Season summary

Week 1

1 234Total
Dolphins 0 3010 13
Bengals 0 0133 16
  • Date: September 19
  • Location: Paul Brown Stadium
  • Game start: 8:30 p.m. EST
  • Game attendance: 65,705
  • Referee: Walt Anderson

[5]

Standings

AFC North
W L T PCT DIV CONF PF PA STK
(1) Pittsburgh Steelers 15 1 0 .938 5–1 11–1 372 251 W14
Baltimore Ravens 9 7 0 .563 3–3 6–6 317 268 W1
Cincinnati Bengals 8 8 0 .500 2–4 4–8 374 372 W2
Cleveland Browns 4 12 0 .250 2–4 3–9 276 390 W1

Team leaders

Passing

PlayerAttCompYdsTDINTRating
Carson Palmer4322632897181877.3

Rushing

PlayerAttYdsYPCLongTD
Rudi Johnson36114544.05212

Receiving

PlayerRecYdsAvgLongTD
Chad Johnson95127413.4539

Defensive

PlayerTacklesSacksINTsFFFR
Landon Johnson1332.0011
Justin Smith978.0022
Tory James740.0821

Kicking and punting

PlayerFGAFGMFG%XPAXPMXP%Points
Shayne Graham312787.1%4141100.0%122
PlayerPuntsYardsLongBlkdAvg.
Kyle Larson83349966142.2

Special teams

PlayerKRKRYardsKRAvgKRLongKRTDPRPRYardsPRAvgPRLongPRTD
Cliff Russell3987222.4400000.000
Keiwan Ratliff000.0001720712.2490

Awards and records

Pro Bowl Selections

All-Pro Award

Milestones

NFL Records

  • Highest scoring regular season game in NFL history (58-48 win over the Cleveland Browns on November 28th, 2004)

References

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