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Bengals Free Agency: Control Yourself

NFL free-agency turns fans into small children at a toy store. They walk around the imaginary aisles and drool over the big-named players that they recognize from television. Eventually, they want everything in the store and they have to pee.

Teams, on the other hand, are like the parents and are faced with a multitude of considerations when shopping for their team. Their impulse buying must be checked with a sense of shrewdness and cold common sense.

Not only do the basics like the roster and cap space come into play, but so do larger pictures like market-size, team philosophy and even attractive living situations. Unlike rookies, most free-agents come to a new team as well-established adults who often have family responsibilities and other more grown-up things to think about. After a team processes through all of these factors, their list of remaining candidates is small and often modest. Sometimes fans get angry with little to no activity and feel their team isn't trying to get better, but in the long run, this kind of practice is a more sturdy one than frivolous spending.

Star-divide

Today's free-agency is used more as a stop-gap than as a power move. There is discussion that this year's free-agent class could be fraught with cap casualties and that those bigger names fans enjoy so much will be floating around for the taking. But of all the free-agents from a year ago, only two or three players come to mind that seemed worth the cost.

One of those was Johnathan Joseph. The Bengals tried to keep him, but not well enough and the effects of his departure showed in both Cincinnati and Houston. Nate Clements was signed as the stop-gap and now, in 2012, the Bengals look to upgrade that position again. Replacing Joseph's talent level could take years to find, but such is life in the business-side of football.

Business also took away the team's secondary coach, Kevin Coyle, who became Miami's new defensive coordinator. Mark Carrier, a onetime no-nonsense safety for the Bears, takes over an area that has received a lot of scrutiny in the past few months. Many fans and analysts point to the defensive backfield as the first place to upgrade and Carrier comes into a somewhat pressurized situation for a position coach.

It's already been reported that former-Raider Stanford Routt is scheduled to visit Paul Brown Stadium, but that is exactly the type of filler the Bengals should avoid. Routt looked tired at the end of games last year and was a big part of that record-setting defense for penalties committed. He would not be an upgrade to Nate Clements and is simply "just another guy".

One intriguing corner who might be available, however, is Terence Newman of the Cowboys. If he is cut thanks to his big cap-number as some have speculated, he can fit into a Mike Zimmer system after having done so from 2003-06. After nine seasons, he isn't the blazer he used to be but his talents are better than those of Clements or Routt, and if he becomes available, Zim may ask for him.

For all the dangers and risks of plugging in free-agents on an especially young team like the Bengals, one position has historically been kind to the game when joining a new team, and that is the running back. Even last year Darren Sprowles and, ironically the guy he replaced, Reggie Bush, had tremendous impacts on their team's offensive production last year.

Like all backs with those kinds of numbers, those two fit their new scheme almost perfectly to gain that much production, but even a player like the aged Ricky Williams had a quality season being a normal second back for the Ravens. This year, a guy like the unrelated Micheal Bush could do the same with a new team. When Darren McFadden went down last year, Bush filled in superbly and showed not only a bruising straight-ahead style, but also shiftiness on screens and delays. Couple him with a sports-car back like Bernard Scott, or dare I say Trent Richardson, and suddenly the Cincinnati running game might have some teeth again.

Let's face it, Cedric Benson has become predictably average the past two seasons. His side-stepping nonsense will never be reliable enough to convert short-yardage pick-ups and his me-first attitude makes him that much less attractive. Yes, he stays healthy and doesn't wear down but his running style is not conducive to the Jay Gruden scheme. The mistake of keeping the wrong guy can sometimes be as costly as a bad signing and Benson could help the team most by leaving it.

I don't mind some filler signings because depth is so important. Second-tier free agents like Thomas Howard, Manny Lawson and Donald Lee saved the team at times when the ranks became thin with injury. I would like to keep Reggie Nelson and Jonathan Fanene, and some interior offensive line depth couldn't hurt either, but the heavy-hitters looking for the jackpot are not how small-market teams succeed for the long haul. This organization reacted in the 2011 offseason by not investing into marquee names like they had the previous years with Terrell Owens and Antonio Bryant. They should stick to that thinking and not just spend cap-room money because it's there. Landing a new every-down back, and improving depth in the weaker areas before the draft, will really open up possibilities with those two first-round picks, but there is no need to get carried away.

Unlike the NFC East who load up on known expensive veterans, the two most important players on each side of the ball for the Bengals were drafted in the last two years. Today's young players are more ready than ever to step onto a professional field and make an immediate difference. These are the types of players the Bengals must dump most of their resources into; that is the winning formula for a team like Cincinnati.



Mojokong—beneath the internet.

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Comments

Manny Lawson graded out as the Bengals best Linebacker

a position on this team that seems otherwise snakebitten since Reggie Williams retired…

could still be other solid fa options for olb

Erin Henderson might not get the franchise tag in minny. if the vikes fail to franchise the younger henderson, he could make a solid free agent signing for any team needing a olb to build a defense around.

I agree to a certain extent

but if there’s an elite talent out there you need to go get it. Especially if it’s…Mike Wallace? Eh? Eh? ;)

This year and next year are completely different because

There is a cap floor. Mike brown has no choice, the money has to go somewhere. Yes, of course, sign your own best guys but eventually you’re going to have to make moves you wouldn’t have made 10 years ago. Will Cincy have to offer more than another team to entice them, who knows but it has to be done at some point. Of course, it’s easy to say be safe, but it’s also hard to predict who might work better under a new coaching staff and system

Cap floor is applied next year I thought

Cap floor isn't enforced until 2013.

In saying that, he’s going to have to sign some guys regardless, because there’s no way he’d meet the floor next season if he doesn’t.

My point exactly

Because we have glaring needs now and there are players that would be perfect out there now. Waiting to fill 40 to 60 mil next year might cause problems.

these are good points.

You gotta fill the roster with the best players you can get and the money has to be spent anyway so it does make sense to load up this season, AND another good point about old players in new systems (i.e. Carlos Rogers), but ultimately I think vets are easier to get upset with when they don’t make a play. There’s a certain antagonism I feel toward veteran free agents. I don’t know, gotta think about that one.

Nice job.

Disagree

I think Routt is an upgrade from Clements and Newman!!

I agree

To say Routt would be a filler and Newman wouldnt be is insane. Newman is older and has been hurt a lot the past 3 years. Yes Routt had a rough year but if he could play closer to how he did in 2010 he would be a way better pick up than Newman.

I completely agree with both of you...

I would take Stanford Routt over Terrence Newman anyday. The success of Rob Ryan’s defense stands on the shoulders of the defensive backfield. Like Rex, he likes to bring pressure and leave his corners on islands. Well, we saw how that worked for them last season. That’s why I don’t think Dre Kirkpatrick gets passed them in the draft.

Stanford Routt, on the other hand, played in a man scheme and actually had success doing it. In Bresnahan’s scheme, which is a Cover 2 scheme more than man, he was left covering more space than he was used too. No excuse for the penalties, but I think Routt would fit Zim’s scheme way better and would be way more comfortable.

For the right money Routt makes sense

Seems to always be the case, but in terms of establishing quality depth at the position Routt would be a huge pick up. Newman is of no interest to me. Guy is 33? Not exactly sure what you see in him besides the fact he has experience with Zim. Hall, Clements, Routt, re-sign Jennings, and grab best available in the draft sounds good to me. I’d even consider re-signing Jones. I doubt there is anyone out there with much interest in him, so he’d likely not cost much. And he’d be solid in the return game.

Would love it if Carr hit the open market. I’d have no problem spending money on him, but that is highly unlikely.

I'm with yoy and you had me

UNTIL you included Jennings:) UHG…… Please NO!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

+1

They could definitely overhaul the CB with letting Jennings and Jones walk. We’re solid up front and somewhat at LB. I say bring in as many DB’s as possible and let them fight it out. Nothing wrong with depth and competition.

+2 Kelly Jennings

he did his job for the year gave us 11 on the field. Any doubts ask a Seahawks fan.

I like this article Mojokong!

…Well written! I Manny Lawson and I hope the Bengals resign him and then pair him up with better quality lb’s. then we have.

With the cap space as large as it is,

Quality has to be where they spend the bulk of it. Yet with bengals.com saying no big signings this season, it looks like the cap room will be spacious at the end of 2012. Even then nothing in the new CBA says the Bengals must spend 89 precent to the cap. They have a 4 year average of that percentage to meet From 2013 thru 2016. In any event guys like Routt are too old and too burned out to make a tiny dent in our cap space. They have to go for guys like Carl Nicks to start lowering the cap gap.

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