By Loran Smith
CINCINNATI, Ohio - Paul Brown Stadium, the home of the Cincinnati Bengals, sits stately by the Ohio River, where six former Georgia football players are making a contribution to the central objective of a team that last sniffed a championship in 1988.
The
Bengals are the brainchild of the legendary Paul Brown, whose genius went
beyond coaching. The Bengals were
originated by Brown in 1966 but have been a small market club without big-salaried
players, which has led them to lowly finishes throughout their recent history. At Cleveland, Brown and the upstart
All-America Football Conference rivaled the National Football League in the
forties. Brown had won four AAFC
titles when the Browns merged with the NFL in 1950. Brown, the classic innovator, proved that he could compete in
any league. The Browns won the NFL
title in 1950-54-55 after which their coach was let go by principal owner Art
Modell. Brown went looking for a
franchise and settled on Cincinnati as the place he would like to start a
team. The NFL looked with favor on
Brown and Cincinnati as a place to locate an NFL franchise.
In
the early seventies, Cincinnati was a perennial playoff team. Later the Bengals won AFC titles in
1981 and 1988, but lost in the Super Bowl both times to the San Francisco
49ers.
Brown
retired from coaching in 1975 and died in 1991, having turned the team over to
his son, Mike, who has had difficulty fielding a contending team. That began to change when he hired
Marvin Lewis to coach the team.
These Bengals have a new mission, which they refer to as "DNO," which
means "Destination New Orleans," site of the next Super Bowl.
"We certainly believe we can get there," Clint Boling, starting
offensive guard who was a starter and a letterman for the Bulldogs in 2010. "We have to believe in ourselves and we
do," he said at Paul Brown Stadium following a recent practice.
In
addition to Boling, the Bengal roster includes former Georgia lettermen Dennis
Roland (2002-05), Robert Geathers (2001-03), Orson Charles (2009-11), Geno
Atkins, (2006-2009) and A.J. Green (2008-10). Green, the outstanding rookie of a year ago, is one of the
most popular athletes in Cincinnati.
"We
saw what he did at Georgia," Boling said of his former Bulldog teammate, "and
we told people when the Bengals signed him that they would be seeing a great
NFL receiver. Some people thought
we didn't know what we were talking about, but A.J. showed them what he could
do from that first day in training camp.
Everybody is a big fan of his now."
Roland,
who started his NFL career with the Cowboys and then spent two years with the
Tampa Bay Bucs, came to Cincinnati in 2008 as a tackle but has often lined up
at tight end.
"If David Pollack hadn't gotten hurt, we might have seven Bulldogs on
our roster," Roland laughed. Roland and Geathers are the old timers of the Bulldog
sixsome.
Following
is a summary of the season for the six players through week 10. With a 4-5
record and having lost four games by 10 points or fewer, the Bengal-Dawgs still
believe they have a shot at getting to the playoffs. They remember what took place last year with the New York
Giants. The Giants were 9-7 in the
regular season and won the Super Bowl.
Geno
Atkins, DT: Started all nine games
and leads the league in sacks by an interior defensive lineman with seven and
that is tied for third overall among all players; Also tallied 28 tackles.
Clint
Boling, OG: Started all nine games at guard this season.
Orson
Charles, TE: A backup at tight
end, he has seen action in all nine games this season with two starts and has five
catches for 70 yards.
Robert
Geathers, DE: Starter at LDE in all nine games with 19 tackles and 3 sacks.
Dennis
Roland, T/G: Played in all nine games
with two starts along the offensive line at tackle, guard and tight end.
A.J. Green: Started all nine games and ranks among NFL leaders with 58 receptions for 820 yards and nine touchdowns. Also, Green was named the AFC offensive player of the month for September.
(Photo Credit: Andy Ware, Cincinnati Bengals. L-R: Orson Charles, A.J. Green, Clint Boling, Geno Atkins, Robert Geathers, Dennis Roland).








