A barn burner in Cincinnati
CINCINNATI — Kelly Holcomb threw for 400 yards and five touchdowns — and lost.
Strange? Not as strange as those other numbers glowing on the scoreboard as Holcomb trudged off the field with his head down and more misery ahead.
Cincinnati 58, Cleveland 48.
The intrastate rivals played the wildest game in their history Sunday, one that defied logic and wound up as the second-highest scoring game in NFL history.
“You just can’t explain the second half, and there’s no need to try to,” Bengals linebacker Brian Simmons said. “It was a great game for the fans, I guess.”
It started as a referendum on the two head coaches, and quickly turned into a rewrite of the record books. The points came so fast that it seemed a recount might be needed to determine who won Ohio’s bragging rights.
“It was crazy,” said the Bengals’ Rudi Johnson, who ran for 202 yards and two touchdowns. “Just crazy.”
The 106 combined points were the second most in an NFL game, trailing only the Redskins’ 72-41 victory over the Giants on Nov. 27, 1966. Until Sunday, the most points in a game since the NFL-AFL merger in 1970 was 99 — Seattle beat Kansas City 51-48 in overtime on Nov. 27, 1983.
In the end, the Browns (3-8) had the ball and a chance to send this one to overtime, as well. Deltha O’Neal’s interception and 31-yard return for a touchdown finally decided it with 1:43 left.
“We kept putting them away, and they kept coming back,” said Cincinnati’s Carson Palmer, who threw a career-high four touchdown passes. “We kept expecting them to slacken up, but they never did.”
No one expected anything like it.
The Browns’ defense has been the only dependable thing during their losing streak, now up to five. The Bengals (4-5) have been watching their young defense grow up fast, allowing only two touchdowns in the three previous games.
On Sunday, it looked like they were playing two-hand touch. Two previously struggling offenses combined for 49 first downs and 966 yards, gaudy numbers set up by innumerable missed tackles and broken coverages.
The first five possessions of the second half resulted in touchdowns, many of them as easy as they get because of defensive breakdowns.
“It is what it is,” Browns defensive back Robert Griffith said glumly. “We gave up too many big plays — deep balls, long runs. It’s just frustrating. When it rains it pours, and right now we’ve got to turn off the sprinkler.”
Holcomb, who took the Browns to the playoffs under coach Butch Davis in 2002, nearly got him a desperately needed victory. Holcomb threw four touchdown passes in the second half, including a 1-yard toss to Steve Heiden that put Cleveland up 48-44 with 10:22 to play.
Holcomb, who has thrown for 400 yards twice in his career and lost both games, knew it wouldn’t be enough.
“The way the game was going, I felt like we needed to score two more times,” Holcomb said.