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September 14, 2025 48 mins
The Bengals improve to 2-0 with a dramatic comeback win over Jacksonville. Dan Hoard recaps the victory with radio replays, locker room comments and postgame analysis from Dave Lapham. Then, in this week’s “Fun Facts” conversation, you’ll get to know offensive lineman Dalton Risner.

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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:03):
Hi, get everybody. I Dan Hord and thanks for downloading
the Bengals Booth podcast The Love Me two times. Addition,
as the Bengals improved at two to zero by beating
Jacksonville in the home opener, coming up radio replays, locker
room comments and postgame analysis from Dave Lapham. Then in
this week's fun Facts Conversation, you'll get to know the

(00:26):
highly entertaining Dalton Reisner. The Bengals Booth Podcast is brought
to you by pay Core, proud to be the Bengals
official hr software provider, by Alta Fiber future proof fiber
Internet designed to elevate your home, business and community to
a new level, and by Kettering Health the best care
for the best fans. Kettering Health is the official healthcare

(00:48):
provider of the Bengals. Now here's a quick reminder that
you can have the latest edition of this podcast delivered
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you get your pot. It's the greatest thing since the
on the Rhine Eatery. That's the location this year for
our weekly PEP Rally show every Friday from three to six.

(01:11):
The on the Rhine Eatery is the food Hall on
the second floor above the downtown Kroger at the intersection
of Walnut and Central Parkway, and it's a great place
for the show. There are five inexpensive restaurants there and
a bar so you can get something to eat and
drink while you enjoy the show. There's plenty of available seating,

(01:32):
and since it's so close to pay Corse Stadium, it
should be easy to line up player appearances. We've had
Demetrius Knight and Joseph Osai so far, and the players
are available for autographs at our shows. So if you
live in the Cincinnati area or come to town for
a game, come out and join us for the Bengals
pep Rally Show every Friday from three to six at

(01:56):
the on the Rhine Eatery. And while you're there, get
the dry rubbed wings. They're fantastic, as is a to
andoh start. Let's get to the radio replays from Sunday's
win over Jacksonville. After starting the season with a win
in Cleveland, the Bengals look for another in a jam

(02:18):
packed pay Corpse Stadium. The noise level will be deafening
today as the Bengals open the home schedule in orange
against the Jacksonville Jaguars, and it is time for the
pig skin to fly. Here in the jungle horn stop
straight back to throw pressure coming his past interceptment in

(02:39):
the end zone. Trey Hendrickson d great pressure and the
throw went right to Dax Hill for an end zone takeaway.
Burrow in the gun with p Ryme to his left,
Jamar Chase out to the left. Three receivers, including Higgins
out to the right. Burrow looking for Chase Slamm bye touchdown.

(02:59):
Jamar Chase cutting inside of Tyson Campbell from the left.
He's doing the gritty and the Bengals have scored. Third
down and six. Lawrence back to throw penalty flag down
pass some of the middle is intercepted. The Bengals have
the ball Shortan battled with the pick and he's tackled
at the thirty yard line. First and ten from the

(03:21):
thirteen yard line at Cincinnati looks for a tying touchdown.
Browning floats it toward the end zone and it is
caught for the touchdown. Mitch Tinsley with his first NFL
catch and it goes for a touchdown in the back
right corner of the end zone. Harris snaps it back

(03:42):
to Browning from the pocket. He flings it deep down
the sideline, chased with a catch still on his feet,
Nacon Higgins. He'll walk into the end zone for a
Bengals touchdown. The Bengals can't flinch. I'm fourth down and five.

Speaker 2 (03:57):
Hold your water.

Speaker 1 (04:00):
O'clock is at five. They snap it to Trevor Lawrence.
He's looking. He throws and it's dropped. Thomas dropped it
at the three. I can't believe that Jacksonville did not
kick a field goal to go up by six. Now
the Bengals could force overtime with a field goal or
win the game with a touchdown. Fourth and five, Browning

(04:22):
to throw. He floats it high and deep for Yo Sivosh.
There's a penalty flag down Travis Hunter in coverage, Andre
yupsee Vosh interfered with in field goal range. Third down,
end goal inches away, nineteen seconds on the clock. Jake

(04:44):
Browning will be under center. Chase brown lines up behind.
Now Sample goes behind the quarterback and shoves him. It's
a touchdown. Shake Browning, with eighteen seconds left in regulation,
has given the Bengals their first lead all day. Jacksonville

(05:05):
will flood the right side of the field with wide
receivers Lawrence waiting for the shotgun snap with eighteen seconds left.
The Bengals leap by four deep top Hendrickson nails him
and that is Coffin nails Bam, bam bam, and the
Cincinnati Bengals are two and zero.

Speaker 3 (05:28):
It wasn't easy, but they get the job done thanks
to Shake Browning fast start check as the Bengals beat
Jacksonville thirty one to twenty seven.

Speaker 1 (05:44):
As you know, Joe Burrow left the game of the
toe injury at the eight thirty six mark of the
second quarter and did not return. Ian Rappaport from the
NFL Network reports that it's turf toe. We'll get more
from the Bengals on Monday, but one thing's for certain.
The Bengals can win games while he's out. Jake Browning
went four and three as a starter when Joe hurt

(06:04):
his wrist two years ago, and rallied the Bengals from
four different deficits in the win over Jacksonville, overcoming three
interceptions to direct the fifteen play ninety two yard drive
to win the game. He talked to Dave Lapham after the.

Speaker 4 (06:20):
Victory unbelievable football game. I mean it's one of the
craziest games I've ever seen. Back and forth we go.
I mean, the Bengals take their first lead with eighteen
seconds to play, win the game by four points. I mean,
what were you thinking? What was going through your mind
when you were in the huddle quarterback in this football

(06:41):
team down the stretch? Really the whole time you were playing.
You were in the game a significant amount of time.
Office you were the guy. You had a hell of
a game.

Speaker 5 (06:49):
Yeah, I mean I've just tried to keep a level ahead.
Obviously have some players on want bag. Not my best game,
but you know, I think the defense did a really
good job of obviously forcing turnout is our fourth down
stop was huge. And for me, it's just, you know,
especially at the end of the game, it's like, don't
shell up, like stay aggressive, you know. I mean I
threw three picks, which is pretty bad, but it's like,

(07:12):
all right, we got a chance to go win it, Like,
don't shell up and get tentative.

Speaker 1 (07:15):
Now, like go win the game.

Speaker 5 (07:17):
And so, uh that's what that's what we did.

Speaker 1 (07:19):
We did.

Speaker 5 (07:20):
I mean, it was really fun to play again.

Speaker 4 (07:23):
That's gonna be so tough. I mean you're you're you're
getting ready to play the Jaguars. I mean, you were
in all the meetings, all the practices, are all that
sort of thing, the limited snaps with guys who were
in the huddle with trying to execute to win the
football game. How do you how do you put all
that aside? How do you focus? How do you get
your mind right to go out there and play at
the level that you played at?

Speaker 5 (07:44):
I mean I go into every every game as a backup,
like going through in my head, like what's this gonna
be like if I get thrown in? Because I mean,
that's that's the point having a backup is being ready
to go. And you get thrown in, and so, uh,
you know, like I know everybody else is really shocked,
but like that's really the only thing I've prepared for
all week is getting thrown in. And so obviously unfortunately

(08:05):
what happened to Joe and hope he's okay. But that's
that's the purpose of having a backup is be ready
to get thrown in. And so for me, it's just
stay calm, go through reads, and stay aggressive.

Speaker 4 (08:16):
You know I know that, Uh, the offensive line, they
love you and they love you and huddle, they love
what you're all about. Uh, they want to play for you.
They want to win football games with you at the
at the quarterback position. I'm sure to a man they'd
say we didn't have our best game. We didn't play
as well as we can play in front of Jake,
and we when we know we can play better and

(08:36):
we know we'll play better if Jake's quarterback next week,
which looks like very well could be the case, we're
gonna come out, we're gonna play better.

Speaker 5 (08:43):
Yeah, I mean, I didn't play great either, So I'm
not gonna sit here and say anything about the old line.
I'm pretty focused on, you know, trying to do my job.
And yeah, I think we're all tied up in here
for a while. A lot of the same guys have
been here for a while, and so you know, I
think anytime you win a game and NFL like Sundays
are are happy. But you know, I think tomorrow we

(09:04):
definitely got to come back and be critical of even
though there's this emotional high of making sure we make
the adjustments and improvements or any.

Speaker 4 (09:11):
Me included adjustments you talk about and then discipline, what
what does it take to be disciplined enough to say,
all right, well that didn't go well. That series didn't
unfold the way I really wanted it to. You know,
made a mistake here and made a mistake there. But
you put all that aside, and there's one drive to
win a football game. One drive.

Speaker 2 (09:31):
That's it.

Speaker 4 (09:32):
If you don't win it, you're done. You lose the
football game. What's it like to get your mind right
to execute that in that in that stage, on that stage.

Speaker 5 (09:40):
Yeah, I mean, I feel fortunate to throw three picks
and still have the chance at the end of the game.
And I think it's because our defense played really well
and had some big stops, some big turnovers, and uh yeah,
I mean I think, especially in two minutes, a lot
of your base stuff and so I got a lot
of reus in that. Like, you know, I didn't practice
any of the game band players this week, but I've

(10:01):
been in the offense for a while, and so when
you get on the ball and call the simple you know,
basic stuff, I feel pretty good about it. And try
to stack completions like we got so many weapons, just
get them the ball.

Speaker 4 (10:12):
You mentioned that you got so many weapons. Jamar Chase
t Higgins and a whole bunch of others. What's it
like to go into a football game looking in the huddle?
You got number one, Jamar Chase, number five T Higgins
looking back at you, and you know they're giving you
a smile and wink. You know they're ready to go,
They're ready to play. Well, what kind of a feeling,
a feeling of confidences that give a quarterback?

Speaker 5 (10:32):
I mean, I don't really know how the Scott the Felix.
I felt confident when I went in, and you know
how they feel about it all that, you'd have to
ask them. But for me, it's just distribute the ball.
Get it to T, Jamar, my Chase, Samaji was running.

Speaker 1 (10:46):
Through everybody today, Drey.

Speaker 5 (10:49):
I mean, there were so many people that we have
so many weapons. It's just like, don't sit back there
with the ball forever. Just get it to them and
let them do their thing. And you know, especially especially
tomorrow and teams special I know.

Speaker 4 (11:01):
And finally, this is the last question.

Speaker 2 (11:03):
Zach Taylor.

Speaker 4 (11:04):
I know that a couple of times, you know, you
guys talked about things and I could see, you know,
he gave you a couple of nuggets and you kind
of nodded your head and like your cool thumb up,
I got it. Kind of thing he knows as a
head coach, with you at quarterback, he does not have
to do anything differently, not a damn thing. He knows
that he can run the offense. Did you guys have
been running all week long? He knows you're gonna run

(11:26):
it at a very high level. He knows you're gonna
be professional. He knows you're not gonna make mistakes. He
knows you're gonna get all your teammates involved. What's what's
that feeling like when you know the head coach has
that much confidence in you.

Speaker 5 (11:37):
I mean, I think the main thing is, like I've
said a few times, got through three picks and I
never felt like he lost as cool. I mean, I've
never seen him lose the school ever. And so when
you get thrown into a game and kind of a
tough situation, you know, it's not surprising that we always,
you know, generally do all these games and final way
to stick around because our head coach never loses his school.

(11:59):
So I throw my third pick. It looks like we
just lost the game, and he's still just steady. And
so as a quarterback. It's like the nicest thing ever
where you know, not making my job any harder by
screaming at me on the sideline or anything. And so
probably deserved it, but it was nice that he didn't.
He's like, hey, next play, here we go. And you
just feel like that's steady calmness that allows you to
play like that, And so I think it goes to

(12:19):
the whole staff, but it really starts with Zach Jake.

Speaker 2 (12:22):
Unbelievable game.

Speaker 4 (12:24):
Go home, rest up, get some get some good grub,
get some rest. You deserve, man, well.

Speaker 2 (12:29):
Earn and well deserved.

Speaker 1 (12:30):
Appreciate it.

Speaker 5 (12:31):
Thank you.

Speaker 1 (12:32):
Jake completed twenty one out of thirty two passes, that's
sixty six percent for two hundred and forty one yards,
with two touchdown throws and the game winning touchdown run.
And Jamar Chase had an incredible game with fourteen catches
for one hundred and sixty five yards and a touchdown
a few feet away from Browning in the locker room.

(12:53):
The Bengals offensive linemen were more subdued. It's a terrible
feeling when your quarterback leaves with an injury, and that
feeling is ten times worse when that quarterback. Is Joe
Burrow finally coming off a normal training cap. Here's my
conversation with team captain Ted Karris, Ted, that's a heck
of a win. What can you say about Jake Browning

(13:15):
and the resiliency that he showed today.

Speaker 6 (13:17):
I mean, anytime he comes in the game obviously is
not something we want, but when he comes in, he
wins ball games for us.

Speaker 2 (13:25):
So I'm no fear, no panic, and got it done.
That's that's my guy.

Speaker 1 (13:30):
Give us inside the huddle, feel you take over it
your own. Eight three forty two to go, needing a
field goal. What's the talk, what's the mood? How did
you guys attack that final drive?

Speaker 6 (13:43):
You know, I told everyone at halftime they were really
they were going off our calls, so there was no
more calls being called.

Speaker 2 (13:51):
So everyone just know what to do.

Speaker 6 (13:54):
Everyone really responded, and I just had a feeling we're
gonna win the game.

Speaker 2 (13:57):
I tried to feel, you know, whatever that energy he
was and we went and got it done on a
QB SNEA. So very proud of the guys today.

Speaker 1 (14:05):
There are a lot of quarterbacks that come off the
bench for somebody like Joe Burrow and lead ninety two
yard drives in the final four minutes. Do you feel
like you have the best backup quarterback in the NFL.

Speaker 2 (14:17):
I think that's pretty obvious, you know.

Speaker 6 (14:19):
I think he's obviously a starter in the league, and
we're blessed to have good depth there.

Speaker 2 (14:25):
Really sucks that we have to test it. So hope
Joe's okay. We'll see him tomorrow.

Speaker 1 (14:30):
Is the joy muted by the fact that he had
to exit the second quarter.

Speaker 2 (14:34):
Absolutely, it's the best player in the world.

Speaker 1 (14:37):
You're two and oh. Everybody talked about a fast start.
Neither game was easy, but the bottom line is you're
the only team in the AFC North off to a
two and oh start. What's the satisfaction level there?

Speaker 6 (14:49):
You know, I just want to go three to zero
against a good Minnesota team that we got to go
up there, so.

Speaker 2 (14:55):
Gotta go get it done. So we're gonna go watch
this film. First half was a nightmare, and h luckily
we all responded. No one, you know, no one flinched,
So you know, we'll get back tomorrow and watch this
and figure out what's next.

Speaker 1 (15:09):
Congrats on the win.

Speaker 2 (15:10):
Thank you.

Speaker 1 (15:12):
Now let's hear from head coach Zach Taylor, who spent
four minutes with lap after the game.

Speaker 4 (15:19):
It was a crazy game, back and forth it went.
You took your first lead with eighteen seconds to play.
That's that's mind boggling. I've never been in a situation
like that as a player, high school, college, or NFL
where trailed the whole game and just stayed after it.
Showed the guts and determination to stay after a discipline
and then take the lead and win the game with

(15:39):
eighteen seconds to play. What does that mean to you
as a head coach?

Speaker 5 (15:42):
Well, just a halftime.

Speaker 7 (15:43):
We're sitting there down seventeen to ten, and I just
told the guys, this is a great opportunity for us
to be in right now, and we'll find out what
this team has made of early in the year. I'd
rather find out earlier than late. And so all they
did was respond and find the way to get us
a win late and really proud of these guys.

Speaker 4 (16:00):
So different players obviously stepped up for you on different
levels areas of the football team, offense, defense, and special teams.
Give us your take as you reflect back on the
football game on guys that had special performances for you.

Speaker 7 (16:14):
Too many to truthfully name Jamar obviously stands out. We're
gonna find as many ways to get Jamar chase the
ball as possible because it always pays off for us.
Mitch Tinsley with his first career catch, first career touchdown
on a run play that Jacob I heard if he
had the confidence, Jake's confidence and given Andrea one on
one up fourth down on the last drive to draw
a DPI, changing the route to go to him, the

(16:36):
lineman stepping up and protecting in the second half and
giving Jake an opportunity there in the second half to
help us go win the game with the clean pocket defensively,
just Dax Hill and Jordan Battle creating two turnovers for
us in huge situations, the whole defense rising up after
a sudden change that was going to end the game
down there in the ten yard line and getting a
stop on fourth down that allowed us to go score

(16:56):
touchdown and win the game, not tye go win the game.
And so really proud all and their kickoff return team,
and we're getting a great yardage on the kickoff return
with all those guys out there. So just overall really
pleased with the way the coaches and the players finish
the game.

Speaker 4 (17:10):
Were you surprised that the Jaguars went forward on fourth down?

Speaker 7 (17:14):
I think Liam, you know, he's got a new staff
and he's setting a tone for his team that we're
gonna be aggresive and go win the game. And sometimes
that's I've lived that life. Sometimes at backfires on you,
and that's just that's part of coaching. And again, if
they convert there, it's a ten point game, the game's
over and it's a great decision. And when they don't,
he'll he'll catch his heat for it. But Liam, Liam's
a great coach. I mean, two games in, he's got

(17:35):
the team playing the way. He's already got a plan.
So again, that's the team that's gonna have a great
year coming out of the AFC South. They got a
chance to win that division just after playing them one time.
They got great coaches and players, got a lot of
respect for that group. And so again it's just proud
of our guys were the ones that rose up and
made a play and gave the offense the ball.

Speaker 3 (17:50):
Bet.

Speaker 4 (17:51):
I know you're not a doctor, and I know you
don't talk about injuries with Joe Burrow, pretty important guy.
I mean he's a big player with the football team.
There's saying as to toe injury you is there anything
else you can further information?

Speaker 1 (18:04):
No, I really don't.

Speaker 7 (18:04):
You know, We'll just we'll figure out more information later.

Speaker 4 (18:07):
And what about the upcoming opponent? You can go three
and oh in the National Football League. H that's not
easily done. That takes takes a lot, takes a lot
of resolve, takes a lot of discipline, a lot of desire, execution,
I mean all kinds of things. What will it take
for your football team to go three and oh.

Speaker 7 (18:25):
True resilience. This is going to be maybe the lottest
environment we'll ever plan, you know, going on the road
to Minnesota. I don't know what the record. I don't
know if they've already played it they or not, but
they played at night, so we'll see. We know we're
gonna get their best. They got a great coaching staff,
really good players. They make life really difficult for you
with their defense. We'll put together a great plan and
go attack them and work come being three and oh.

Speaker 4 (18:45):
Heck of a football game two and oh start. You
can't ask for anything better. Did you feel like during
the course of training camp this might be a special group.

Speaker 7 (18:54):
I know we have a lot of special players, and
it's how are they going to come together that remains
to be seen. Training camp is easy in the sense
that there's not a lot of real adversity. Now we
face real adversity the last two weeks, and then I've
seen how this team response to that, and so I'm
happy to pack them up and take them on the
road next week to Minnesota.

Speaker 1 (19:11):
Two weeks into the season, the Bengals are alone on
top of the AFC North with their two to zero record.
The Ravens are one and one after a forty one
to seventeen win over Cleveland, The Steelers are one and
one after losing by fourteen at home to the Seahawks,
and the Browns are zero to two. The Bengals Booth
podcast is brought to you by pay Corps, proud to

(19:32):
be the Bengals official HR software provider, by Alta Fiber
future Proof Fiber Internet designed to elevate your home, business,
and community to a new level, and by Kettering Health
the best care for the best fans. Kettering Health is
the official healthcare provider of the Bengals. Now time for
the radio guys recap lap I feel like I can

(19:54):
safely say the Bengals not only have arguably the best
quarterback in the NFL, but they arguably have the best
backup quarterback in the NFL. It wasn't perfect, Jake Browning
threw three picks, but when you can take a team
on a fifteen play ninety two yard drive in the
final three minutes and forty two seconds to win a game,
there aren't many guys that can do that.

Speaker 4 (20:16):
I agree. I mean that takes guts, determination, savvy confidence.
He's got a tremendous amount of confidence. I mean, you
have to believe in yourself, and Jake brown believes in himself.
There's no doubt. If you don't believe in yourself, it
doesn't matter if everybody else does. You got to be
the one to step up first and say, you know,

(20:37):
I know I can get this done. I've done it before,
I can do it again. And the thing that impressed
me the most as a form alignment, if you're seeing
him come into the huddle the way he does, total poise,
extremely calm, very matter of fact. Guys, were gonna get
this done, and here's how we're gonna do it. I mean,
you respond to a guy like that, and they do.

(20:58):
They respond to Jake brown They like him, They like
him as a person, they love him as a as
a quarterback. They love the way he leads the football team.
He's a guy that knows his role, doesn't try to
overstep uh anything or anybody. He's uh He's a great teammate,
greatest spree to core guy. He's he's all about, you know,

(21:23):
making sure that the team's upbeat, enthusiastic about the upcoming opponent.
And this might be his job for a few weeks.
I mean, Joe's got a too injury that those things
can be, you know, dangerous, they can be iffy, and
you don't know necessarily until you know, maybe a couple
of three days. I'm sure he's gotten an MRI I already.
I don't know what the damage has shown, if any,

(21:46):
but you know he's going to be off that thing
for a while. There's no doubt that's the The only
way it's going to get better is to is to
give it rest and relaxation. So it's gonna be Jake
Browning's football team. Jake's the guy for a while. And
that's the life of a backup quarterback.

Speaker 2 (22:00):
Ever.

Speaker 4 (22:00):
Know, when when the call is going to come. How
long the call will be? Uh, it might, it might
be for for a lot longer than you think.

Speaker 2 (22:09):
Uh.

Speaker 4 (22:10):
He's the kind of guy though, that it's got He's
got it in him to have a great season and
to lead the Bengals to a you know, a really
good season in the playoffs and maybe ultimately the super Bowl.

Speaker 8 (22:20):
Who knows.

Speaker 1 (22:21):
Hopefully Joe's not out for all that long. There's no
official word on that yet, but the last time that
Jake Browning played an extended period of time was two
years ago. Started seven games, won four. One of those
wins was a tremendous win over Jacksonville, so he's done
that twice. The next game is against Minnesota, which was
another tremendous performance by Jake in a memorable game at

(22:41):
pay Corp Stadium, where afterward he screamed at the cameras
to remind the Vikings that they let him go. So
he'll be facing the team that he started his NFL
career with, assuming that Joe is not back next week.

Speaker 4 (22:53):
And that means something to a guy. You want to
go out and perform well against the team that believed
in you enough to bring you to their organization from
the collegiate level. And uh, believe me, you want to
beat them. You want to you want to thump them
if you possibly can. And uh, Jake Browning is gonna
want to thump the Minnesota Vikings. You can be you

(23:15):
can rest sured about that.

Speaker 2 (23:17):
Uh.

Speaker 4 (23:17):
He's he's competitive. That's that's the thing that I admire
about about him the most. I mean, you know, he's
not gonna feel like he's second fiddle to anybody. And
he knows he's got weapons. He knows he's got teammates
that can perform at an unbelievably high level. He knows
if he gives them the opportunity, they're going to step
up and perform for him. They're gonna win football games

(23:39):
for him. So, uh, he knows his role and and
he's he's good at it.

Speaker 2 (23:44):
He really is.

Speaker 1 (23:45):
Jamar Chase is good at his role. Fourteen catches one
off his career high, which is the Bengals single game
record one hundred and sixty five yards. Jamar has done
better than that before, but it's still incredible, and his
first touchdown of the season. This was one of those
games where it felt like even though Jacksonville knew it
was coming and designed its defense to try and stop

(24:08):
it from happening. Jamar Chase just said, you know what,
I'm better than you guys. I'm going to catch the ball,
drag three guys, getting extra five to ten yards, and
just keep doing it all day.

Speaker 4 (24:17):
Yeah. And that's the thing with Jamar Chase. He's such
an unbelievable physical talent. He's better than everybody. He's physically
better than everybody, everybody at his position group, everybody goes
against in the defensive back position group. And you know,
to me, it didn't look like you know, when Joe
was in there, he didn't obviously, and then when Jake
went in there, Jake wasn't trying to force feed the

(24:39):
ball to Jamar Chase. It just was part of the
natural flow of the offense. And honestly, until I remember
a couple of times you updated the stats that Jamar
was accumulating during the course of the game, and I'm like, jeez,
that's a little bit more like, you know, I'm trying
to remember all those catches and you know, and you
can remember some, obviously, they're all great. And he plays

(25:03):
he plays a beautiful game of football, you know, every
catch he makes, it seems to be memorable. You know,
he always he always has something to do. He plays
with such a flare, such a panache. You know, it's like, uh,
he's he's a superstar. That's that's the bottom line. He
he he dots every eye, crosses every t that you
have to have to be a successful wide receiver from

(25:24):
the National Football League.

Speaker 1 (25:26):
Last year, the Bengals had some breaks that didn't go
their way. Missed field goal in overtime against Baltimore, fourth
and sixteen penalty against Kansas City in Week two. Well,
we're two weeks into this season and some key breaks
have gone their way. The Browns kicker choked in Week one. Today,
fourth and five, less than two minutes to go, and
the second pick in the draft, Travis Hunter commits a

(25:48):
pass interference penalty on Andre Josibash to keep the Bengals alive.

Speaker 4 (25:52):
The Bengals today capitalized on every mistake that was made
by the Joshuville Jaguars, and unfortunately, you know, to start
the seasons in prior years, that's what the opponent was
doing to the Cincinnati Bengals. The Bengals and key moments
would make huge mistakes, monumental mistakes, you know, and not

(26:12):
be able to recover. Well, that's ultimately what Jacksonville did.
They made enough mistakes where they kept the Bengals in
the football game. I mean, they never trailed by more
than seven points. And you know that's kind of crazy
when you look at some of the numbers in the
first half, second half, you know, it was a little
bit different. But I just thought that for them to

(26:33):
hang in there the way they did, to show the
mental toughness that they did, the intestinal fortitude and everything
that goes along with it, I thought, you know, mentally
and physically, I think this football team has what it takes.
I think this could be a special year. You know,
I was part of a team in eighty one that
went to the Super Bowl, and was a broadcaster in
a team in eighty eight that went to the Super

(26:54):
Bowl and then Super Bowl fifty four here recently it's
a broadcast. So this team has what it takes. This
team has the intangibles, has the has the the things
that are needed, uh to you know, keep winning games,
keep winning at a high level, doing what's necessary to
get out of a out of a game with the
victory that he had no right doing. This is the

(27:15):
first example of it. I think there are going to
be a few more examples of it during the course
of this season.

Speaker 1 (27:20):
Doctor Ted Karris after the game on the postgame show,
he was not joyous. When you're an offensive lineman and
you are blocking for one of the best quarterbacks in
the world, are you gutted when he exits the game?
Regardless of the outcome.

Speaker 4 (27:33):
You are an offensive lineman's main job is to protect
the quarterback, and uh, you know, number nine is the
best quarterback in my mind in the National Football League,
and his lineman believed that. Obviously they think he's the best,
uh and and they want to protect him at all costs,
and when it doesn't happen, they're crushed, devastated, destroyed.

Speaker 1 (27:56):
You know.

Speaker 4 (27:56):
It's an emotional it's emotional downer. I mean, it really is.
There's no other way to put it. And uh, you
know that that's probably that does not allow them to
celebrate victory because it costs them. That victory, costs them
their star quarterback and it's their fault and they're not

(28:18):
happy about it.

Speaker 1 (28:20):
Based on what Ted was saying, it sounded like Jacksonville's
front had to read on the Bengals calls in the
first half, and they were getting good jumps as a result.
It sounded like the Bengals mixed that up in the
second half. But does that happen. Are there games where
for whatever reason, the other team kind of has a
feel for that and and consistently gets good jumps on you.

Speaker 4 (28:40):
Yeah, it's happened. I mean, I remember, you know, back
in the playing days, when when teams feel like from
film study, uh, and then sometimes you know, they can
pick up the audible, the sound, the audio of the
and they hear the snap count and can really you know,
get a beat on it. And there's so dam athletic,

(29:00):
so quick, and they're off in that ball before you know,
you can even get out of your stands. So I
think it was all of that, you know. I think
the fact that they were gifted athletically. They have a
good defensive football team. They've spent high draft picks on
their defensive front, on the defensive line, and it's paid
off for them. And I think they had a pretty

(29:22):
good handle on what the Bengals were doing. And then
the Bengals made some adjustments in terms of probably snap
count and how they aligned themselves formationally, personnel wise, configurations,
all of that to keep them on their heels a
little bit, because man, they were teeing off and you
just can't allow that to happen in the NFL.

Speaker 1 (29:43):
If Joe Burrow's out next week, we'll see if Jake
Browning can take the Bengals on the road and lead
them to a three and oh start.

Speaker 4 (29:49):
That would be magnificent. I think Jake has got what
it takes, man. I think he's all about guts, determination,
positive attitude.

Speaker 2 (29:59):
Players on to him. He's a leader.

Speaker 4 (30:02):
Oh put my money down on Jake Brownie.

Speaker 1 (30:06):
Up next a road game against the Minnesota Vikings. That's
a one o'clock kick on Sunday with Jim Nantz and
Tony Romo on the call for CBS. Now time for
this week's fun fact segment. In last week's season Openers,
starting right guard Lucas Patrick exited the game of a
calf injury early in the second quarter, and in came

(30:27):
the recently signed Dalton Reisner. He had only had two
padded practices since January, but Reisner played the rest of
the game and played well, allowing just one quarterback pressure.
On twenty four passing plays. His effort drew praise from
Captain Ted Karras.

Speaker 8 (30:48):
In the case of Dalton Reisner, I thought it was
one of the most stunning displays of football professionalism that
I've ever seen. Yeah, you know, I think he's been
in pads twice in eight months. And then you know,
puts puts the fifth overall pick, you know, and Handcuffs
really really had a solid game. You know, I think,
you know, Mason Graham's gonna be really good, but Dalton

(31:09):
came out and did we need to do so we
could rely on them, knew the communication had to handle
the silent count. I was really really happy, kind of
blown away by the amount of, like I said, professionalism
that he showed going out there helping us win a
football game.

Speaker 1 (31:23):
Now, let's mate the thirty year old offensive lineman in
his seventh NFL season. Time for some fun facts with
offensive lineman Dalton Reisner from Wiggins, Colorado, a small town
about an hour away from Denver. I've read that you
grew up on a farm. Was that the case? And
do you fit the stereotype of being country strong from

(31:45):
working on the farm as a kid.

Speaker 6 (31:46):
I'd say most definitely. You know, I always have to
say we didn't grow up on a farm. We grew
up on a ranch because we had fifty head of cattle, pigs, horses, dogs,
the whole get out, and we had one hundred acres
right and I was bull riding.

Speaker 2 (31:59):
I was a bull rider up. I barrel raced.

Speaker 6 (32:01):
I tried to rope calves at one point. And I
grew up working on farms. So you know farms when
it comes to wheat harvest and corn and.

Speaker 2 (32:11):
Millet and you name it out there, you know.

Speaker 6 (32:13):
I worked for a bunch of farmers I worked. I
worked at a dairy farm growing up as well. So
whether it was building barbarire fence, branding cattle, scoop and
poop at the dairy farm, or walk into wheat fields for.

Speaker 2 (32:26):
Rye, That's what I grew up doing.

Speaker 6 (32:28):
So any type of physical strength I have, I'm gonna
have to attest it to that.

Speaker 1 (32:32):
Just how small is Wiggins?

Speaker 6 (32:34):
Wiggins is about When I was going to school there,
it was about eight to nine hundred people in the
whole town.

Speaker 2 (32:39):
I want to say it's about fifteen.

Speaker 6 (32:41):
Hundred or more now I haven't looked it up, but
when I was going to school there, was one A football,
so it was the slow It was the smallest classification
of eleven man football. There were seventeen guys on my
football team. So I was on kickoff, kick return, punt return,
I was linebacker on defense. You played every single way,
so up until college, I was like, oh, I only
have to play one way.

Speaker 2 (32:58):
This is wild. So you had to be in very
good shape.

Speaker 6 (33:01):
Obviously the level of athleticism wasn't very good at the
one A level, but regardless, that's how small it was.

Speaker 2 (33:08):
There's no stoplights, one.

Speaker 6 (33:09):
Restaurant, count two if you count the chicken tenders at
the gas station, which I love. The chicken tenders at
the gas station, stubs, gas and oil shout out. Other
than that, there is a hardware store, a school, and
all the farmers and ranchers that live in the town.
That's about it, man, that's the size of Wiggins.

Speaker 1 (33:27):
Your dad was your coach in high school? Did he
treat you like everybody else? Or was he especially hard
on you?

Speaker 6 (33:33):
To make a point, Oh, he gave me the special treatment.
And by special treatment, I don't mean he gave me anything.

Speaker 2 (33:38):
Man. He was hard on me.

Speaker 6 (33:40):
This is back when coaches could grab you by your
face mask and get in your face.

Speaker 2 (33:44):
That's not really allowed nowadays.

Speaker 6 (33:46):
But my dad created the pee wee football program in
our small town. When we moved to Wiggins, there was
no pee wee football program, so he started a peew
football program. I'm one of five boys, so I was
the third boy in line, and we all went through
the football program. When the two older boys got to
junior high, he became the junior high coach. He coached
me through junior high and by the time I was

(34:07):
getting to eighth grade, he wanted to become the high
school football coach in Wiggins. You have to be on
the teaching staff to be a football coach. My dad
the guy he is, and this is why he is
a full time job, right, And he goes and petitions
and gets the whole town of eight hundred people. I
think he got six hundred signatures to take to the
school board to say that they wanted him to be

(34:29):
their head high school football coach. And he kind of
strong armed the school board and he became the head
football coach.

Speaker 2 (34:34):
Without happened to be at the school and yeah, coached
all of us five boys through high school, went to
a state championship had some success.

Speaker 1 (34:42):
The voters spoke the voters. When it came time to
pick a college, you chose Kansas State, about seven hours
away yk State.

Speaker 6 (34:50):
You know, Kansas State was one of those teams I
just felt like fit my mold. It was a blue
collar program. It was run by Bill Snyder at the time,
and I felt like the staff was more interested in
molding me into a young man and a follower of
Jesus and just a good human being, maybe as a
father and as a son before a football player. And

(35:10):
not everything glitters it glows. But I really enjoyed my
time at Kansas State. It was perfect for me. I
was a kid that needed time to grow, so I
red shirted, and you know, it was seven hours up
the road from where I lived in Wiggans, Colorado, and
it just kind of it kind of fit the mold
for a kid coming from Wiggins, Colorado.

Speaker 1 (35:26):
You had a great career at Kansas State, and then
after that a dream came true in twenty nineteen in
the NFL Draft when you were selected by your childhood team,
the Denver Broncos in the second round. Describe that draft experience.

Speaker 2 (35:37):
Oh was wild. I mean, I'm such a competitor.

Speaker 6 (35:39):
I remember I was so ticked off that night because
I felt like I should be a first round draft pick.
Looking back, I'm like, man, you should have been jumping
up and off the walls, which I was so excited.
John Elway called me when I was at Elway's in
downtown Denver and you know, was talking about getting a flight.
I said, brother, I'm already at Elways downtown. That's why
I'm celebrating. I just got to drive thirty minutes in
the morning to get the playbooks. So for me, I

(36:00):
grew up in a family that didn't have much. You know,
there was a time where we were getting Christmas presents
dropped off on our doorstep.

Speaker 2 (36:06):
This is way when we were.

Speaker 6 (36:07):
Young, young, young, And you know, I got to go
to maybe two or three Bronco games growing up, but
it was always what I wanted to do. I mean
I remember looking down at the Broncos just being like,
that would be sick if I could do that someday.

Speaker 2 (36:18):
And I was always kind of the kid that dreamed big.

Speaker 6 (36:20):
So for me, when I got drafted, to like actually
put on the helmet and be a part of the
program and do it for four years and run out
of the tunnel was absolutely surreal, and that opportunity in
two weeks to go back. It won't be my first time,
but it's gonna be another cool opportunity to be back there.

Speaker 1 (36:36):
How crazy was it to have John Elway as a boss? Oh?

Speaker 2 (36:38):
It was wild. I mean I grew up watching the guy.

Speaker 6 (36:40):
I mean that's that's the jersey that you see growing up, right,
Everyone's talking about Elway, and that's what Grandpa was talking about,
and that's who mom likes and all these different things.
And for John Elwie to be the guy that picked you,
it sure meant a lot. And I created a relationship
with him to where my time in Denver. You know,
I talked to him on the phone and we text,
and yeah, I had a lot of respect for I
have a lot of respect for him.

Speaker 1 (37:00):
I read a story where you said the following, I
hope scouts watch my tape and say, Reisner must have
been ticked off. Do you become a different person on
the field? Oh?

Speaker 2 (37:11):
I tried to man, I don't know when that quotes from.
That's hilarious.

Speaker 6 (37:14):
But I've always tried to play with a extra level
of grit or work hards to me, But yeah, you
can't be mister nice guy when you're in a football field.
You're trying to put food on the table and the
plate for your family, and you're trying to make a
career out of the job that you're doing. And being
in the league seven years you understand, and being on

(37:34):
the street two weeks ago you understand how hard this
job is and you understand that it waits for nobody
and I don't care who you are, So yeah, a
level of change when you cross those white lines is
needed for a guy like me.

Speaker 1 (37:48):
Offensive line is interesting in that sense because it's obviously
very physical, but there's also a tremendous x's and o's
chess match going on at that position. Which part of
it do you like more?

Speaker 6 (37:58):
The easier one for me is the chess match because
it's all between the ears, and that's something you can
prep for throughout the week, and the more you study it,
the more you dial in, the more you lock in.
I feel like the more that you can edge out
your opponent mentally, the physical side sometimes, in my opinion,
it's not a work hard standpoint.

Speaker 2 (38:16):
Sometimes you know.

Speaker 6 (38:18):
You got the kid from Wigans, Colorado going against the
five star recruit from Gosh knows where. So I think
the physical thing, the physical side of things can be
harder at times, but that's also one that with a
great respons great responsibility comes great reward because you get
to go against these great players and when you find
yourself blocking them up, it's a great feeling too.

Speaker 1 (38:37):
We're visiting with Dalton Reisner. After four years in Denver
in two years with Minnesota Vikings, you were a free
agent this past offseason and didn't sign until late August.
How did you stay ready?

Speaker 2 (38:48):
Man? Great questions.

Speaker 6 (38:52):
It's hard to talk about because, man, I am so
grateful for the way that I did approach things, and
so grateful for a wife that you know, supports me
each and every day, even when sometimes the dream seems
a little bit far fetched, because you know, there were
I'm waking up at six am every day and I'm
going out to my garage and I'm putting the garage
door up, and I'm doing an hour lift, and I'm

(39:13):
putting my cleats on. I'm walking through the neighborhood over
to the local like that. It was where the mail
boxes are in our neighborhood and there's an area between
the mailboxes and the pickleball slash basketball court and it's
about twenty yard patch of grass that gets mowed every
two weeks and sometimes the grass is up to your
past your ankles, and you know, I do fifteen to

(39:34):
twenty sprints every morning and then I run through inside zone,
tight zone, pass block right guard, left guard. It's about
a thirty to forty five minute deal and it's muggy
as hell.

Speaker 2 (39:42):
That's why I do it at six am in Florida.

Speaker 6 (39:44):
But regardless, I had this whole you know, order in
which I did things, and it was from like six
to ten in the morning, end with sauna, end with
cold tub.

Speaker 2 (39:51):
And it's cool to look.

Speaker 6 (39:53):
Back on because if I didn't do that every day,
no one was watching, no one cared, right, there were
times where who knows if I was going to get
picked up.

Speaker 2 (39:58):
Or you didn't know your future.

Speaker 6 (40:00):
So there were so many mornings where you question, why
am I doing this, you know, and is it really
gonna matter? I mean, we're in late August here, guys,
and went through a whole training camp, and you know,
if I didn't do that, there's no way in heck.

Speaker 2 (40:10):
I could have stepped in against the Browns. There's just
no way.

Speaker 6 (40:12):
And if I did didn't do it, I bet the
Bengals wouldn't have even trusted me too, because my workout
probably wuldn't have been good and I probably would never
have gotten signed, or I would have been here and
they knew I wouldn't.

Speaker 2 (40:22):
Have been ready and they would put someone else in.

Speaker 6 (40:24):
So just really grateful for a wife that supported me
through that, and for just the willpower to, you know,
do that when no one was looking.

Speaker 1 (40:32):
So nobody was looking in terms of NFL teams, but
what about neighbors and passers by? Did they see this
gigantic human being doing past blocking drills against nobody?

Speaker 6 (40:41):
Oh yeah, I remember, like a week before I came
out here, a guy walked by and he said, that
must be one hell of a fantasy football team you're
on and you know the human nature, and you said,
wants to bark back and say, I'm a six year
NFL vet. You know I could be on multiple teams.
I'm in contract negotiation, but get into it right, and
you just laugh.

Speaker 2 (41:00):
And every morning there's the grandma's walking their dogs.

Speaker 6 (41:03):
And they poop in the grass that you're working out
in and they just stare at you, and you know
they're going back and they're chattering about what's that big,
huge man doing in the grass, grunting and making all
that noise. But when you love something enough and you
care about it enough, you'll find a way.

Speaker 1 (41:19):
So after two padded practices with the Bengals, you suit
it up in the season opener, and two and a
half minutes into the second quarter, Lucas Patrick suffered a
calf injury, and you're in. You're gonna play the rest
of the game. Ted Carris called it a stunning display
of football professionalism. This was your ninetieth NFL game, including
the playoffs. Is it among the most memorable in light

(41:40):
of the circumstances.

Speaker 2 (41:41):
Oh, it's one of the most memorable. For me.

Speaker 6 (41:42):
Two years ago, I signed late with the Minnesota Vikings,
and I think two weeks later I started Monday night
football against the forty nine ers. That was a absolutely
surreal experience. So that's up there, number two, the first
start in Mile High Stadium, that's up there, and then
this one is top three.

Speaker 2 (41:59):
Those are all my top three.

Speaker 6 (42:01):
I mean to be able to be with a different team,
different organization, guys that you barely know and step in
in a way of like that is truly an unreal feeling.
I talked to you guys earlier in the week, but
what Ted said meant a whole lot to me, not
only because the player he is, but the man he is.
And I take it very seriously to step in here
and be a guy that guys can count on. So

(42:21):
I know that I'm getting more time underneath my belt,
more times working with the ones, So I got to
continue to elevate my game, which I will. But yeah,
it was an unbelievable experience. Awesome words that Ted said
something I'll never forget. A story I'll tell the kids
and the grandkids, and I'll probably stretch it.

Speaker 1 (42:37):
So two days after that, you spoke to kids at
a local elementary school. Tell us a little bit about
the Riisner Up Foundation and its mission.

Speaker 6 (42:46):
Yeah, you know, I kind of told you a little
bit about where I come from and the humble beginnings
and the roots of where I'm from. So when it
comes to giving back to other people and the type
of people we are off the field, that means more
to me, And I have no problem saying that means
more to me. You don't care if you call me
in five years and say I was one of the
best guards to ever come.

Speaker 2 (43:06):
Through as a Cincinnati bank. I don't care.

Speaker 6 (43:08):
It doesn't matter the awards, the trophies. I don't even
remember what awards I got in college, nor do you care.
If I ask you right now, tell me every award
I got in college, you wouldn't be able to do
it because it doesn't matter to you. But when you
go home and talk to your wife or your kids
and they ask you about Dalton Reisner, You're.

Speaker 2 (43:21):
Probably gonna tell them about maybe the heart that I have,
And I hope that that's a good thing. And that's
why I do those things in.

Speaker 6 (43:27):
The most genuine way. I mean, let's be honest. When
you go do that for kids, a lot of those
kids want to They want to know Joe Burrow and
how much money Joe Burrow makes. Those are the questions
you get, right, But there might be one kid that's like, Wow,
like that NFL football player, I would have done anything
for ANFL football player to show up to my school.

Speaker 2 (43:42):
I've done anything.

Speaker 6 (43:43):
So for me, it's like, Man, if there's one kid
that could have used this today, it matters for me.
And even if it didn't matter even if the kids
got nothing from it. And I give a whole speech,
I signed autographs. I did the whole deal for me
morally to say, hey, little Dalton, little kid that had
dream to be in the NFL. You know, just know
that when you made it like you're a good dude

(44:03):
and like you're still giving time to other people.

Speaker 1 (44:06):
That's awesome.

Speaker 2 (44:07):
Yeah, I appreciate.

Speaker 1 (44:07):
Here come a few wild card topics. Now to wrap
things up with Dalton Reisner. Is it true that you
got free pizza from memorizing Bible versus as a kid.

Speaker 6 (44:17):
That is very true, hundred percent Tostino's pizza. So there
were days where I'd get three or four Tostinos. Miss
Segura shout out Summit Baptist Church. Miss Segura, Wigans, Colorado.

Speaker 1 (44:27):
You said in an interview a few years ago that
you want to open a restaurant when you're playing days
or finished. Is that still the case and what type
of restaurant would it be?

Speaker 2 (44:34):
Great question.

Speaker 6 (44:35):
I love the research you did. You did a great job. No,
definitely not anymore. I think starting a family is really
important to me. Being a father is really important to me.
I would love to speak at churches, men's group. I've
already done sermons at Sunday churches, so I'd love to
do that men's groups, youth groups, you name it, as
well as pickleball. I'd love to do that competitively with

(44:56):
my wife. But three twenty doesn't go well with pickleball.

Speaker 1 (44:58):
So I have searched high and low for a picture
of you with no beard unsuccessfully. When was the last
time you were clean shaven.

Speaker 2 (45:08):
Since I grew the beard?

Speaker 6 (45:10):
I've never done a clean shaven you know, as an
offensive lineman.

Speaker 2 (45:12):
That scary stuff. Buddy.

Speaker 6 (45:13):
You know you look good, you know you're brave, You're
a fit dude, But when you weigh three and twenty pounds,
even though you're married, that's a risk you don't take.

Speaker 1 (45:21):
Was this college or high school when the beard?

Speaker 6 (45:23):
I think I started to finally grow it, like red
shirt freshman year in college, and all the pictures you
can see before that look pretty dang bad, so I'm
not going back to it.

Speaker 1 (45:31):
Roughly, how many tattoos do you have? Oo?

Speaker 6 (45:34):
I got about twenty Bible verses, so about maybe twenty
three twenty four tattoos. I got a family tree in
my right arm with you know, buddies that have died
or you know, family members that are still alive or
not alive, and then everything else is Bible versus some
stuff about my marriage. So yeah, probably it depends on
how much you want to break it up, you know
what I mean. I have two full arm sleeves and

(45:55):
I have a little bit on my legs, So.

Speaker 2 (45:57):
Regardless, it could be you could call it five big,
huge pieces, or you could call it a hundred.

Speaker 1 (46:02):
Are there more to come?

Speaker 2 (46:04):
I think I'm done. I want to do the neck,
and my wife really shut things down. She said, we're
not going to the next So I said, okay, all right.
You know, I was just gonna get something about Jesus. Man.

Speaker 1 (46:12):
I love Jesus so anywhere, but the neck. Final question
for Dalton Riisner, this one's a little bit deep. If
you could meet anybody in history, living or deceased.

Speaker 6 (46:23):
Jesus done deal, Jesus done deal. I know that's cliche, man,
but maybe not cliche, but maybe corny.

Speaker 2 (46:29):
But for me it's Jesus. I mean, dear Gosh, and
I am gonna be able to meet him, but I
don't want to. I don't it'd be cool not to
have to meet him, because then I know I'm dead.

Speaker 6 (46:36):
So it would be really cool if you're telling me
one person right now, just dead or living, that I
could have and I could chat with Are you kidding me?

Speaker 2 (46:43):
Bro? I would ask him so many questions and he
be sick of me, Like, how about that one prayer? Man?
Did you not listen? You don't want it to happen?
Or about the game this weekend? Who's gonna win? Jesus?
Am I gonna play?

Speaker 3 (46:55):
Well?

Speaker 2 (46:55):
Could you really just have me lock up this guy? Please?

Speaker 3 (46:58):
No?

Speaker 2 (46:58):
I'd ask him much more deeper questions in that. But
it'd be cool to meet Jesus.

Speaker 1 (47:01):
I think I'd like to witness that conversation.

Speaker 2 (47:03):
It'd be cool, man, It'd be a fun one. It'd
be a fun one.

Speaker 1 (47:06):
This has been a fun one too. Appreciate your time.

Speaker 2 (47:08):
Thank you so much, Ben, really appreciate you. God bless I.

Speaker 1 (47:11):
Think you'll agree that Dalton Reisner is an easy guy
to root for. That's going to do it for this
episode of the Bengals Booth Podcast, brought to you by
pay Core, Proud to be the Bengals official HR software
provider by Alta Fiber future proof fiber Internet designed to
elevate your home, business and community to a new level,
and by Kettering Health the best care for the best fans.

(47:34):
Kettering Health is the official healthcare provider of the Bengals.
If you haven't done so already, please subscribe to this
podcast and if you have a minute, give it a
rating or share a comment that helps more Bengals fans
find us. I'm Dan Horde and thanks for listening to
the Bengals Booth podcast.
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