Andy Dalton comments on chance his return could impact 2020 draft

Andy Dalton talked about his possible impact on the 2020 NFL draft.

The Cincinnati Bengals want to win some games, spurring the change back to Andy Dalton under center.

A byproduct of potentially winning games? The chance at spoiling the team’s draft position next offseason.

Wednesday, in his first public comments since becoming the starter again, this topic naturally came up. Asked about any potential backlash for getting wins and spoiling the team’s chances at the first overall pick, Dalton kept it simple, according to ESPN’s Ben Baby:

“If this city isn’t happy for wins then I don’t know what to tell them.”

Fair play by Dalton, whose team hasn’t won a game since December 16 of last season and is now off to the worst start in franchise history.

On the subject of the benching itself, Dalton was humble in looking back on the ordeal:

For now, talk about spoiling draft slotting seems premature. There are no one-win teams left in the NFL right now and the first challenge for Dalton’s second chance comes against a strong New York Jets defense.

If the Bengals win Sunday, then we’ll really get into the meaningful draft questions and considerations.

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Joe Mixon, Bengals players on social were happy with move back to Andy Dalton

Joe Mixon and other Bengals players celebrated the move back to Andy Dalton.

The move back to quarterback Andy Dalton sure seems like it was a popular one with some of the notable players in the Cincinnati Bengals locker room.

New head coach Zac Taylor announced the move to Dalton over Ryan Finley at quarterback for Week 13.

Right after, players like Mixon were active on social:

Mixon, along with notables like Tyler Boyd, liked the team’s official announcement on Instagram:

And in the comments here, Mixon wasn’t shy about tagging Dalton personally and asking if he could be the one to catch his record-breaking touchdown pass:

This is all in good fun, of course. The entire locker room was clearly supportive of the rookie Finley and keeps fighting hard for Taylor.

But here, and assuredly in the quotes to follow in the coming days, the rallying around Dalton seems to be a testament to his leadership and personality.

Dalton gets the start against the Jets over the weekend in what looks like it could be one of his last games with the team.

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7 fantasy football wavier wire claims to make ahead of Week 13

Fantasy football wavier wire claims ahead of Week 13 of the NFL season.

Need a fresh face for your fantasy football roster this week?

It’s never too late for a few extra points to add to your win column.

Here are seven waiver wire claims to make in fantasy football ahead of Week 13:

New York Jets quarterback Sam Darnold. (AP Photo/Frank Franklin II)

QB Sam Darnold

Another week, another 34 points, another addition of Sam Darnold on the waiver wire player to pick up list. Folks still aren’t pick up on Darnold, but he’s now a huge add and immediately start with the Bengals en route. It’s easy to envision the Jets and Darnold not putting up 34 point for the fourth-straight game, that’s because they have a look at surpassing that, easily. In those three games, he has seven touchdowns, one interception and 838 passing yards. He should stay out of the tabloids, though.

Percent owned in ESPN fantasy leagues: 18.9%

What if Andy Dalton rattles off multiple wins?

Can Andy Dalton change the trajectory of the team’s 2020 NFL draft plans?

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Hardly 30 days after seemingly ending the Andy Dalton era, the Cincinanti Bengals have gone right back to him in the hopes of salvaging at least one win on the season.

This comes after weeks of Zac Taylor and Co. shouting from the rooftops about long-term evaluation and rookie Ryan Finley getting the full eight games to show what he’s got.

But the experiment is over after three dreadful games, the point of the change registering as simple — win.

“Yeah, we just want to win. That veteran presence he has will certainly be helpful through all the things we’ve been experiencing so far on offense,” Taylor told the media.

Which is a nice sentiment, ignoring the fact the Bengals have opened up a massive lead in the race for the 2020 draft’s top pick. It also waves aside the fact Dalton was 0-8 before getting yanked, completing just 60.4 percent of his passes with nine touchdowns and eight interceptions.

One could argue the Bengals perhaps win one of the last two games with Dalton in there. The 17-10 loss to Oakland and 16-10 loss to Pittsburgh were putrid affairs, though the running game and defensive line showed signs of life.

Does anything change from here if Dalton somehow manages a win or two? Is a victory over the four-win New York Jets, or a takedown Cleveland in one of two matchups or a triumph over two-win Miami worth anything at all?

The answer is of course no. But Bengals fans are right to perhaps feel a bit of deja vu. It wasn’t too long ago a bad, bad team rallied late in the season and impressed the front office enough to give Marvin Lewis another season. Could Dalton do the same?

Knowing Dalton, the relationship with the team isn’t past the point of no return. He got benched and wanted a trade yes, but his upstanding character isn’t a secret.

It should go without saying, but the pick at first overall, provided the team stays there, should be a quarterback 10 times out of 10. It’s the most important position in sports and getting the guy of their choice isn’t something the Bengals will be able to do again. It also largely removes the ability to make a stupendous gaffe — no Billy Price or John Ross over Patrick Mahomes this time.

Given the jerky, almost erratic actions of this staff and front office lately, it’s hard to get a guaranteed read on what the plans are for the 2020 draft. But it’s understandable if fans have gone from worrying about earning the top pick to worrying about whether the team will actually take a quarterback.

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Bengals will return to Andy Dalton vs. Jets

To avoid going 0-16, the Bengals will start Andy Dalton at quarterback again and sit rookie QB Ryan Finley against the Jets.

The Bengals made their second quarterback change of the season on Monday.

Cincinnati will go back to veteran Andy Dalton after benching him in favor of rookie Ryan Finley earlier this season. Bengals head coach Zac Taylor decided that three games were all he needed to see from Finley to know that his team needs to take a quarterback in next year’s draft.

Finely started the previous three games after Dalton was benched following Week 8. Now Week 13, the veteran quarterback’s first game back will be on Sunday against the New York Jets.

In three starts, Finley completed 47.1 percent of his passes for 474 yards, two touchdowns and five total turnovers.

Up until he was benched this year, Dalton had been Cincinnati’s starting quarterback since the Bengals drafted him in the second round of the 2011 NFL draft.

In eight starts this year, Dalton completed 60.4 percent of his passes for 2,252 yards, nine touchdowns and eight interceptions.

In his career against New York, Dalton is 2-0. In those two games, Dalton has completed 70 percent of his passes for 691 yards while throwing six touchdowns and two interceptions.

Everything Zac Taylor said about going back to Andy Dalton over Ryan Finley

Zac Taylor talked at length about the decision to go back to Andy Dalton.

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Zac Taylor shocked the NFL world Monday by announcing Andy Dalton would once again be the starting quarterback for the Cincinnati Bengals, pushing aside rookie Ryan Finley.

Finley got to start three games. He struggled, but everything from Taylor and the coaching staff prior to Monday had reinforced the idea the rookie would be the starter the rest of the way.

Taylor met with the media and kept the explanation for the move simple: “Yeah, we just want to win. That veteran presence he has will certainly be helpful through all the things we’ve been experiencing so far on offense.”

Taylor wouldn’t commit to whether Dalton would finish the season and also said he’s not thinking about how it impacts things like the upcoming draft.

On his relationship with Dalton, Taylor offered the following:

“Andy and I have had many, many, many conversations since all that happened, before and after. We’ve been on the same page. Andy has handled it as well as you could hope any veteran would.”

Perhaps most interesting was Taylor commenting on whether this move had anything to do with possibly losing his locker room:

“The team has understood everything we’ve done up to this point. I always have an open door for those guys to come up and talk. There have been times throughout the season where players have felt like they needed to, they have, and they know that I’m going to be open with them. I feel like we’re in a good place with the locker room, and we have been throughout the whole season.”

After briefly attempting to evaluate Finley to get a better idea of the offseason plan — as well as looking for a spark — Taylor and his staff now have a focus on wins.

As Taylor pointed out during his chat Monday though, so many moving pieces have made it hard for either quarterback to excel. Dalton’s second chance this year starts with a visit from the New York Jets on Sunday.

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Bengals bench Ryan Finley, name Andy Dalton starter for Week 13

The Bengals will bench Ryan Finley for Andy Dalton.

The Cincinnati Bengals have pulled the plug on the brief Ryan Finley experiment.

Monday, the team announced veteran Andy Dalton will slot back into the starting role in the wake of Sunday’s 16-10 loss to the Pittsburgh Steelers.

Sunday was Finley’s third start of his career after joining the team via the fourth round. He completed just 12 of his 26 attempts with a touchdown and two fumbles.

A new Bengals coach staff benched Dalton after eight games in order to evaluate for the future while attempting to spark a win.

Over eight games, Dalton has completed 60.4 percent of his passes with nine touchdowns and eight interceptions.

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Zac Taylor isn’t ready to talk going back to Andy Dalton over Ryan Finley

The Bengals head coach won’t talk about benching Ryan Finley for Andy Dalton yet.

Cincinnati Bengals head coach Zac Taylor isn’t ready to declare Ryan Finley benched for Andy Dalton coming out of Sunday’s loss to the Pittsburgh Steelers.

Taylor’s Bengals are 0-11 for the first time in team history and the rookie Finley just put up another putrid performance, completing 12 of his 26 passes for 192 yards while fumbling twice, losing one late at a key moment in the game.

Finley has started three games now after the surprise benching of Dalton. His second start in the loss to Oakland last week saw him complete 13 of 31 attempts for 115 yards with a pick.

In his postgame presser after Sunday’s loss, Taylor made it clear he won’t talk about a change yet, per Laurel Pfahler of WCPO:

This falls in line with what Taylor had said earlier in the week coming out of the Raiders loss. But Finley’s fumbling issues, inaccuracy and the lack of strength behind passes look like problems another five games might not resolve.

If the Bengals don’t want to revert back to Dalton for a handful of obvious reasons, they could also throw rookie Jake Dolegala out there for an evaluation period too.

But for now, Taylor isn’t announcing any sort of change.

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Future QB Rankings: Rating all 32 NFL teams’ situations from worst to best

Touchdown Wire ranks the 32 NFL teams in terms of stability and potential at the game’s most important position over the next 3-4 seasons.

 

Future QB Rankings: Rating all 32 NFL teams’ situations from worst to best

Touchdown Wire ranks the 32 NFL teams in terms of stability and potential at the game’s most important position over the next 3-4 seasons.

Tom Brady might be the best quarterback ever, but he’s not the best in the NFL right now. He certainly won’t be the best in 2022.

He’s human, after all, and at age 42, regression is inevitable even for someone with six Super Bowl rings. That puts the New England Patriots in an uncertain situation at quarterback two or three years down the road. The New Orleans Saints, with 40-year-old Drew Brees under center, find themselves in a similar scenario.

Other teams, such as the Chicago Bears and Carolina Panthers, likely will face difficult personnel decisions at the quarterback position much sooner than that. Only a handful of teams, notably the Kansas City Chiefs and Seattle Seahawks, appear secure in their quarterback situation for years to come.

All this got us thinking about the quarterback situations of the future — and where each of the NFL’s 32 teams ranks in terms of preparedness at the game’s most crucial position.

By quarterback situations, we mean the full overview of each team’s quarterbacks group, including backups and a potential succession plan, if necessary. For this exercise, we will define the future as three to four years down the road.

To help form these opinions, we consulted with a blue-ribbon panel of one former head coach, two former general managers and one current general manager. They were asked for their thoughts on each team’s quarterback situation. They provided insight to inform our rankings.

With that in mind, we present Touchdown Wire’s future quarterback rankings for every NFL team, from worst to first:

32. Miami Dolphins

Brian Spurlock-USA TODAY Sports

Earlier this season, many observers accused the Dolphins of tanking to earn the No. 1 pick in the 2020 NFL Draft and presumably select a quarterback. Since then, Miami (2-8) has been eclipsed by the ineptitude of Cincinnati (0-10) and Washington (1-9), so the Dolphins might not get the first QB off the board. Currently, the Dolphins have Ryan Fitzpatrick and Josh Rosen on their roster. Rosen has failed in his playing time. There’s no way he’ll be back next year. The Dolphins have the option to hang onto Fitzpatrick, 36, who’s currently under contract next season at $5.5 million. It makes sense to keep Fitzpatrick around for one more year to help groom a young quarterback. That could be LSU’s Joe Burrow, Alabama’s Tua Tagavailoa (although his recent hip injury now complicates his draft status), Oregon’s Justin Herbert or Oklahoma’s Jalen Hurts. Two members of my panel said they like Burrow better than Tagovailoa. Either way, it’s going to take some time to develop a young quarterback.

31. Chicago Bears

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For the moment, Mitchell Trubisky is Chicago’s starting quarterback. But it doesn’t appear that he will be in that role next year — although he remains under contract and the team holds a fifth-year option on the No. 2 overall pick from 2017. Given his level of play this season, it’s highly unlikely he will receive the option year, and he might not even see 2020 with the Bears — although the cap hit for cutting him would be slightly more than $9 million. The Bears are 4-6 after going 12-4 last year. There’s one main reason for the decline. That’s Trubisky. My panelists say he’s holding the offense back and could end up keeping a good team out of the playoffs. All four panelists agree Trubisky should be nothing more than a backup. Current backup Chase Daniel’s contract expires after this season. So there’s no telling who will be Chicago’s quarterback next year. Maybe the Bears will draft a quarterback. But with a talented roster already in place, the Bears should be first in line to sign New Orleans backup Teddy Bridgewater as a free agent.

30. Cincinnati Bengals

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Veteran Andy Dalton has been benched, and the Bengals are giving rookie fourth-rounder Ryan Finley a shot. There should be no turning back to Dalton, even though he remains under contract for 2020 with a $17.5 million scheduled salary. The Bengals can cut Dalton after the season without any salary cap ramifications. It’s too early to judge Finley. Cincinnati is going to end up with an early draft pick and could have a shot at Joe Burrow, Tua Tagovailoa, Justin Herbert or Jalen Hurts. The Bengals will be starting over. But, given their current state, that’s not a bad thing. “Dalton had more than enough time and couldn’t win consistently,” one panelist said. “I have no idea what they have in Finley. But they have to draft a quarterback if they’re sitting there at No. 1 or 2.”

29. Washington Redskins

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The current situation is a mess. Veterans Colt McCoy and Case Keenum, who clearly aren’t the answer, each is in the last year of their contract. The Redskins have little choice but to play rookie Dwayne Haskins, who has five interceptions and two touchdown passes, the rest of this season. Call it an audition for Haskins. But this situation is complicated because the Redskins currently have interim coach Bill Callahan, who took over when Jay Gruden was fired. There will be a new coach next year, and he might not like Haskins. With an early draft pick likely, the new coach might want his own guy. Give up on Haskins after only one season? Arizona did it with 2018 first-round pick Josh Rosen after drafting Kyler Murray. All four of our panelists said Haskins was overrated when he was drafted.

28-25 / 24-21 / 20-17 / 16-13 / 12-9 / 8-5 / 4-1