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2000 Cincinnati Bengals season

The 2000 Cincinnati Bengals season was the team's 33rd year in professional football and its 31st with the National Football League. Corey Dillon would rank fifth in the NFL with 1,435 rushing yards and set a franchise record for most rushing yards in one season. On October 22, 2000, Dillon set a franchise record by rushing for 278 yards in one game. After being shut out in two of their first three games and a home loss to the Browns 24–7 in week 1, head coach Bruce Coslet resigned; he was replaced by former All-Pro Detroit Lions defensive back and Bengals defensive coordinator Dick LeBeau. Under LeBeau, the Bengals dropped their first three games, with an eventual long losing streak finally coming to an end on October 22 against the Denver Broncos at the new Paul Brown Stadium. The Bengals defeated the Broncos 31–21 as RB Corey Dillon set a single-game record by rushing for 278 yards. The Bengals used it as springboard to win their next game in Cleveland despite not scoring a touchdown. The Bengals offense would continue to struggle as 2nd year quarterback Akili Smith, the team's No. 1 draft pick out of Oregon, was overwhelmed by the NFL game. Corey Dillon set a team record by rushing for 1,435 yards, but with Smith's struggles as starting quarterback, the team floundered with a season-ending record of 4–12. They won only one game against a team with a winning record, which was a 31–21 win over the Broncos, who went 11–5 and made the playoffs.

Offseason

NFL draft

Undrafted free agents

Personnel

Roster

Preseason

Regular season

Schedule

Note: Intra-division opponents are in bold text.

Standings

Team leaders

Passing

Rushing

Receiving

Defensive

Kicking and punting

Special teams

Awards and records

Milestones

  • Corey Dillon, 4th 1000 yard rushing season (1,435 rushing yards)
  • Tremain Mack, 3rd 1000-yard return season (1,036 yards)

Best performances

  • Corey Dillon, October 22, 2000, 278 rushing yards vs. the Denver Broncos
  • Corey Dillon, December 3, 2000, 216 rushing yards vs. the Arizona Cardinals

References

External links