Bengals vs. Jets Week 8: The Good, The Bad & The Ugly

Bengals vs. Jets Week 8: The Good, The Bad & The Ugly
Cincy Jungle Cincy Jungle

On Sunday, October 26, 2025, the Cincinnati Bengals hosted the New York Jets at Paycor Stadium in Cincinnati and suffered a heart-breaker, 39-38. The result was one of the more maddening losses of the season for Cincinnati. Here’s a full breakdown of the good, the bad, and yes — the ugly.

The Good

  1. Offensive production still showed life
    • Quarterback Joe Flacco completed 21 of 34 passes for 223 yards and two touchdowns, with no interceptions.
    • The Bengals moved the ball and accumulated 398 total net yards.
    • Wide receiver Ja’Marr Chase had 12 receptions for 91 yards — showing he’s still a weapon even in a chaotic game.
    • Running backs contributed: Samaje Perine rushed for 94 yards and a touchdown, and Chase Brown added 73 yards and a score.
    • The Bengals jumped out to a strong start, taking a 10-0 first-quarter lead and a 24-13 lead at halftime.
      All in all, the offense gave hope that this team can still move the ball and score, which matters.
  2. Red-zone efficiency early
    • Flacco’s two touchdown passes came relatively early — one to Tee Higgins (44 yards) and one to Chase Brown (19 yards) — helping build the lead.
      That kind of execution gave Cincinnati a platform to win.
  3. Some defensive flashes
    • In the first half, the Bengals’ defense held the Jets to 13 points and seemed to have control. They also forced some early stops.
      – Especially coming off earlier losses, it was good to see the Bengals defend reasonably in stretches.

The Bad

  1. Letting a manageable lead slip away
    • Despite leading 31-16 entering the fourth quarter, the Bengals allowed the Jets to score 23 points in the final quarter and lost by one.
    • Time of possession: The Jets held the ball for 33:40 vs. the Bengals’ 26:20. That kind of edge often factors in late-game breakdowns.
      In short, you build a lead, but you must finish the game. The Bengals didn’t.
  2. Defensive collapse when it mattered most
    • The Jets ran for 255 yards (and 254 was noted in some accounts) and executed key plays in the fourth quarter.
    • The Bengals failed to create turnovers or big plays in the red zone late. According to Bengals notes: “someone’s got to step up … create a turnover … win offensively explosive play … never happened for us.”
      The defense simply didn’t hold up when it mattered most.
  3. Special teams / situational miscues
    • The play that killed them: a sack of Flacco on the game-deciding drive, setting up the Jets’ final score.
    • Fourth-down and late-game sequence miscues hurt.
      These details really add up, especially against a team that came in 0-7.

The Ugly

  1. Blowout on paper, razor-thin on result
    • It’s one thing to lose a close game; it’s another to lead by 15 points in the fourth quarter and still lose. That magnifies every mistake.
    • Some outlets are already calling...