Spokesman-Review
National Football League
Cincinnati 20, Denver 17
When: 4:25 PM ET, Sunday, November 19, 2017
Where: Sports Authority Field, Denver, Colorado
Temperature: 60°
Head Official: Craig Wrolstad
Attendance: 75707

DENVER -- The Cincinnati Bengals hope they are at the beginning of a strong finish.

Andy Dalton passed for three touchdowns and the Bengals hung on to beat the Denver Broncos 20-17 Sunday for their first win in the Mile High City in 42 years.

"If we would have lost this one, it would have set us even further behind," Dalton said. "Marvin (Lewis, the Bengals head coach) has talked about it, everybody's talked about it. There's a team that's in the position that we're in right now that gets hot every year. We're doing everything we can to make it us."

Dalton did his part toward that goal, completing 15 of 25 passes for 154 yards, including scoring passes to A.J. Green, Alex Erickson and tight end Tyler Kroft.

Cornerback Dre Kirkpatrick returned an interception 87 yards, before fumbling and recovering at the 1-yard line to set up the first touchdown by the Bengals (4-6). Linebacker Vontaze Burfict forced a fumble by running back C.J. Anderson, leading to Dalton's decisive 18-yard touchdown pass to Green midway through the fourth quarter.

"A.J. is so good and he was able to win quickly at the line of scrimmage. Just give him a chance and he made a great catch," Dalton said. "We get an opportunity, we're going to let A.J. go make a play."

The Bengals snapped a 10-game losing streak in Denver since their last victory 17-16 on Nov. 9, 1975, and the manner in which they did it and in a place where they had experienced so much difficulty bodes well for the rest of the season in Kirkpatrick's mind.

"I feel like we bonded today," he said. "Guys were backing up each other. Guys were picking up each other. We've got to keep working. We've got to rise up."

Brock Osweiler completed 23 of 42 passes for 254 yards, including a 17-yard touchdown pass to Demaryius Thomas. The Broncos' wide receiver pulled the ball in with Kirkpatrick draped on him and brought the Broncos to within three points with 5:05 remaining.

The Bengals ran more than three minutes off the clock before punting. The Broncos' final possession ended on a fourth-down incompletion and the Bengals took over on downs, running out the last few seconds in sending Denver (3-7) to its sixth straight loss.

"You are who you are. It's our record," Broncos head coach Vance Joseph said. "Tonight we had great effort. Offensively, we moved the ball, but we had two turnovers. They both led to points. That's the game again."

Brandon McManus, whose 61-yard field-goal attempt just before halftime was blocked, converted a 45-yarder with 4:54 remaining in the third quarter. Denver trailed 13-10 heading into the fourth quarter.

Erickson got a step on cornerback Bradley Roby as they sprinted down the left sideline and Dalton hit him in stride for a 29-yard touchdown that gave Cincinnati a 13-7 halftime lead.

Denver was poised to strike first in the game when Shaquil Barrett ended Cincinnati's opening possession by breaking through to block Kevin Huber's punt, handing Denver possession at the Bengals' 29-yard line.

The Broncos moved the ball to the 4, but on third down, Osweiler's pass intended for Cody Latimer was picked off by Kirkpatrick after Latimer collided with another defensive back on the play, leaving the pass headed right toward Kirkpatrick.

"The football was gift-wrapped to Kirkpatrick," Osweiler said. "And he made a great play. But bottom line, no excuses. I can't turn the ball over."

Kirkpatrick took off the other way, but fumbled in the midst of the runback only to recover the ball a yard shy of the end zone.

Two runs by rookie Joe Mixon were stopped for no gain before Dalton, on a play-action pass, hit Kroft for a touchdown. The extra-point try by Randy Bullock missed wide left.

Denver got on the board at the end of a 75-yard drive when Anderson ran it into the end zone from 3 yards out. Anderson had kept the drive alive earlier by converting a fourth-and-1 with a 3-yard run.

NOTES: NT Domata Peko Sr., who spent his first 11 seasons in Cincinnati before signing with Denver as a free agent in the offseason, extended his starting streak to 122 games. That's the longest active streak by an NFL defensive lineman. ... Bengals LB Vincent Rey left in the second quarter with a hamstring injury. ... TE Austin Traylor made his NFL debut after being promoted by the Broncos from the practice squad. Traylor filled the roster spot of TE A.J. Derby, who was waived/injured on Saturday.
Top Game Performances
Rushing
Cincinnati   Denver
Joe Mixon Player Devontae Booker
20 Attempts 14
49 Yards 44
2.4 Avg Yards 3.1
0 Touchdowns 0
8 Long 8
Receiving
Cincinnati   Denver
A.J. Green Player Demaryius Thomas
4 Receptions 5
50 Yards 64
12.5 Avg Yards 12.8
1 Touchdowns 1
18 Long 17
Team Stats Summary
 
  Yards Scoring Defense
Team Tot Rus Pas TD FG INT Sck FF
Cincinnati 190 49 141 3 0 1 3.0 1
Denver 341 112 229 2 1 0 2.0 1
Upcoming Games
  • Denver will play their next game on the road against Oakland. The Broncos have a W/L % of .500 after a win and .167 after a loss.
  • Cincinnati will play their next game at home against Cleveland. The Bengals have a W/L % of .333 after a win and .429 after a loss.