Former Bills Voice Takes A Shot Bengals Fans Wont Forget

A retired Buffalo Bills veteran's critical take on the Bengals' wide receivers has sparked debate, though statistical triumphs lean heavily in favor of the Cincinnati duo, highlighting a contentious landscape ahead of a possible playoff showdown.

Stevie Johnson picked the wrong fight if he wanted to take a shot at the Bengals’ receivers.

The retired Bills wideout jumped on social media and tried to frame Buffalo’s 39-34 Week 14 win over Cincinnati as proof that the Bengals’ pass catchers were somehow less impressive than the Bills’ group. His post leaned heavily on target totals and yardage, with Johnson writing:

“Hear me out: 🤖

Bengals WRs = 130+ yards 2 TDs

Bills WRs = 32 yards 1 TD

Bills Beat Bengals 39 - 34

Bengals WRs = 20 Targets

Bills WRs = 5 Targets

CIN WRs got 4x more targets than BUF WRs and STILL TOOK THE L.

Bengals are same as Cowboys WRs…

Bills #3 WR Room in League. pic.twitter.com/mKMfIUAPkS”

But the numbers from that game tell a different story than the one Johnson was trying to sell.

In Buffalo, Joe Burrow threw a pick-six and then another interception on his very next pass attempt. That second interception led to another Bills touchdown.

Even so, neither throw was classified as a turnover worthy play. Burrow, who had only two turnover worthy plays last season despite throwing five interceptions, still finished 25 of 36 for 284 yards, four touchdowns and a 106.5 passer rating.

Cincinnati’s run game managed just 3.3 yards per carry on 19 attempts.

The Bengals also got big production from their top targets. Tee Higgins was concussed in the game and still caught six passes for 92 yards and two touchdowns. Mike Gesicki, described in the source as a TEINO/TINO, had six receptions for 86 yards and a score.

Johnson’s broader point about Buffalo’s receiving room doesn’t hold up much better. The source points to the Bills’ current group as DJ Moore, Khalil Shakir and “a whole lot of not much else” at receiver. It also notes that Chase is the NFL’s WR1 and that Higgins is a legitimate WR1 on most teams, including the Bills.

The source also takes Johnson to task for his view of Moore, calling him “the most consistently low-effort, openly loafing, quote unquote star player in the National Football League.” It cites a clip from Moore’s final play in a Bears uniform and says the effort issue was not isolated, adding that Ben Johnson, now the Bears head coach, “couldn’t get Moore out of the Windy City fast enough.”

There’s also the matter of what Cincinnati has already done with Burrow and its top two receivers. The source notes that Burrow and the Bengals’ dynamic duo have been to a Super Bowl, while Johnson never had a winning season in Buffalo as a player.

For now, the argument can wait until January. That’s when the teams could meet again in the postseason, and when the debate over which receiver group is better will get a much bigger stage.

Johnson, for his part, also posted after the fact that Buffalo is built around the run and short game, writing:

“we can talk about WRs all we want.. The Bills are a running team first. So, if the run game/short game is efficient - idc about amazing 1500 yard wr stats. #perspectives”

In Other News...

Joe Flacco Had A Telling Reaction To That Bengals Trade

Joe Flaccos move from Cleveland to Cincinnati in the middle of the 2023 season still stands out as one of the more unusual quarterback detours of that year, and the Netflix documentary Quarterback gives a behind-the-scenes look at just how quickly it came together. With Joe Burrow sidelined, the Bengals needed help in a hurry, and Flaccos reaction to the trade showed a veteran who understood the opportunity right away and was ready to slide into a new locker room without much time to waste.

The documentary also captures how fast the transition moved once the deal was done, with Flacco immediately diving into Cincinnatis plans and getting himself ready for the next game. He played well in his starts before the job shifted back once Burrow returned, and the Bengals decision to bring him back this offseason says plenty about how they viewed his brief run. [Read more 🡒]

Joe Burrow Trade Talk Just Put A Stunning Price On Cincinnatis Future

The idea of Joe Burrow ever being moved is still firmly in the hypothetical bucket, but it is the kind of hypothetical that gets attention in Cincinnati because of what it says about the quarterbacks standing around the league. ESPN analyst Bill Barnwell recently put a striking price on that possibility, using the Deshaun Watson deal as the benchmark for how elite quarterback trades can reshape a franchises future.

For the Bengals, the bigger takeaway is not a transaction on the horizon, but the reminder that Burrow remains one of the leagues most valuable assets even as the team plans around him. Barnwells scenario only matters if circumstances ever turn sharply against Cincinnati, and for now it reads more like a stress test of the roster-building era than a real negotiation. Still, it is hard to ignore how much draft capital a team would need if it ever had to replace a quarterback of Burrows caliber. [Read more 🡒]

Joe Flacco Is Giving Bengals Fans A Very Cincinnati First Impression

Joe Flacco is still settling into Cincinnati, and part of that adjustment has meant getting to know the city one restaurant at a time. The Bengals quarterback said in a press conference and on a podcast that he has been exploring local spots while getting comfortable with his new home, a fairly ordinary routine that feels a little more notable when it comes from a veteran passer with a national profile.

One of those stops was Cantina, the Mexican restaurant in Pendleton, where Flacco talked through a meal that fit the kind of low-key first impression Cincinnati tends to reward. The visit also lines up with his appearance in the third season of Netflixs "Quarterback," which has already dropped all eight episodes, giving fans another look at how hes handling life with the Bengals beyond the field. [Read more 🡒]