Netflix Shows Why Flaccos Bengals Run Turned So Frustrating Fast

Dive into Episode 5 of Netflixs Quarterback, where the journey of NFL quarterbacks like Joe Flacco unfolds in both humorous and heartbreakingly painful ways.

Episode 5 of Netflix’s new season of “Quarterback” is built around pain, and it doesn’t take long to show its hand. Titled “Running Out of Time,” the episode opens with Washington Commanders quarterback Jayden Daniels’ season-ending elbow injury, then moves through Tampa Bay’s Baker Mayfield’s knee and Tennessee rookie Cam Ward talking about getting the f-k beat out of him.

But the episode keeps circling back to Joe Flacco, who once again gets a heavy share of the spotlight.

The Bengals quarterback is first shown heading home to New Jersey during the mini bye after the Thursday night win against the Steelers. He gets time with his sons at a football game and a chance to step away for a little while before returning to the grind.

From there, the episode leans hard into the moment that went viral before the Week 8 game against the Jets, when Flacco joked about once feeling bad for the person eating alone in a restaurant and now realizing “that dude is in heaven.”

The show shows Flacco by himself at the counter at Guardia, a pizza shop near Mt. Lookout, which had become his Friday routine.

Head coach Zac Taylor and center Ted Karras both react to the line, along with the obvious appeal of getting 30 minutes of quiet to eat. Media members are also shown weighing in as the quote spreads, eventually making its way back to Flacco’s wife, Dana, in New Jersey.

She takes it in stride in an interview with producers.

“I know you’re living your best life while we scrounge for whatever we can get in between sports,” she says. “To go to the bar and sit there by yourself, who wouldn’t want that.

I would want that. So enjoy it while you can.”

The episode also shows Flacco sitting alone, chatting with workers and customers while “Cheers” plays in the background - “Where everybody knows your name…”

That lighter stretch gives way to the game against the Jets, where Flacco suffers a right shoulder injury. It was also the first of two straight games the Bengals believed they had won before the defense turned them into losses.

“When you do allow yourself to get decently high with that victory in sight, the comedown can be pretty hard,” Flacco admits.

The episode shows him trying to throw on the sideline after the injury and asking doctors how long a cortisone shot would take to kick in. They tell him five minutes, and the Bengals race to the locker room with a 38-32 lead only to come back out facing a 39-38 deficit. Cincinnati then fails to get into field goal range and takes what the show calls “a killer loss.”

That leads into Thursday practice before the Bears game, when Flacco gets another shot before going out to work. Taylor walks up to him on the field and tells him, “This is the last time I’m gonna ask you,” before adding, “I’m just gonna have to trust you to tell me if it’s too much.”

Flacco says he won’t know until he sees how he feels that night. Taylor later tells producers, “It’s the worst-case scenario for a quarterback to hurt his right shoulder. It’s a true testament to his character that he wants to play for a bunch of guys he just met.”

The episode briefly shifts to Mayfield and Daniels again before returning to Cincinnati for the Bears game. The first big moment is Flacco’s 44-yard touchdown pass to Tee Higgins, which leaves him stunned on the sideline.

“Holy s-t! What?!”

Flacco and backup Jake Browning are shown laughing on the bench as the crowd belts out the “Who Dey” chant.

That reaction mirrors what the show captured in Episode 4 with the Ja’Marr Chase touchdown, and by the final minute against the Bears, it’s the Bengals around Flacco who are the ones in disbelief after he throws for a career-high 470 yards.

Injured defensive end Trey Hendrickson is first to reach him, and director of rehab Nick Cosgray follows with, “You’re a really tough son on a bitch, man.”

Taylor then comes over, and Joe Burrow asks, “Was that your first 400-yard game?” When Flacco says yes, Burrow fist-bumps him and replies, “Good job.”

Flacco’s own voiceover undercuts the celebration, though: “I said ‘not yet.’ You never know.’”

The Bengals’ defense ends up proving that point the hard way by blowing the lead - and the game - almost immediately.

The segment closes with Flacco talking about how demoralizing those back-to-back losses were before the episode moves on to a final section with Mayfield.

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