CINCINNATI — The blood on Carson Palmer’s face reflected the state of the Cincinnati Bengals’ offense: a nasty, ugly mess.
The New Orleans Saints sacked Palmer three times in the first half Saturday night, knocking him out of the game with a bloody nose and a cut lip during a 13-0 victory that left the teams heading in opposite directions.
The Bengals have big problems.
They couldn’t move the ball or protect their franchise quarterback in the first half. Palmer left the game when Kevin Kaesviharn got to him on a third-down safety blitz with 2 seconds left before halftime.
As he walked to the sideline, Palmer had blood streaming from both nostrils and his lower lip. He dabbed at the wounds with a towel, then draped the bloody towel over his head and walked to the locker room, prematurely done for the night.
With Pro Bowl receivers Chad Johnson and T.J. Houshmandzadeh sidelined by injuries and two of their backups out as well, Palmer had nowhere to go with his passes other than the running backs and tight ends. That made it easy pickings for the Saints, who are trying to sort out their troubled secondary.
Cornerback Mike McKenzie made his first appearance since he tore a knee ligament last December, starting on one side. Second-round draft pick Tracy Porter started at the other cornerback spot, one week after he was repeatedly burned for long passes.
Neither one had much difficulty against a gutted offense that crossed midfield just once — and, then, by only 1 yard — on six possessions in the first half. The Bengals managed all of 94 yards in the half and never advanced farther than the Saints’ 47-yard line during the game.
They hadn’t been shut out in the preseason since 1999 at Detroit. It was the first time in franchise history they were shut out at home during an exhibition.
The Saints were hoping to get tight end Jeremy Shockey into a game for the first time, but decided to sit him. Shockey, obtained in a trade last month for two draft picks, hasn’t played since he broke his left leg Dec. 15.
Running back Reggie Bush left the game in the first half with an undisclosed injury that didn’t appear to be serious. He walked to the locker room briskly and didn’t return to the game.
The Saints’ first-string offense moved the ball smoothly, but couldn’t put up many points. Drew Brees was 14-of-22 for 199 yards and one touchdown before leaving late in the first half with a 10-0 lead. He threw a 1-yard touchdown pass to tight end Ronnie Ghent, who beat linebacker Keith Rivers, Cincinnati’s first-round pick.
Fans expressed frustration and disbelief over owner Mike Brown’s decision to re-sign troubled receiver Chris Henry earlier in the week. The Bengals released him in the offseason after his sixth off-field run-in during his time with the Bengals. Brown brought him back over the strong objection of coach Marvin Lewis.
One banner behind the end zone read: ‘‘Hey Mike, Surely You Can’t Be Serious.’’ Another hanging from the upper deck read: ‘‘Fool Me Once, Shame on You. Fool Me Six Times, Shame on Mike Brown.’’ Both banners were taken down before the end of the first quarter.
Henry did not play, watching from the sideline in a white Bengals T-shirt and black shorts. He has to sit out the first four regular-season games, his latest suspension from the NFL for violating its conduct policy.
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Saints rough up Palmer, beat Cincinnati 13-0
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Neel leaving champion War Eagles for Panthers
Eric Neel spent three seasons coach at East Central. The Hornets played in three state championship games.
Neel then coached the past three years at Wayne County, leading the War Eagles to three straight Class 5A fast-pitch state crowns.
And now, he doesn’t see why the same can’t occur at Quitman. After guiding Wayne County to its third straight championship Saturday, Neel resigned his position in Waynesboro on Thursday to replace Kacie Roberson at Quitman. -
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Winning a state championship, that Blake McMullen expected.
To be named the Player of the Year in Class 3A by the Mississippi Association of Coaches, that caught the Southeast Lauderdale senior off guard. -
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Russell Christian Academy senior Camryn Lee and Newton County Academy duo Clay Upton and Dillon Williams will wrap up their senior seasons today.
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McFarland named first-team All-American for Jones County
The honors continue to come in for the Jones County Junior College softball program.
Pitcher Ginger Lonergan and centerfielder Relanda McFarland were both named to the NJCAA Division II All-American first-team on Thursday. -
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It’d be hard to find a family that had a better week than the one Robbi and Shay Cooper just experienced. -
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The Drought Is Over
All Mason Irby was hoping for was to find a way on base.
The Southeast Lauderdale sophomore did that and so much more. Irby's single with two outs in the seventh inning broke a tie, lifting the Tigers to a 6-3 MHSAA Class 3A state championship win at Smith-Wills Stadium on Wednesday, and handing Southeast (32-7) its first title since 1966. -
Ramey shines again, hurls Tigers to MHSAA Class 3A crown
The bar was set pretty high.
After all, Southeast Lauderdale senior right-hander Colby Ramey needed just 65 pitches to beat Kossuth in Game 1 of the MHSAA Class 3A state championship game Thursday.
However, according to fellow senior Blake McMullen, Ramey cleared the hurdle Wednesday when he scattered eight hits on 104 pitches to finish off the Aggies in a 6-3 state championship-clinching win at Smith-Wills Stadium on Wednesday. -
Southeast wins MHSAA Class 3A Championsip
Slideshow from the MHSAA Class 3A state championship game between Southeast Lauderdale and Kossuth.
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Briarwood to host Emerald Coast Golf Tour in June
Professional golf is coming to Meridian.
The Emerald Coast Golf Tour will be holding the Meridian Pro-Am Classic at Briarwood Country Club June 26-29. - More Sports Headlines
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Neel leaving champion War Eagles for Panthers

