Originally published on Oct. 12, 2024
By Zane Miller
On Sunday, October 12th, 2014, the Carolina
Panthers and Cincinnati Bengals played to a 37-37 draw at Paul Brown Stadium, as
the exciting clash saw the Panthers’ record move to 3-2-1 whereas the Bengals
now held a similar 3-1-1. However, this game made history, just not necessarily
in the way either team would have liked.
Both the Bengals and Panthers were coming off of excellent
regular season performances coupled with disappointing playoff exits.
Cincinnati finished 2013 with an 11-5 record before falling 27-10 in the first
round to the San Diego (now Los Angeles) Chargers, while Carolina scored a 12-4
record and were able to obtain a first-round bye, but the week of rest proved
to be a moot point as they lost in the second round 23-10 to the San Francisco
49ers. With both teams retaining mostly the same rosters for 2014, they were looking
to bounce back and were more or less doing so, each side already having three
wins in the still-young season.
This matchup would be a battle of the highly-touted quarterbacks
from the 2011 draft. Panthers quarterback Cam Newton was taken with the first
overall pick that year after the failed Jimmy Clausen experiment and
immediately lived up to the hype, winning Offensive Rookie of the Year with 21
passing touchdowns for 4,051 yards, to go along with 14 rushing touchdowns. While
his numbers weren’t as explosive the next two seasons, Newton was still among
the league’s better quarterbacks going into the 2014 campaign. A preseason rib
injury forced Newton to sit out the first game of the year, but a week before
playing the Bengals, he had his season-best game to that point in a 31-24 win
over the Chicago Bears where he threw for two touchdowns and 255 yards.
While Newton grabbed most of the headlines in the 2011
draft, Bengals quarterback Andy Dalton had been making noise of his own after
falling to the team in the second round. After an ugly dispute with team
management, veteran quarterback Carson Palmer announced he would sit out the
2011 season until he was traded, forcing the Bengals to start Dalton right
away. However, Dalton was up to the task and, with the help of fellow rookie
teammate AJ Green, passed for 20 touchdowns and 3,398 yards to finish second to
Newton in Offensive Rookie of the Year voting. From there, the Bengals experienced
sustained success in the regular season which they had not felt in decades, as
the team earned three consecutive winning seasons for the first time since 1977.
Dalton looked to continue this streak in 2014 and was well on his way to accomplishing
that as the team squared off against the Panthers.
The got off to a roaring start for the Panthers, as they
took the opening kickoff and methodically worked their way down the field,
culminating in a short touchdown pass from Newton to Kelvin Benjamin. The drive
took nearly 10 minutes of game time to complete, with the ensuing Bengals drive
also taking a significant amount of time off the clock, leading to just two
drives taking place in the first quarter. In the second quarter, now already
well inside the red zone, Dalton hit veteran wideout Brandon Tate for a
touchdown, tying the game at 7-7. The Panthers’ next drive went nowhere, though
the Bengals were still pinned deep after Darqueze Dennard was flagged for
unnecessary roughness on the punt.
This set up the most exciting offensive play of the
game, as running back Giovanni Bernard ran up the middle and shook off would-be
tackles from defensive lineman Charles Johnson and linebacker Thomas Davis,
before taking it to the house virtually unchallenged from there to make it a
14-7 lead for Cincinnati. The 89-yard jaunt would be by far the longest
touchdown run of Bernard’s 10-year long career.
The Bengals were still up front by seven at halftime
after both teams traded field goals to make the first half score 17-10. However,
with the Bengals knocking on the door of the red zone to start the third
quarter, Carolina’s defense created a backbreaking turnover as a Dalton pass
was intercepted by cornerback Antoine Cason, who ran it back 80 yards to the
10-yard line.
With momentum now on their side, the Panthers capitalized
on the excellent field position and punched it in with a touchdown run from
Fozzy Whittaker, before the Bengals punted on their next possession and Newton
himself ran it in from 12 yards out to give the Panthers a 24-17 lead. With the
third quarter winding down, the Bengals were trying to restart their offense, but
not before another throw was picked off by Carolina, this time by veteran
safety Roman Harper. However, in a bit of foreshadowing, a special teams
blunder cost the Panthers a chance to go up by two possessions as kicker Graham
Gano missed a 38-yard chip shot.
The Bengals looked to put the abysmal third quarter
behind them and did just that, with Dalton hitting wide receiver Mohamed Sanu for
a 34-yard touchdown, right after finding him for a 22-yard completion to set up
the scoring play. The game was now tied up for a third time, but the Panthers
were in no hurry to move the ball downfield. In a drive which took seven full
minutes off the clock, Newton found wide receiver Jason Avant to put them
inside the red zone, capped off by Newton’s touchdown pass to tight end Greg
Olsen from 13 yards out.
Obviously, this was already a competitive game, but
the ensuing kickoff return was where it really started to get crazy. Bengals
returner Adam Jones, who already had five career punt return touchdowns but no
kick return touchdowns, took the Gano kick just inside of the end zone and cut
his way past several defenders thanks in part to incredible blocks from Marquis
Flowers and Shawn Williams. Jones had first kick return score in his sights,
but was caught by a hard-charging Colin Jones just short of the goal line.
Nevertheless, rookie running back Jeremy Hill ran it in himself from three
yards out, tying it up for a fourth time at 31-all.
The nightmare continued for the Panthers on their next
drive, as they lost three yards before Newton airmailed a throw which ended up
in the waiting arms of Bengals safety Reggie Nelson. Nelson picked himself up
and ran it back into field goal range with just over three minutes to go in
regulation. The Panthers had an ever bigger scare shortly after as Hill
appeared to have his second touchdown of the game after running it in from 22
yards out, but the play was called back for a holding penalty. The Bengals
would be forced to settle for a field goal, which kicker and Cincinnati-area
native Mike Nugent delivered from 38 yards with 2:11 to go, putting the Bengals
back on top for the first time since early in the third quarter. However, there
was still plenty of time for Newton and company to mount a comeback.
Starting at their own 20-yard line, the Panthers
quickly picked up a first down before Newton hit Olsen at midfield with a
minute and a half left to play. After a short gain and a pair of incompletions,
the Panthers faced a fourth down, tantalizingly close to Gano’s field goal
range. With no choice but to go for it, Newton called his own number, rushing
up the middle from the shotgun formation to keep the drive alive. A couple more
short plays put Gano in a more comfortable spot and, despite missing a makable
field goal earlier, sent the 44-yarder right down the middle to force the
contest into overtime.
Something to keep in mind, this game occurred before
the current 10-minute overtime was instituted; at that time they would still
play the full 15 minutes of overtime if necessary, but the game still could not
be won on a field goal on the first possession. The Bengals looked to be in
good position after winning the coin toss, enabling them to go on offense first
and embark on a seven-minute-long drive into the red zone. However, following a
tackle for loss and sack, both courtesy of Charles Johnson, Cincinnati would
have to settle for a 42-yard Mike Nugent field goal. Needing to score on this
possession, Newton went back to work and found Jerricho Cotchery for nine yards
and Olsen for 11 to help advance into Bengals territory. The drive temporarily stalled
as they faced a 3rd-and-10 situation, but an ill-timed illegal contact penalty
on linebacker Vontaze Burfict provided the Panthers with an automatic first
down.
Newton then scrambled for 12 yards to put Carolina
firmly in field goal range, but were still thinking touchdown as that would put
the game on ice. However, they were ultimately stopped on a 4th-and-1
and, not willing to risk going for it, Panthers head coach Ron Rivera opted to
take the points with Gano hitting the 36-yard attempt to even the score for the
sixth time on the afternoon. Now with just over two minutes left, Dalton took
the reins and methodically worked the Bengals downfield. The biggest play of
the drive came when the Red Rifle found seventh-round draft pick James Wright for
a 24-yard gain, with an admittedly-questionable roughing the passer penalty setting
the Bengals up in the red zone.
Not wanting to risk anything further, the Bengals ran
the clock down to just two seconds left to preserve the game-winning field goal
attempt from 36 yards away. While the snap and hold were good, Nugent’s kick
drifted to the right of the uprights, much like Gano’s missed kick earlier in
the game. With no time left, the game concluded in a 37-37 draw, the first tie
game in the history of the Carolina Panthers while the Bengals’ last tie had
occurred relatively recently in 2008. Most notably, though, this set a new NFL
record for the highest-scoring game to end in a draw, surpassing the mark of
35-35 set by four different contests from 1955 to 1974.
This is also an important game for myself personally, as
I was actually in attendance for this game. Of course, I wish that the Bengals
had been able to make that last kick and get the win, but I definitely
recognize the historical significance of it nonetheless. As both a Bengals fan
and a Panthers fan, this game still remains 10 years later as one of my all-time
favorites.
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| Photo Credit: Rita Miller |
Both Dalton and Newton ended the afternoon with
impressive stats, as Dalton threw for two touchdowns and 323 yards albeit with
two interceptions, while Newton passed for a pair of touchdowns for 284 yards
with one interception. The Bengals went on to make the playoffs with a 10-5-1
record, but were bounced out in the first round 26-10 by the Indianapolis
Colts. Meanwhile, the Panthers achieved the rare feat of making the playoffs
with a losing record, claiming the NFC South title at 7-8-1. The team scored a
first round victory over an injury-plagued Arizona Cardinals by a score of
27-16, but were unable to keep the Cinderella run going against the Seattle
Seahawks in the second round, losing 31-17.

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