Sunday, Dec. 3 1:00pm ET
Dillon does it again for Cincy
 
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CINCINNATI (AP) -- With a white towel wrapped around his waist and a look of exhaustion on his face, Corey Dillon slowly walked to his dressing stall and plopped down.

"Oh," he half-moaned. "I'm extremely tired."

Corey Dillon
Corey Dillon scored from one yard out to give the Bengals a 14-0 lead in the second quarter.

Imagine how the Arizona Cardinals' defense felt after chasing him around all afternoon.

Dillon set two Bengals records and made the difference in a ragged game befitting the NFL's two worst teams since 1990. He ran for 216 yards -- his third-best game -- to set up Cincinnati's 24-13 victory Sunday.

He also had a 1-yard touchdown run as part of the biggest game ever against the Cardinals (3-10). The Los Angeles Rams' Charles White ran for 213 yards on Nov. 17, 1987.

"We had everything that we could throw at them today to stop the run," said Cardinals coach Dave McGinnis, his nose and cheeks bright red from the 18-degree wind chill. "We had five linemen in the game. We blitzed them. We knew coming in this was a very, very dangerous back."

No matter what the Cardinals tried, Dillon kept going. He carried on 35 of the Bengals' 78 plays -- the only time he's had more carries was his 246-yard game as a rookie in 1997.

TOM DONAHOE'S BREAKDOWN
Question on the Cardinals: How would you rebuild the Cardinals in the offseason?
Donahoe: The Cardinals have a massive rebuilding job to do in the offseason. Even with the replacement of coach Vince Tobin, things have not significantly improved. For years the Cardinals have had high draft picks and have done little with them. Arizona has problems -- they've struggled on offense and today their defense allowed the Bengals to do just about anything they wanted to. It may take a complete housecleaning to get this organization headed in the right direction.

Question on the Bengals: Is it wise for Corey Dillon to stay in Cincinnati?
Donahoe: Dillon has proven his value to the Bengals this year. From the Bengals' perspective, it is imperative that they sign him. He can be the cornerstone of an offense -- someone to build a game plan around. The Bengals have some talent, and coach Dick LeBeau has done a fine job getting players focused and playing with more enthusiasm and direction. From Dillon's perspective, he will have to decide what will factor most into his decision. But if he stays with the Bengals, they could be a promising and competitive NFL football team.

Tom Donahoe, ESPN.com's NFL analyst, was formerly the Steelers' director of football operations.

The Bengals (3-10) have gotten two of their wins because Dillon had big games. He ran for an NFL-record 278 in a 31-21 win over Denver on Oct. 22.

"It's really typical of what he's done all year," said Scott Mitchell, who completed 11 of 23 for 109 yards in his first game back from a sprained knee. "It's just really amazing."

Both teams had a touchdown nullified by penalty and the kickers had trouble on the chewed-up grass field that was an expanse of divots and dirt. There were three missed field goals and a wide extra-point try as the kickers slipped around.

In all the muck and mistakes, Dillon was the one constant. His 18th 100-yard game set a club record and pushed his season total to 1,278 yards, breaking James Brooks' mark of 1,239 yards in 1989.

"I'm impressed that we stayed with our methods and fought for 60 minutes and won a ballgame," Dillon said. "I'm more impressed with that than the yardage."

Cincinnati's bulky offensive line bowled over the Cardinals, creating big running lanes. The Bengals got ahead 21-0 early in the third quarter on Brandon Bennett's 7-yard touchdown run, giving Cincinnati its biggest lead in 16 games.

Jake Plummer came up one interception shy of pulling off a comeback. His touchdown passes of 38 and 15 yards to David Boston cut it to 21-13 with 13:45 to play -- Cary Blanchard was wide on the extra-point try.

Tom Carter intercepted Plummer at the Bengals 7-yard line with 8:27 left, and Cincinnati essentially ran out the clock in a 17-play drive that lasted more than seven minutes and culminated in Neil Rackers' 32-yard field goal.

The Bengals ran 14 times during the clinching drive, which featured Dillon changing fields and running around left end for a first down on 4th-and-2 at the Arizona 31-yard line.

"Just to lose is frustrating, and to lose to the Bengals is even more frustrating," Cardinals running back Michael Pittman said. "I mean, the Cincinnati Bengals ... I can't say anything bad about them because we lost to them, but it hurts big-time losing to the Cincinnati Bengals."

The Bengals sold only 50,289 tickets, 15,000 below capacity. Cincinnati has sold out only two of its seven games in its new stadium. Of the seven, this one was the most ragged.

The Bengals had a touchdown run by Dillon nullified by a holding penalty, Rackers missed field-goal attempts from 36 and 45 yards and the secondary left Boston uncovered on his 38-yard touchdown catch.

The Cardinals were even worse. Blanchard hit the right upright on a 31-yard field goal attempt and missed an extra point. Mac Cody's 72-yard punt return for a touchdown early in the fourth quarter was nullified by a holding penalty on cornerback Corey Chavous.

Chavous also was called for three other penalties, including third-down holding and interference penalties that sustained Bengals drives.

Game notes
Cardinals OL Lester Holmes bruised his left elbow in the first quarter. LB Ray Thompson sprained his left knee in the second quarter. ... Since 1990, the Cardinals are 51-112 and the Bengals are 55-118. ... Blanchard, a nine-year veteran, called it the worst field he's ever played on in the NFL. ... Cardinals S Tommy Bennett kicked his gym shoe across the locker room after the game when he found a mouse in it. There are mouse traps around the stadium. ... Plummer, sidelined last week by a sore thumb and ribs, finished 22-of-44 for 278 yards. ... Bengals CB Rodney Heath hurt his shoulder and was listed as doubtful for next week's game. He expected to get X-rays.
 


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