Search This Blog

Sunday, January 6, 2019

Thanks for Making Us Demand More Marv


            


            Like most fans, I was elated at the news that Marvin Lewis and the Bengals were parting ways. It was move that fans across Bengals Nation had been calling for since the 2015 playoff meltdown and the emotion behind grew ever season thereafter. This led us to December 31st, 2018 and the end of the rein of Marvin Lewis in Cincinnati.
            While it was a move that needed to happen and was far overdue, Marvin’s impact on the franchise can’t be understated. The team he inherited had become the laughing stock of the NFL and suffered one of the worst ten-year spans in the league’s history from 1992-2002. In his first season with the club he brought them to the .500 mark after going 2-14 the previous season. Two seasons later he led the Bengals to an AFC North Title, the first of four in his career.
            Marv had a great deal of success in as a head coach. His 131-122-3 record over 16 seasons is nothing to scoff at and earned him the most wins by a coach in franchise history. The previous 16 years the team went 98-173. Those years include 1988 Super Bowl run and two other playoff appearances. Considering this Marv did a pretty good job of raising the bar.
            I remember the excitement of the 2005 division championship. For a young fan with no recollection of the 1980’s it was the first taste of glory and I relished it. Over the next decade the Bengals remained a contender and left their fan base wanting more. The problem was more never came. The fans were forced to endure heartbreak after heartbreak. Out of the seven playoff appearances during the Lewis era the fans watched the orange and black fall to the Jets, Chargers, Colts, Texans twice, and worst of all two devastating defeats by the Pittsburgh Steelers.
             Honestly, Marv suffered a lot of bad breaks. His bad breaks began when Carson Palmer went down in the wildcard game back in January of 2006. From there they just kept coming. Whether it was lost draft picks like David Pollack and Chris Henry, untimely injuries such as 2014 and 2015 playoff appearances, or flat out one-sided officiating like the 2015 playoff disaster, Marvin Lewis took more than his fair share of bad breaks.

            
            In the end what does it all mean? The pessimist would argue that it was all a waste. Cincinnati has the same number of post season wins as they did 16 years ago. This would be narrow minded thinking and a total disservice to all the player and coaches who worked hard over that span. As a fanbase we owe Marv a lot. He pulled us from the dark ages and gave us four AFC North titles and seven playoff appearances.
            To slant quote the movie The Dark Knight, “you either leave the hero or hang around long enough to become the villain.” This is exactly what happened to Marv. For many years he was the answer to the Bengals’ prayers and I can honestly say that I really wish he could have retired as a Super Bowl champion. As Marv moves away from his time in Cincinnati I would like to say thank you. Thank you for the memories, thank you for making us proud to be Bengals fans, thank you for making us a contender, and thank you for making us demand more.