Cincinnati scored on its first three possessions Sunday, then spent the rest of its time chasing Baltimore's Joe Flacco around the field, setting up a 17-7 victory that kept the surprising Bengals unbeaten in AFC North games.
The Bengals (6-2) can take control of the division by winning next Sunday at Pittsburgh; the Steelers (5-2) play Denver on Monday night. Cincinnati has won all four games in the division, including a sweep of the Ravens (4-4), who started fast but have self-destructed into mediocrity.
They've been at their worst against the Bengals, who took advantage of three Ravens penalties to pull off a winning drive in Baltimore on Oct. 11 for a 17-14 win.
The rematch had very little drama. Benson and the Cincinnati defense made it that way.
Benson was coming off the best game of his career: 189 yards against his former Bears team, a dominating performance that sent Cincinnati into its bye on an upbeat note. Refreshed by a weekend off, he was at it again, running for 117 yards and a touchdown.
Up 17-0 at halftime, it was only a matter of holding on. The Bengals did, with a lot of help from the self-destructive Ravens, who had 80 yards in penalties and missed a field goal. Their last chance slipped away when Flacco was sacked on three consecutive plays.
Last season, the Ravens went 11-5 and made the playoffs as a wild card, losing to Pittsburgh in the AFC title game. They opened this season 3-0 with Flacco showing growth in his second season.
Now, Baltimore has dropped four of its last five, making it a long shot to win the division.
Cincinnati scored on its first three possessions - touchdown, touchdown, field goal - against a defense that has struggled against the run lately, a surprising change. The Ravens hadn't allowed a 100-yard rusher for 39 consecutive games, a streak that Benson broke by piling up 120 in that win at Baltimore.
The Ravens have allowed a 100-yard rusher in three of the last four games. They've also hurt themselves on big plays - two pass interference penalties extended Cincinnati's second touchdown drive.
That's not all.
Ray Rice's 1-yard touchdown run cut it to 17-7 early in the fourth quarter, the Ravens' only drive of the game. They got their chance to make it close when Ed Reed stripped Chad Ochocinco after a catch at midfield, but Steve Hauschka hooked a 38-yard field goal try with 6:12 left.
Bengals receiver Chris Henry broke his left forearm in the second quarter, when he made a catch and was immediately tackled. He ranks sixth on the team in receiving.
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