Bengals make everyone laugh by looking hilariously out of place during postgame Thanksgiving dinner interview
The Bengals feasted during and after their win over the Ravens.
The Cincinnati Bengals weren’t expected to beat the Baltimore Ravens on Thanksgiving night, at least not according to the oddsmakers and the general public, and you could argue many of the players were surprised too by how they acted after the game.
It’s tradition after every Thanksgiving NFL game players of the winning team enjoy a feast provided by the broadcast and be interviewed while chowing down. Many Cincinnati players did so, and comedic gold was the result.
Let’s go through some of the moments that made this whole thing hilarious.
Joseph Ossai’s general bewilderment
I mean, what the heck was this? Lmfao. Ossai had two sacks on the night and celebrated with a turkey leg, but clearly didn’t expect a microphone to be in his face with a dry mouth.
“I just . . . I don’t know.”
Neither do we man, neither do we.
Joe Burrow looking for teammates to take some turkey
Burrow feasted on the Ravens’ defense in the second half, but didn’t let any of the postgame food touch his lips. Instead, he made sure everyone else got a bite of the grub he wanted no part of.
“I didn’t touch it,” Burrow said after the game. “I don’t know who made it, I don’t know where they made it, I’m good.”
Ja’Marr Chase’s honest review
Chase, who carved up Baltimore’s secondary with 110 yards on seven receptions in his return from suspension, was also in charge of carving up the turkey by Orlando Brown Jr.
“This [expletive] hot hold on!”
But how does it taste?
“Ain’t that bad.”
Fair enough.
William Wagner screams to the heavens
Wagner, the team’s rookie long-snapper, has probably never done any live TV interviews of this magnitude. A specialist is just happy to be featured as such.
Was he supposed to eat cold crab? Probably not. His reaction was shakespearean.
Cedric Johnson getting a to go order
There will always be leftovers, but sometimes you can’t wait to eat them before coming home. That’s how Johnson was feeling, clearly.
This was the first time Cincinnati has ever won a Thanksgiving game, and judging by how delighted they made everyone after the game, it wouldn’t surprise anyone to see them playing on this holiday again soon.
Cincinnati Bengals News
Joe Burrow describes his tale of two halves in Bengals’ win over Ravens, and the one throw that felt better than the rest
Joe Burrow came alive late in the Bengals’ much-needed win in Baltimore.