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Zac Taylor explains why Samaje Perine got carry on key play
Cincinnati Bengals head coach Zac Taylor Gary A. Vasquez-USA TODAY Sports

The Cincinnati Bengals’ play-calling and personnel decisions on their final two offensive plays of the Super Bowl left a lot to be desired.

The Bengals had a 3rd-and-1 at the Rams 49 trailing 23-20 in the final minute of the Super Bowl. Cincinnati had two timeouts and decided to run up the middle with Samaje Perine, their second-string running back, who rushed for no gain. They burned a timeout after the play. Then they passed on fourth down despite the Rams defense being all over Joe Burrow in the second half of the game. Burrow ended up throwing a desperation pass incomplete while being pressured by Aaron Donald.

Many wondered why the Bengals had Perine on the field for the 3rd-and-1 run rather than Joe Mixon, who had rushed for 72 yards in the game and averaged 4.8 yards per carry.

Bengals head coach Zac Taylor answered that question on Wednesday. He said he called the play late and turned down his running backs coach, who asked whether the head coach wanted to make a personnel change at running back.

Taylor noted that Perine is the team’s better blocking back, which is why they had him in the game — for pass protection. But that hurt them when they needed the better runner on the third-down play.

The inability to convert the last yard is what killed the Bengals at the end. They should have gotten the first down and then been close to field-goal range, with a chance to send the game to overtime.

Instead, the Rams stopped them on consecutive plays to seal the Super Bowl win.

Taylor was transparent with the media regarding the mistake, but there is no doubt that he blew it with the bad calls.

This article first appeared on Larry Brown Sports and was syndicated with permission.

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