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Cincinnati Bengals

Cincinnati Bengals
Current season
Established 1967; 50 years ago (1967)
First season: 1968
Play in and headquartered in Paul Brown Stadium
Cincinnati, Ohio
Cincinnati Bengals logo
Cincinnati Bengals wordmark
Logo Wordmark
League/conference affiliations

American Football League (1968–1969)

National Football League (1970–present)

Current uniform
AFCN-Uniform-CIN.PNG
Team colors

Black, Orange, White

              
Mascot Who Dey
Personnel
Owner(s) Mike Brown
President Mike Brown
General manager Mike Brown
Head coach Marvin Lewis
Team history
  • Cincinnati Bengals (1968–present)
Championships
League championships (0)

Conference championships (2)

Division championships (9)

Playoff appearances (14)
Home fields

American Football League (1968–1969)

National Football League (1970–present)

Black, Orange, White

Conference championships (2)

Division championships (9)

The Cincinnati Bengals are a professional American football franchise based in Cincinnati, Ohio. The Bengals currently compete in the National Football League (NFL) as a member club of the league's American Football Conference (AFC) North division. Their home stadium is Paul Brown Stadium in downtown Cincinnati. Their current head coach is Marvin Lewis, who has held the position since 2003 and is currently the second-longest tenured head coach in the NFL, behind the New England Patriots' Bill Belichick. Their chief rivals are the Pittsburgh Steelers, Cleveland Browns, and the Baltimore Ravens.

The Bengals were founded in 1966 as a member of the American Football League (AFL) by former Cleveland Browns head coach Paul Brown. Brown was the Bengals' head coach from their inception to 1975. After being dismissed as the Browns' head coach by Art Modell (who had purchased majority interest in the team in 1961) in January 1963, Brown had shown interest in establishing another NFL franchise in Ohio and looked at both Cincinnati and Columbus. He ultimately chose the former when a deal between the city, Hamilton County, and Major League Baseball's Cincinnati Reds (who were seeking a replacement for the obsolete Crosley Field) was struck that resulted in an agreement to build a multipurpose stadium which could host both baseball and football games. Due to the impending merger of the AFL and the NFL, which was scheduled to take full effect in the 1970 season, Brown agreed to join the AFL as its tenth and final franchise. The Bengals, like the other former AFL teams, were assigned to the AFC following the merger. Cincinnati was also selected because, like their neighbors the Reds, they could draw from several large neighboring cities (Louisville and Lexington, Kentucky; Columbus, Dayton, and Springfield, Ohio; and Indianapolis, Indiana) that are all no more than 110 miles (180 km) away from downtown Cincinnati.


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Wikipedia

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