Want a quick summation of Monday night's matchup between the Cincinnati Bengals and Denver Broncos? Here you go: One-sided. There was little doubt in this prime-time affair as the Broncos rolled over Cincinnati, 28-3, to claw to 2-2 on the season, while the offense -- mainly Bo Nix -- enjoyed a bounce-back performance after a sluggish start to the season.
Speaking of sluggish, using that to describe the Bengals offense would do a disservice to the world itself. Initially, it looked as if Cincinnati would give themselves a puncher's chance in this game, despite coming into it as a 7.5-point underdog. It took the opening possession and moved all the way down inside the Denver 10-yard line before settling for a field goal and an early lead. However, that'd be the last time they'd enter Broncos territory for the rest of the night. At no point after that opening drive did Cincinnati cross the 50-yard line, resulting in another demoralizing defeat where the Joe Burrow-less offense floundered.
Jake Browning completed 14 of his 25 passes for 125 yards in the losing effort. The Bengals quarterback, who entered Week 4 with a NFL-high five interceptions, didn't commit a turnover in this game, but that was largely due to conservative pass attempts.
As for the other quarterback in the game in Nix, it was a different story entirely. The second-year QB had his best performance of the season, completing 29 of his 42 throw for 326 yards, two touchdowns and an interception. This could be the outing that rights the ship and spells the chatter about a sophomore slump.
Play of the game
The rout was on after the Broncos forced a three-and-out of the Bengals offense and quickly regained possession with just under a minute left in the first half. At that point, Nix uncorked a couple of impressive passes into tight windows. First, he found Marvin Mims Jr. on a third-and-10 throw for 28 yards to push Denver into Cincinnati territory. The dagger, however, came four plays later when Nix fired a laser over the middle to Courtland Sutton, who made an acrobatic catch to extend the lead to three scores just before halftime.
Sutton finished his night with five catches for 81 yards and that score.
Bo Nix eases 'sophomore slump' concerns ... for now
Nix didn't look his best through the first three weeks of the regular season, to the point where uncomfortable conversations about a possible sophomore slump were starting to bubble to the surface.
For at least one week, however, he eased those concerns with a strong showing Monday night. Nix finished with three total touchdowns (two passing and one rushing) while completing nearly 70% of his passes. Beyond the box score, he looked much closer to the quarterback who led Denver to the playoffs last season than the one we saw to start 2025. He consistently fit the ball into tight windows and logged five completions of 20 or more yards in the win. His numbers could've been even bigger if not for five drops by his pass-catchers.
In general, those worrying about Nix can exhale -- for now. But it wasn't a perfect outing for the second-year quarterback. His lone blemish was a costly one: an end-zone interception. The turnovers need to subside, as he's now thrown four interceptions this season, a rate that isn't sustainable if Denver wants to make another playoff push.
Marvin Mims Jr. is ready for takeoff
Don't let Marvin Mims Jr. get hot. The Broncos receiver emerged at the tail end of last season as a key catalyst in Denver's postseason surge. Before Monday night, though, he'd been quiet in 2025, totaling just six catches for 40 yards and a touchdown through three games. That changed in this win. Mims hauled in all six of his targets for 69 yards and added a 16-yard rushing touchdown to his stat line. If Denver keeps scheming ways to get the ball into his hands, the payoff could be an even more explosive offense moving forward.
Bengals issues go beyond Jake Browning
The conversation around Cincinnati's offensive struggles will naturally gravitate toward the quarterback position. And while that's certainly part of the problem, it goes deeper than Jake Browning. The Bengals repeatedly shot themselves in the foot with mistakes that had little to do with QB play. They committed 11 accepted penalties -- six on offense (mostly on the offensive line), one on defense and four on special teams. That's undisciplined football, and it falls squarely on head coach Zac Taylor. On top of that, the defense couldn't get off the field, allowing Denver to rack up 512 yards of total offense. The issues extend well beyond the deficiencies under center.
However, Jake Browning is still a problem
While Cincinnati's 0-2 mark with Browning as the starter isn't entirely on him, it hasn't been good for the veteran quarterback, either. As noted above, he avoided throwing an interception in this game, but that was largely because he rarely took risks pushing the ball downfield. On the few occasions he did, his sideline attempts often sailed out of bounds. Browning also struggled to get the ball to his elite receivers: Tee Higgins managed just one catch after the opening drive, while Ja'Marr Chase caught five of eight targets but for only 23 yards, most of them around the line of scrimmage. When you can't consistently cross midfield, it raises serious questions about whether this quarterback is the right one for the job.