Bengals can’t possibly screw up the Joe Burrow pick, right?

Joe Burrow Bengals NFL Draft

Mark J. Rebilas-USA TODAY Sports

LSU quarterback Joe Burrow finished up his collegiate career with yet another brilliant performance in a blowout win over the Clemson Tigers in Monday night’s National Championship Game.

Burrow tallied 521 total yards and six touchdowns, throwing dime after dime in the process. He’s seen as a generational quarterback and the consensus No. 1 overall pick in the 2020 NFL Draft.

It’s now time for the highly-regarded signal caller to turn his attention to the pre-draft process and the annual event in Las Vegas this coming April.

It’s also time for the downtrodden Cincinnati Bengals to pretty much close up shop on their big board for the No. 1 overall pick. Select Burrow, and don’t think twice.

The short of it: Cincinnati has pretty much been in quarterback purgatory since Carson Palmer suffered an elbow injury in 2008 and never really returned to form. Sorry, Andy Dalton was the definition of quarterback purgatory during his career.

There’s a lot of high-level prospects heading into the 2020 NFL Draft. None of them will make the same franchise-altering impact as Mr. Burrow. And that’s the biggest key.

Don’t make the mistake: There has to be some draw to selecting Ohio State product Chase Young No. 1 overall. We’re here to say that makes absolutely no sense.

The Zac Taylor dynamic: Cincinnati hired an offensive-minded head coach who worked wonders with Jared Goff in Los Angeles. The fit is perfect.

We’re not talking about your average quarterback: What Burrow did this past season for the Tigers is historical. It’s unprecedented.

Finding the light at the end of the tunnel: Could Burrow finally be the quarterback to lead this Bengals team out of the doldrums?

Cincinnati’s history in the NFL Draft raises some alarm. Can the team move past its recent struggles in this regard? After all, these struggles have been something to behold.

YearPickPlayer
201424Darqueze Dennard
201521Cedric Ogbuehi
201624William Jackson
20179John Ross
201821Billy Price
201911Jonah Williams

Cincinnati’s six most-recent first-round picks started a combined 24 games for the team this past season. That’s just disastrous stuff, and it leads us to our final point.

Bottom line

Normally, someone of Burrow’s ilk would be a lock to go No. 1. That’s until we realize we’re talking about one of the worst run organizations in football over the past several decades.

Cincinnati can’t afford to mess this up. It earned the No. 1 pick by putting up one of the worst seasons in franchise history.

Anything less than going with the LSU standout would be see as a failure of epic proportions and lead the team’s fan base right back into hiding with paper bags over their heads.

Don’t mess this up, Cincy!

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