It is the first game of 2006's Wild Card game against the Steelers it was the longest passing sequence during Bengals playoff history, as well as the conclusion of the short time that Palmer was an elite quarterback in the NFL. The play ends with buy MUT 23 ltds Henry getting sacked at the Steelers 22. Palmer fell to his 5feet, supine and flailing after Kimo von Olhoeffen struck him on the ground and broke his ACL and MCL.
However, this doesn't mean that Palmer hasn't been a good player since the time he was able to recover quickly and played all 16 games in his sophomore year (no problem; just ask Robert Griffin III) and even made it to the Pro Bowl. But it was the Palmer of 2005 -- who was the leader of his team in Madden NFL 23 with 32 touchdown passes and an 67.8 completion rate while throwing 12 interceptions during his second year as a starter appeared. His accuracy declined as the Bengals organization's problems resurfaced, and he struggled with elbow problems, likely the effect of throwing onto his knee that was surgically repaired.
His time with Cincinnati ended when the Bengals went 4-12 over the 2010 season, Palmer's eighth time with the team. Palmer has stated that he'd like to retire at 31 rather than play for the Bengals for another time: "I have $80 million in the bank. I don't need to play football to earn money. I'll play because I love the game , but that passion would have to be elsewhere. I'm ready to live my life to the fullest." Consider that for a second: Palmer, the first overall pick in the 2003 Madden NFL 23 Draft, younger than both Tom Brady and Peyton Manning and was determined to never play again in football at around 31. That's how much playing for the Bengals sucks ass.
Bengals the owner Mike Brown, who created his perpetual failure machine with cheap MUT 23 ltds money and nepotism, refused to take draft picks for free from a quarterback-starved league. "Carson signed an agreement. He made a commitment. He backed up his word," Brown said. "We believed in his word. We relied on his word. We expected him perform in this regard. He's going out from his obligation. We're not going to reward him for that."