Risner, who starts his 92nd game Sunday and his seventh straight game this season, says it’s one of the best runs of his career.

“One thing (Peters) does great is adjust by player. What each player might be good at. What to teach players they can do differently,” Risner says. “It’s personally been great for me. It plays to my strengths.

“Playing with long arms, something I’m good at. Playing square in the pass game. Combinations in the run game. Hand placement. Independent hands. Things that benefit the game that I play.”

Now they have to play the best.

“Nobody like him,” says Peters, who saw Garrett every day for four years when they were with the Browns together. “Micah Parsons is explosive. Twitchy, fast, and has some strength. But he doesn’t have the range Myles has from a lateral perspective.”

Brown Jr., got a heavy dose of Garrett in the opener on the left side, the side where Garrett got his sacks.

“So strong. And the thing about him is that while he’s coming at you on the rush, he’s able to play the run, too, and you almost never see a guy be able to do that,” Brown Jr. said.

And, as Burrow says, he’s usually the best athlete on any field he takes.

Peters says at one point Sunday, each of his five linemen are going to find themselves one-on-one with Garrett. They move him, but he’ll be primarily over Brown on the offense’s left side. But Mims will see him some, too, as Garrett looks for places to exploit.

“They find ways to isolate him and prevent your help systems,” Peters says.

Willie Anderson chuckles from Atlanta when asked how he would block Garrett. That, says the man who blanked seven Hall-of-Famers, would be a problem.

“I ask myself all the time,” Anderson says. “I’m sitting here at 50 watching him on social media thinking what the 25-year-old me would do.

“You can’t just sit back there all the time on seven-step drops. He’ll eat you alive. He’s too athletic. Get on him faster than usual.”

The Steelers shut out Garrett last week, and Anderson says the Bengals have bigger and better tackles. But the Bengals have their own agenda that they have been using for the last 11 games, when they have the NFL’s second-most passing yards and second-most touchdown passes.

“When Ja’Marr and Tee (Higgins) and our tight ends are catching balls, and Joe is throwing,” Risner says, “we’re scoring. That’s our thing. Protect him.”