The Detroit Lions visit the Cincinnati Bengals in Week 5, with kickoff set for 4:25 PM ET on Sunday, October 5, 2025. The weather at Paycor Stadium could be a factor, as there is a slight chance of thunderstorms for the entire game. Let’s check out the further details.
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At kickoff, the temperature will sit at 84 degrees Fahrenheit. Skies will be mostly clear with only 3% cloud cover. Winds will come from the southwest at 6 miles per hour, with occasional gusts up to 8 mph. Humidity will be around 39%, and visibility will remain at a full 10 miles. There is only a 1% chance of rain, making conditions near perfect for football.
By the second quarter, readings stay consistent at Paycor Stadium. The temperature will be 83 degrees. Winds shift slightly south, still at 5 mph, with gusts up to 9 mph. Cloud cover remains minimal at 3%. Humidity increases to 40%, while the dew point remains the same as kickoff time at 56 degrees. No significant changes are expected, keeping the game environment stable.
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In the third quarter, the weather continues to hold. Temperatures dip slightly to 82 degrees. Winds will come from the southeast at 5 mph with gusts up to 9 mph. Cloud cover rises to 4%. Humidity ticks up to 41% with the dew point steady at 56 degrees. The weather remains clear with 1% chance of rain.
By the fourth quarter, evening sets in with a small cooldown. The temperature drops to 79 degrees. Winds will still be at 5 mph, from southeast, with gusts near 9 mph. Humidity climbs to 47%, and the dew point reaches 57 degrees. Skies stay mostly clear with only 4% cloud cover. Visibility holds at 10 miles. Overall, the forecast is stable throughout all four quarters.
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Happy Caturday before the clash of the big cats pic.twitter.com/BITUkhJpBn
— Detroit Lions (@Lions) October 4, 2025
Temperatures will gradually drop from the 80s to the 70s. Winds stay light at Paycor Stadium, never exceeding 10 mph. Humidity levels remain moderate and comfortable, with no impact on play. The chance of precipitation remains at 1%, essentially ruling out rain.
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The only things that could worry players, coaches, and fans are the thunderstorms. It could spoil the Lions’ consistent run.
Lions coming to Paycor Stadium to change history
The Detroit Lions and Cincinnati Bengals last met on October 17, 2021, at Ford Field. It was Year 1 of Dan Campbell and Jared Goff in Detroit, and things were rough. The Lions came in winless at 0-5, while the Bengals were 4-2 behind second-year quarterback Joe Burrow. Cincinnati dominated that game, winning 34-11. Burrow threw for 271 yards and three touchdowns, while Goff managed just 202 yards with one interception. The Bengals rolled up 398 yards of total offense, including 142 on the ground, and they carried that momentum all the way to the Super Bowl later that year.
Fast forward to 2025, and the story is very different. Burrow is out with a toe injury that will sideline him for most of this season. Without him, the Bengals have dropped two straight and sit at 2-2. The Lions, on the other hand, have caught fire. They’re 3-1 and have secured three straight wins while averaging 41.3 points per game, and that could carry over into this matchup. Still, history hasn’t been kind to Detroit in this rivalry.
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The Lions are just 3-10 all-time against the Bengals. Their first-ever win came back in 1970 in a 38-3 blowout, but since then, Cincinnati has never allowed them to dominate. Detroit’s most recent victory came way back in 1992, when Barry Sanders gashed the Bengals for 151 yards and a touchdown, and that time-rookie kicker Jason Hanson hit four field goals. That was over three decades ago, and the Lions haven’t beaten Cincinnati since.
So here we are, Week 5 of 2025. The Lions have the momentum, but the Bengals don’t have Joe Burrow. The history books say Cincinnati owns this rivalry, but the present says Detroit has never had a better chance to flip the script.
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