SCOREBOARD
MONDAY, SEPT. 24
Pittsburgh at Tampa Bay, 8:15 p.m. Thanks to Ryan
Fitzpatrick and a talented collection of playmakers that
include DeSean
Jackson, Mike Evans, O.J. Howard and Chris Godwin,
the Buccaneers (2-0) are off to their best start in eight years and have the
NFL's top-ranked offense. The Steelers (0-1-1) are not far behind at No. 2;
however, inconsistency on defense has Ben
Roethlisberger & Co. winless through two weeks.
STARS
PASSING
- Drew Brees,
Saints, set the NFL record for career completions while passing for 396 yards
and three touchdowns and also running for two scores, including a 1-yard keeper
in overtime that lifted New Orleans past Atlanta 43-37.
- Patrick
Mahomes, Chiefs, tossed three more touchdown passes and finished
with 314 yards passing in a 38-27 victory over San Francisco. He has 13 TD
throws and no interceptions through three games.
- Cam Newton,
Panthers, threw for two touchdowns and ran for two others to help Carolina hand
Cincinnati its first loss of the season, 31-21.
- Matt Ryan,
Falcons, had his first career game with five touchdown throws and finished with
374 yards passing in Atlanta's 43-27 overtime loss to New Orleans.
- Jared Goff,
Rams, passed for 354 yards and three touchdowns in a 35-23 victory over the
Chargers.
- Eli Manning,
Giants, completed 25 of 29 throws for 297 yards and two TDs in a 27-22 victory
at Houston.
RUSHING
- Christian
McCaffrey, Panthers, racked up a career-high 184 yards rushing on 28
carries in Carolina's 31-21 victory over Cincinnati.
- Adrian
Peterson, Redskins, ran for 120 yards and a pair of 2-yard scores to
help Washington top Green Bay 31-17.
- Chris Carson,
Seahawks, finished with 102 yards, the first Seattle running back to top 100
yards since late in the 2016 season, and had a score in a 24-13 win over
Dallas.
- Todd Gurley, Rams, rushed for 105 yards and a TD on 23
carries in the Rams' 35-23 victory over the Chargers.
- Ezekiel
Elliott, Cowboys, ran for 127 yards on 16 attempts in a losing cause
as Dallas fell to Seattle, 24-13.
- Kerryon
Johnson, Lions, had 101 yards rushing on 16 carries in Detroit's
26-10 win over New England, becoming the first Lions player to reach the mark
since 2013.
RECEIVING
- Rookie Calvin Ridley,
Falcons, caught three touchdown passes while finishing with 146 yards receiving
on seven receptions in Atlanta's 43-37 overtime loss to New Orleans.
- Robert Woods,
Rams, had two touchdown catches to help Los Angeles beat the Chargers 35-23.
- Jordy Nelson,
Raiders, had 173 yards receiving and a touchdown on six receptions in Oakland's
28-20 loss at Miami.
- Alvin Kamara and Michael
Thomas, Saints. Kamara had a career-high 15 catches for 124 yards
and ran for 66 yards in New Orleans' 43-37 win at Atlanta, while Thomas caught
10 passes for 129 yards.
- Adam Thielen,
Vikings, had 14 receptions for 105 yards in Minnesota's 27-6 loss to Buffalo.
SPECIAL TEAMS
- Adam
Vinatieri, Colts, tied Morten Andersen's career record of 565 field
goals by connecting on all three of his tries in Indianapolis' 20-16 loss at
Philadelphia.
- Justin Tucker,
Ravens, kicked a pair of 52-yard field goals in Baltimore's 27-14 win over
Denver to give him six career games with multiple field goals of 50 yards or
more, an NFL record.
- Joseph Jones and Justin
Simmons, Broncos. Jones knocked away Sam Koch's
punt on Baltimore's first possession, while Simmons blocked Justin Tucker's
43-yard field goal attempt in the second quarter of Denver's 27-14 loss.
- Cory
Littleton and Blake
Countess, Rams. Littleton blocked a punt in the end zone and
Countess recovered it for a touchdown in a 35-23 win over the Chargers.
- Cody Parkey,
Bears, kicked his third field goal of the day, a 43-yarder with 4:31 to play,
to give Chicago the lead in a 16-14 victory over winless Arizona.
- Matt Prater,
Lions, booted field goals of 38, 25, 32 and 30 yards in Detroit's 26-10 win
over New England.
- Wil Lutz,
Saints, kicked field goals of 49, 21 and 45 yards and made all four of his
extra points in New Orleans' 43-37 overtime win at Atlanta.
DEFENSE
- J.J. Watt,
Texans, had three sacks, three tackles for losses, four quarterback hits and a
forced fumble in Houston's 27-22 loss to the New York
Giants.
- Earl Thomas,
Seahawks, intercepted Dak Prescott twice
to help lift Seattle to a 24-13 victory over Dallas.
- Xavien Howard,
Dolphins, had two interceptions in Miami's 28-20 win over Oakland.
- Efe Obada,
Panthers, had an interception, sack and two quarterback pressures to help
Carolina beat Cincinnati 31-21 in his first NFL game. He's the first player to
make an NFL 53-man roster from the new International Pathways Program.
- Justin
Houston, Chiefs, had two sacks and two forced fumbles while helping
Kansas City top San Francisco 38-27.
MILESTONES
With his 14th completed pass in New Orleans' 43-37 overtime
win at Atlanta, Drew Brees broke the record of 6,300 career completions set by
Hall of Famer Brett Favre. Brees set the mark with a 17-yard pass to Michael
Thomas in the second quarter. He has 6,326 completions. Brees also became the
first player in NFL history with at least 350 passing yards, three TD passes
and two rushing touchdowns without an interception in a game. ... Indianapolis'
Adam Vinatieri is tied with Morten Andersen with 565 career field goals. ...
New Orleans' Michael Thomas had 10 catches for 129 yards, giving him 38
receptions this year -- the most by an NFL player in his team's first three
games to start a season. His 28 catches through two games also were a record.
... Adrian Peterson has 102 TD runs, breaking a tie at 100 with Marshall Faulk
and Shaun Alexander to move into seventh place in NFL history behind Emmitt
Smith's record of 164. Next up at No. 6 is former Redskins star John Riggins,
at 104.
STREAKS & STATS
Kansas City's Patrick Mahomes threw three TDs in a 38-27 win
over San Francisco, giving him 13 this season without an interception. That
total broke the NFL record of 12 for the first three weeks of a season, set by
Peyton Manning during the 2013 campaign. ... Washington's Alex Smith had
his streak of 156 consecutive passes without an interception, the longest
active run in the league, and end in the second quarter of the Redskins' 31-17
win over Green Bay. Safety Ha Ha
Clinton-Dix made the pick when Jordan Reed went
one way and Smith threw another. ... Atlanta's Matt Ryan threw five TD passes
in a win over New Orleans, giving him 37 in his career against the Saints --
the most by any player. He surpassed Joe Montana's 33 TD passes against New
Orleans. Ryan's five TDs also tied the team record set by Wade Wilson on Dec.
13, 1992, at Tampa Bay. ... With running back Dalvin Cook (hamstring)
inactive and the score so lopsided, Minnesota set a franchise record for fewest
rushing attempts with six in a 27-6 loss to Buffalo. ... Kerryon Johnson had
101 yards rushing on 16 carries in Detroit's 26-10 win over New England,
becoming the first Lions player to reach the mark since Reggie Bush ran for 117
yards against Green Bay on Nov. 28, 2013. Detroit's 70-game stretch without a
100-yard rusher was the longest since the NFL-AFL merger.
STARTS
Oakland, led by first-year coach Jon Gruden, is 0-3 for the
first time since 2014, when it started 0-10. The Raiders have blown a
second-half lead in all three defeats. ... Houston is also 0-3, the Texans' worst
start since dropping their first four games of 2008. ... New England (1-2) has
lost two of its first three games for the first time since 2012.
BEATING THE ODDS
Buffalo became only the sixth 16-plus-point underdog winner
in the NFL's last 81 point spreads of that size by defeating Minnesota 27-6.
According to ESPN research, the last such winner was Washington over Dallas on
Dec. 3, 1995. "I don't think we took them too lightly," Vikings coach
Mike Zimmer said. "I think they came out and kicked our butts."
LA STORY
Jared Goff passed for 354 yards and three touchdowns, and
Todd Gurley rushed for 105 yards and another score, leading the Rams to a 35-23
victory over the Chargers on Sunday in the franchises' first meeting since
their relocations to Los Angeles. Two seasons after the Rams kicked off
professional football's return to the nation's second-largest market after 21
years away, two NFL teams based in Los Angeles met on the field for the first
time since Nov. 13, 1994.
WELCOME BACK, WENTZ
Philadelphia's Carson Wentz threw
a touchdown pass on his first drive in nine months, helping lift the Eagles to
a 20-16 victory over the Indianapolis
Colts. "It was a long time coming," Wentz said after
playing his first game since he tore two ligaments in his left knee last Dec.
10. "It felt great." Wentz finished 25 of 37 for 255 yards, one TD
and one INT.
IT'S TRICKY!
Trickery gave Miami its first lead of a 28-20 victory over
Oakland in the fourth quarter when Ryan
Tannehill handed off to Frank Gore,
who tossed the ball to Albert Wilson on
an end-around. Wilson -- a quarterback in high school -- then lobbed the first
pass of his NFL career to a wide-open Grant, who outmaneuvered two Raiders to
the end zone. Grant said the Dolphins work on the play every day in practice.
Wilson later scored the clincher when he scooted around the end after taking
Tannehill's short pitch and scored as he high-fived Grant. Wilson also became
the fourth player with a TD pass and TD reception of at least 50 yards in a
game, joining Hall of Famer Jimmy Conzelman (1923), Tom Tracy (1960) and David
Patten (2001).
BIG MAC
Carolina running back Christian McCaffrey, who tied a
franchise record with 14 receptions last week against Atlanta, did his damage
on the ground in a 31-21 win over Cincinnati. He surpassed his previous career
high of 66 yards rushing with 184 on 28 carries, becoming the first player in
franchise history to post a 100-yard receiving game and a 100-yard rushing game
in back-to-back weeks.
SLOPPY
Houston is searching for a way to eliminate penalties on
offense after committing several false starts and holding penalties in a 27-22
loss to the New York Giants. Right tackle Julien Davenport was the worst
offender and had three false start and two holding penalties. "It's the
story of penalties, mistakes," Davenport said. "I don't know how many
penalties I had, but way too much. Hurt this team badly. I've got to eliminate
it all."
NO JOSHIN'
Buffalo rookie quarterback Josh Allen accounted
for three touchdowns, helping the Bills beat the Vikings 27-6 on Sunday as
16+-point underdogs. The seventh overall pick in the draft out of Wyoming who
took the job earlier than expected in relief of a struggling Nathan
Peterman in the opener, completed 15 of 22 passes for 196
yards. That included a 26-yard touchdown pass to wide-open tight end Jason Croom.
Though Allen took three sacks and fumbled three times, the Bills were able to
recover all of them. Allen dived to finish a 10-yard run by beating Anthony Barr to
the pylon to finish the game's first drive. Later, on third-and-9, Allen
hurdled over Barr to land past the first-down marker. He capped that possession
with a 1-yard touchdown leap over the goal line on fourth down for a 24-0 lead
early in the second quarter.
IMMEDIATE IMPACT
Carolina defensive end Efe Obada had an interception, a key
fourth-quarter sack and two quarterback pressures in his first NFL game while
helping the Panthers to a 31-21 victory over Cincinnati. The Nigerian-born
Obada is the first player to make a 53-man roster from the recently formed NFL
International Pathways Program. He overcame being a victim of human trafficking
as a 10-year-old in the United Kingdom to become an NFL player. One of Obada's
pressures was initially ruled sack-fumble in the second quarter, but later
overturned by instant replay to an incomplete pass.
SIDELINED
San Francisco fears quarterback Jimmy
Garoppolo will miss the rest of the season after injuring the
anterior cruciate ligament in his left knee late in Sunday's 38-27 loss to
Kansas City. C.J. Beathard would
be in line to start at quarterback if Garoppolo is sidelined. Garoppolo was
flushed from the pocket and headed for the sideline in the fourth quarter when
he appeared to take an awkward step and his knee buckled just as Chiefs
cornerback Steven Nelson delivered
a shoulder-to-shoulder blow. Garoppolo wound up leaving on a cart. Also in that
game, cornerback Richard
Sherman left with a calf injury. ... Tennessee QB Blaine
Gabbert was knocked out of the game at Jacksonville in the first
quarter with a concussion. Punt returner Adoree Jackson also left with a
concussion. Jaguars defensive end Calais
Campbell left in the fourth quarter with a right ankle injury.
... Green Bay defensive lineman Wilkerson was carted off in the second
quarter against Washington with an ankle injury, and right tackle Bryan Bulaga left
with a back injury. ... Cincinnati wide receiver A.J. Green left
with a groin injury against Carolina. ... Rams cornerback Marcus Peters injured
his leg during the first half against the Chargers and had to be helped off the
field.
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