BILLS 27, VIKINGS 6
MINNEAPOLIS – Josh Allen played with the poise of a
well-seasoned quarterback for the Buffalo Bills by accounting for three
touchdowns in his first road start in the NFL. Allen made Minnesota’s Kirk
Cousins look like the raw rookie in a stunning 27-6 upset of the Vikings on
Sunday.
Cousins had three turnovers, including a lost fumble on a
third-down sack inside Minnesota’s 20-yard line, on each of the first two
possessions. Buffalo turned those recoveries into 10 points and was on cruise
control by midway through the second quarter as the crowd at U.S. Bank Stadium
cranked up the boos.
The Vikings (1-1-1) were 16 1/2-point favorites when the
game began, allowing the Bills (1-2) to become only the sixth such underdog in
the NFL’s last 81 point spreads that big. After being outscored 75-9 over their
first six quarters of the season, the Bills have enjoyed a 41-9 advantage over
the last six periods.
Allen, 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, including 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. He settled almost exclusively for safe
underneath or sideline throws, but took advantage of several broken coverages
by the Vikings for chain-moving gains.
Where Allen did the most damage was on the ground, putting
together a mini-highlight film with his feet while injured running back LeSean
McCoy watched in team-colored sweats – with a big smile – from the sideline.
SAINTS 43, FALCONS
37, OT
ATLANTA – Drew Brees’ 1-yard run capped an 80-yard touchdown
drive to open overtime. Brees’ score came after his apparent 3-yard TD pass to
Alvin Kamara was overturned on video review that determined Kamara’s knee was
down before the goal line. Brees scored on a keeper on the following play,
giving the Saints (2-1) the win on the day the 39-year-old quarterback set the
NFL record for career completions.
Brees passed for 396 yards and three touchdowns and ran for
two scores. Kamara had 15 catches for 124 yards and ran for 66 yards.
Brees’ biggest play before the winner might have been his
improbable 7-yard scoring run with 1:15 remaining that forced overtime. He ran
to his left and then spun to avoid tackle attempts by Brian Poole and Robert
Alford.
Atlanta’s Matt Ryan had his first career game with five
scoring passes, including three to rookie Calvin Ridley. That wasn’t enough for
the Falcons (1-2) against the high-scoring Saints, who gained 534 yards.
Ryan passed for 374 yards, including 146 to Ridley, the
first Falcons rookie with three scoring catches. Ridley, who had seven
receptions, including a 75-yard TD, had his first game with more than one
touchdown reception in his first game with at least 100 yards receiving.
EAGLES 20, COLTS
16
PHILADELPHIA – Carson Wentz threw a touchdown pass on his
first drive in nine months, and then Wendell Smallwood ran in from the 4 for
the go-ahead score.
Adam Vinatieri tied Morten Andersen’s career record of 565
field goals by connecting on all three tries, but the Colts (1-2) couldn’t take
advantage of two turnovers by Wentz inside the 20 in the second half.
The defending Super Bowl champion Eagles (2-1) needed two
defensive stops against Andrew Luck in the final 90 seconds. Indy had a first
down at the Eagles 11 and two cracks from the 4, but Luck’s pass to T.Y. Hilton
sailed over his shoulder in the left corner of the end zone on third down and
Derek Barnett sacked Luck on fourth down.
The Colts got the ball again at their 11 with 39 seconds
remaining but couldn’t reach midfield. Jacoby Brissett threw a desperation pass
on the final play that fell incomplete.
Playing his first game since he tore two ligaments in his
left knee last Dec. 10, Wentz engineered the winning drive with precise passes
and nifty moves. Wentz eluded a sack and threw a 10-yard pass to Nelson
Agholor, who hurdled for a first down on third-and-9 to extend the drive at the
Colts 26.
Four plays later, Smallwood scored to make it 20-16.
Fans welcomed back Wentz with a standing ovation when he ran
through the tunnel during introductions.
RAMS 35, CHARGERS
23
LOS ANGELES – Jared Goff passed for 354 yards and three
touchdowns, and Todd Gurley rushed for 105 yards and another score, leading the
Rams over the Chargers in the franchises’ first meeting since their relocations
to Los Angeles.
Cory Littleton blocked a punt in the end zone and Blake
Countess recovered for an early touchdown for the Rams (3-0), who racked up 521
yards and remained one of the NFL’s four unbeaten teams.
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. The teams put on an uncommonly entertaining show for a Coliseum
crowd of 68,947 containing a surprisingly significant turnout of Chargers fans,
but the Rams’ offensive brilliance kept them ahead all day.
Robert Woods caught two TD passes and Cooper Kupp (Eastern
Washington) made a 53-yard scoring catch from Goff, who went 29 for 36 in one
of his most impressive pro performances.
Philip Rivers passed for 226 yards and hit Mike Williams
with two touchdown passes for the Chargers (1-2), whose two losses have come
against the powerhouse Chiefs and Rams without injured pass rusher Joey Bosa.
Melvin Gordon rushed for 80 yards and a score.
SEAHAWKS 24,
COWBOYS 13
SEATTLE – Russell Wilson threw for two touchdowns in the
first half, Chris Carson added a 5-yard TD run in early in the fourth quarter,
and the Seahawks avoided an 0-3 start.
Wilson hit Jaron Brown on an 16-yard touchdown early in the
second quarter, and later hit Tyler Lockett streaking up the sideline on a
52-yard scoring pass as Seattle (1-2) built a 17-3 halftime lead and cruised
past the Cowboys.
The duo of Dak Prescott and Ezekiel Elliott didn’t have the
answers against a Seattle defense that had safety Earl Thomas on the field and
welcomed back Bobby Wagner after the Seahawks’ defensive leader missed Week 2
with a groin injury. Prescott was intercepted twice by Thomas, including with
3:09 remaining at the Seattle 15 on a deflected pass, with Thomas bowing to the
Dallas sideline at the end of the play.
Prescott was sacked five times and Dallas (1-2) had just 58
net yards passing entering the fourth quarter. Elliott had momentary flashes,
busting off a few long runs, but they were too infrequent for Dallas’ stagnant
offense.
CHIEFS 38, 49ERS
27
KANSAS CITY, Mo. – After winning his first three starts, all
away from Arrowhead Stadium, second-year pro Patrick Mahomes finally made his
regular-season home debut and torched San Francisco’s banged-up pass defense
for 314 yards and three touchdowns. Mahomes now has 13 touchdown passes without
an interception, breaking the NFL record for TD passes in the first three weeks
of a season. Peyton Manning threw 12 to start the 2013 campaign.
Mahomes’ touchdown passes to Chris Conley, Demetrius Harris
and Sammy Watkins, along with a pair of TD runs by Kareem Hunt, helped Kansas
City (3-0) race to a 35-7 lead late in the first half.
Few leads are safe against the Chiefs’ porous defense,
though.
The 49ers (1-2) rallied behind running backs Matt Breida and
Alfred Morris, who kept gouging the Chiefs’ defensive front, and Jimmy
Garoppolo, who threw for 251 yards and two scores. It was Garoppolo’s 11-yard
pass to Marquis Goodwin early in the third quarter that started the comeback,
and Morris scored on a short touchdown run later in the quarter to make it
35-24.
But Garoppolo was injured on a late run and was feared to
have torn his left ACL.
DOLPHINS 28,
RAIDERS 20
MIAMI GARDENS, Fla. – Receiver Albert Wilson threw a 52-yard
touchdown pass to put the Dolphins ahead midway through the fourth quarter, and
then turned a short reception into a 74-yard score that sealed it.
Miami coach Adam Gase used creative play calling to overcome
a wave of injuries and penalties, and a 17-minute deficit in time of
possession. The Dolphins scored on a pair of shovel passes by Ryan Tannehill
that each traveled less than a yard – one on the flip to Wilson, and an earlier
similar pass that Jakeem Grant caught before turning the corner for an 18-yard
score.
Thanks to all the flashy plays, the Dolphins are 3-0 for
only the third time since 1998. The Raiders, led by first-year coach Jon
Gruden, are 0-3 for the first time since 2014, when they started 0-10.
Oakland outgained the Dolphins 434-373, and Derek Carr threw
for 345 yards. But Xavien Howard intercepted him twice deep in Miami territory
and the Dolphins mounted a first-half goal line stand to stay in the game.
PANTHERS 31, BENGALS 21
CHARLOTTE, N.C. – Cam Newton threw for two touchdowns and
ran for two others, while Christian McCaffrey racked up a career-high 184 yards
rushing.
Newton completed 15 of 24 passes for 150 yards and ran for
36 yards as the Panthers (2-1) won their seventh straight home game going back
to last season.
McCaffrey, who tied a franchise record with 14 receptions
last week against Atlanta, did his damage on the ground this time with 28
carries. He surpassed his previous career high of 66 yards rushing and became
the first Carolina player with a 100-yard receiving game and a 100-yard rushing
game in back-to-back weeks.
Carolina had 230 yards rushing.
Andy Dalton was 29 of 46 with two touchdowns, but was
intercepted four times, including twice by rookie cornerback Donte Jackson.
Carolina’s defense, which allowed 432 yards and 31 points to
the Falcons last week, held the Bengals (2-1) to 66 yards rushing without Joe
Mixon in the lineup.
RAVENS 27, BRONCOS
14
BALTIMORE – Joe Flacco picked apart Denver’s depleted
defense for 277 yards and a touchdown. Connecting with eight receivers, Flacco
went 25 for 40 without an interception on a rainy afternoon. He threw 28 passes
in the first half, when Baltimore (2-1) took control.
The Ravens turned to their defense in the fourth quarter,
twice stopping drives inside their 15.
Flacco’s success came against a Denver backfield that began
the day without injured cornerback Adam Jones (thigh) and lost cornerback
Tramaine Brock (groin) in the first quarter. As a result, rookie Isaac Yiadom
saw significant playing time at right cornerback.
Javorious Allen caught a 12-yard touchdown pass and ran for
a score for the Ravens.
Denver was coming off two home wins, both by virtue of
fourth-quarter comebacks. This time, the Broncos could not rally after Allen’s
1-yard TD run made it 27-14 midway through the third quarter. Denver was inside
the Baltimore 5 with 9 minutes left before Case Keenum was intercepted by
Patrick Onwuasor, whose 89-yard return for a touchdown was wiped out by a block
in the back.
The Ravens took consolation in preventing Denver from
getting within a touchdown.
TITANS 9, JAGUARS
6
JACKSONVILLE, Fla. – Marcus Mariota came off the bench and
directed three scoring drives, including one in the fourth quarter. Mariota
replaced Blaine Gabbert in the first quarter after Gabbert was knocked out of
the game with a concussion.
Mariota sat out last week’s victory against Houston because
of an elbow injury sustained in the season opener. He had been experiencing arm
weakness along with numbness and tingling in two fingers. The injury affects
the velocity and spin he gets on the football. Mariota wore a glove on his
injured right hand and was able to do just enough to beat the Jaguars (2-1) for
the third straight time and fifth time in the past six meetings.
Mariota completed 12 of 18 passes for 100 yards and ran for
51 more, including a 15-yard gain on a third-and-1 play late.
The Titans (2-1) milked the clock from there and ended up
celebrating an early lead in the AFC South.
REDSKINS 31,
PACKERS 17
LANDOVER, Md. – Adrian Peterson ran for 120 yards and a pair
of 2-yard scores, Alex Smith threw two touchdown passes – all in the first half
– and the Redskins held on over a gimpy Aaron Rodgers and the Packers, who
again had complaints about a roughing-the-passer penalty on Clay Matthews.
On a rainy afternoon, the Redskins (2-1) moved out to leads
of 14-0 and, at halftime, 28-10, by putting together TD drives of 74, 75, 79
and 98 yards. Smith connected for TDs of 46 yards to Paul Richardson on the
game’s fourth play and of 9 to Jamison Crowder in the second quarter.
Peterson, who ran 19 times, raised his career total to 102
rushing touchdowns, breaking a tie at 100 with Marshall Faulk and Shaun
Alexander and moving him alone into seventh place in NFL history behind Emmitt
Smith’s record of 164. This was Peterson’s 52nd game with at least 100 yards on
the ground, and first since Nov. 5, 2017, for Arizona against San Francisco.
Playing with a bulky brace on his left knee, which he hurt
in Week 1, Rodgers hobbled and limped around, and couldn’t do enough to get the
Packers (1-1-1) back into the game. He finished 27 for 44 for 265 yards with
two TDs – of 64 yards to Geronimo Allison and 2 yards to Davante Adams – and
was sacked four times.
In the third period, Packers linebacker Matthews was flagged
for roughing Smith – and there are sure to be more questions about what
constitutes a penalty on such plays. Matthews broke in alone on Smith, wrapped
him and brought him down with a textbook tackle. Matthews immediately put his
arms up and slapped himself in the helmet as the flag was thrown. Packers coach
Mike McCarthy threw down a play-calling sheet and argued with two officials
about the call, even chasing one along the sideline as he backpedaled away.
GIANTS 27, TEXANS
22
HOUSTON – Eli Manning threw for 297 yards and two touchdowns
and rookie Saquon Barkley added a score.
The Giants (1-2) were up by 14 at halftime but had trouble
moving the ball in the second half and the Texans (0-3) had cut the lead to
five before Manning threw a 7-yard touchdown pass to Sterling Shepard with
about two minutes left.
Deshaun Watson threw a 4-yard touchdown pass to Lamar Miller
with 1 second left to cut the lead to 27-22, but New York recovered the onside
kick.
Watson threw for 385 yards and two scores, but his
interception was one of two second-half turnovers by the Texans, off to their
worst start since dropping their first four games of 2008.
Odell Beckham Jr. had nine receptions for 109 yards and
Barkley finished with 82 yards rushing as the Giants came one point shy of
matching their points total from their first two games combined.
BEARS 16,
CARDINALS 14
GLENDALE, Ariz. – Cody Parkey kicked his third field goal of
the game, a 43-yarder with 4:31 to remaining, to rally the Bears.
Sam Bradford threw two first-quarter touchdown passes to put
the Cardinals up 14-0, but was replaced by rookie Josh Rosen after fumbling the
ball deep in Chicago territory late in the game.
Rosen, the 10th overall pick in this year’s draft out of
UCLA, drew a standing ovation from the Cardinals crowd as he jogged on the
field. He drove Arizona past midfield, but on fourth-and-5 from the Bears 45;
his pass was intercepted by Bryce Callahan with 1:10 to play.
Arizona got the ball back one more time and the game ended
with Rosen sacked by Sherrick McManis, who also had one of two of Bradford’s
interceptions.
The Bears (2-1) intercepted three passes and recovered one
fumble. Arizona is 0-3 for the first time since 2004.
LIONS 26, PATRIOTS
10
DETROIT – Matt Patricia beat mentor Bill Belichick, seemingly
making all the right moves to help Detroit defeat New England, at Detroit.
The Lions (1-2) suddenly looked like a team with a plan on
offense and defense under their first-year coach, and former New England
assistant.
They opened the season with a 31-point loss to the New York
Jets at home and fell short in a comeback at San Francisco.
The Patriots (1-2) have had weaknesses exposed on both sides
of the ball, losing two of their first three games for the first time since
2012.
Kerryon Johnson had 101 yards rushing on 16 carries,
becoming the first player to reach the mark for the Lions 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.
No comments:
Post a Comment