Sunday, October 27, 2013


Kaepernick leads 49ers over Jags 42-10 in London


AP - Sports



LONDON (AP) -- He ran. He threw. He conquered.
Colin Kaepernick did it all Sunday, rushing for two touchdowns and throwing for another to lead the San Francisco 49ers to their fifth straight victory, 42-10 over the winless Jacksonville Jaguars at Wembley Stadium.
''The offensive line did a great job, made it easy for me,'' said Kaepernick, who led the 49ers to the Super Bowl last year. ''I think this is one of the first game that we started that fast.''
Kaepernick ended up with 164 yards passing and 54 yards rushing, Frank Gore also ran for two scores and 71 yards, while Kendall Hunter rushed for 84 yards for the 49ers (6-2).
But it was Kaepernick that made the key plays by when the team needed it early.
''He looked much like a running back, and that's great courage,'' 49ers coach Jim Harbaugh said. ''You don't always see that in the quarterback position. As soon as he saw that window, he had a great dart and speed to get the ball into the end zone.''
The Jaguars (0-8) were the ''home'' team at London's iconic soccer venue, playing in the British capital for the first of their four-year run of regular-season NFL games in London.
They had plenty of fan support, too, with many of the 83,559 spectators waving their giveaway Jaguars flags throughout the evening.
None of that affected what was happening on the field, and on the field it wasn't pretty for the Jags.
''Our season's not over,'' Jaguars receiver Justin Blackmon. ''We're not going to just go out there and get our (butts) kicked, we're going to go back out there and fight.''
Kaepernick made his first big play on San Francisco's first possession, quickly throwing to fullback Bruce Miller on the right sideline for a 43-yard gain.
A few plays later, Kaepernick scrambled for 4 1/2 yards on a third-and 5, setting up Gore for a short gain and a first down.
After an incomplete pass, Gore ran 19 yards for the first touchdown.
Kaepernick took over the scoring after that, running 13 yards and diving into the corner for the second touchdown late in the first quarter, then passing to Vernon Davis in the corner of the end zone for another, and finally holding it and scrambling for 7 yards and a touchdown.
And all in the first half.
''Kaepernick is a stud athlete and he showed it again tonight,'' Jaguars linebacker Paul Posluszny said.
Besides a 38-yard field goal by Josh Scobee in the waning seconds of the half to make it 28-3, Jacksonville had little to be happy about. But the 49ers fumbled in their own territory late in the third quarter, giving the Jaguars their best chance to score. They took it as Chad Henne tossed a 29-yard touchdown pass to Mike Brown to make it 28-10 with 3:00 to go.
The Niners bounced right back, first with Kyle Williams returning the kick 47 yards before getting pushed out of bounds. Hunter ran 41 yards on the next play, bringing the ball to the Jacksonville 13.
Gore then ran for 9 yards, 2 yards and the final 2 on three straight plays for the touchdown.
San Francisco linebacker Dan Skuta scored the final points, recovering a fumble and running it back 47 yards for a touchdown after Marcedes Lewis let the ball loose following a 6-yard completion from Henne.
''There are definitely some plays that we needed to make, and the red zone really killed us,'' Henne said. ''If it's just players needing to make plays, we have to make them. We need to man up.'' MP64
Both teams have a bye next week, as is usual after the trip to London. The Jags then visit Tennessee on Nov. 10 while the 49ers host Carolina.
''The bye week is coming at a good time,'' Jaguars coach Gus Bradley said. ''We can take the time to evaluate where we're at with our whole team and recommit to take the next step.''
Sunday's encounter was the eighth regular-season NFL game at Wembley, the home of England's national soccer team, and the second this year. The Minnesota Vikings beat the Pittsburgh Steelers 34-27 last month.
Next year, there will be three games in London. The Jaguars will face the Dallas Cowboys in their second game of the four-game stretch, while the Detroit Lions will play the Atlanta Falcons and the Miami Dolphins will take on the Oakland Raiders.
Harbaugh seemed to love the experience of making the trip, likening it to another huge sporting event.
''The beginning of the game when they were playing the two national anthems, I felt like I was at the Olympics,'' Harbaugh said. ''As a youngster, I always wanted to be in the Olympics and at that moment I was feeling like the moment when they play the gold medal and the silver medal and the bronze medal, the different anthems.
''I got a chill when the gal was singing 'God Save the Queen.'''
NOTES: R&B artist Ne-Yo sang ''The Star-Spangled Banner'' and Laura Wright sang ''God Save the Queen.'' ... Former San Francisco quarterback Joe Montana and receiver Dwight Clark were the honorary captains for the 49ers. ... It was San Francisco's second game at Wembley. The Niners beat the Denver Broncos 24-16 in 2010.

By JOSH DUBOW (AP Sports Writer)

Raiders beat Steelers 21-18 for rare post-bye win
By JOSH DUBOW (AP Sports Writer)
10 minutes ago
AP - Sports

OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) -- One breathtaking sprint by Terrelle Pryor shook off any post-bye blues for the Oakland Raiders.

Pryor ran 93 yards on the first play from scrimmage for the longest touchdown run ever by a quarterback and Oakland won following a bye week for the first time since 2002, beating the Pittsburgh Steelers 21-18 Sunday.

Darren McFadden added two touchdown runs and the defense did the rest for the Raiders (3-4), who had been outscored by more than 13 points a game in losing their last 10 games out of the bye.

Ben Roethlisberger struggled against heavy pressure from Oakland's front, and Shaun Suisham missed two short field goals as Pittsburgh (2-5) squandered any momentum gained during back-to-back wins following an 0-4 start.

The Steelers took advantage by a fumble from Jacoby Ford to get in the end zone on a 9-yard pass to Emmanuel Sanders and cut the deficit to 21-10 early in the fourth quarter. But Roethlisberger also threw two interceptions in the fourth quarter.

Le'Veon Bell's 2-yard TD run followed by a 2-point conversion run by Sanders cut Oakland's lead to 21-18 with 1:24 remaining. But the Raiders recovered the onside kick.

The Steelers were hurt by three injuries on their offensive line. Starting left guard Ramon Foster left in the first half with a concussion, his backup Guy Whimper left in the third quarter with an injured left knee, and right guard David DeCastro left in the third quarter with a right ankle injury.

That helped the Raiders get the win despite generating no offense in the second half. Oakland had one first down and 34 yards of offense in the second half.

But a defense that sacked Roethlisberger five times and forced two second-half turnovers did enough to give the Raiders their third home win in as many games with Pryor as the starter this season.

Pryor was far from his best after the first play, completing 10 of 19 passes for 87 yards and two interceptions. He did have his second 100-yard rushing game of the season, finishing with 106 yards on nine carries.

The Steelers gained just 35 yards on the ground, allowing Oakland's defense to tee off on Roethlisberger. He withstood the pressure to complete 29 of 45 passes for 275 yards but it wasn't enough.

Pryor set the tone on the first play from scrimmage when he kept the ball on a read-option and used a strong block by Rod Streater on Troy Polamalu to sprint the length of the field. It was the longest run in Raiders history and longest touchdown run by a quarterback.

Oakland dominated the half as Pittsburgh gained 3 fewer yards in the opening two quarters than Pryor had on that one play to open the game.

The Raiders took advantage of a short field after a deflected punt by Rashad Jennings to make it 14-0 on McFadden's first touchdown run. McFadden's keeper from 4 yards from the wildcat formation in the closing minutes made it 21-3.

The Raiders survived a pair of interceptions in the half by Pryor, including a late one on a pass that hit receiver Brice Butler in the hands. Pittsburgh failed to capitalize on that gift when Suisham was wide right on a 34-yard field goal attempt in the closing seconds for his first miss of the season.

--- mp 64

Raiders Edge Steelers, 21-18


The Raiders topped the Steelers, 21-18, at home.
Terrelle Pryor finished the game 10 of 19 with 88 yards passing, one touchdown (0 pass, 1 rush) and two picks. On the Steelers side, Ben Roethlisberger went 29 for 45 with 275 yards passing, one touchdown and two picks.
Darren McFadden was a focal point for the Raiders, running at will on the Steelers for 73 yards on 24 carries with two touchdowns. Rod Streater caught four balls for 45 yards.
The Oakland defense was the deciding factor in the victory, giving up 35 yards rushing and 241 passing. They terrorized Roethlisberger and the Steelers offensive line with five sacks.
Steelers wide receiver Emmanuel Sanders provided some spark with 88 receiving yards and one touchdown. Wide receiver Antonio Brown had a good game as well with 82 receiving yards.
The Raiders will play host to the Eagles (3-5) next week while the Steelers head to Foxborough to face off with the Patriots (6-2).

Steelers Passing Leaders
GradeNameCompAttYdsTDsInt
D+70B. Roethlisbe294524112

Raiders Passing Leaders
GradeNameCompAttYdsTDsInt
D+67T. Pryor10198202

Steelers Rushing Leaders
GradeNamePAttYdsYdsATDs
C+78L. BellRB13241.81
--J. DwyerRB393.00
B86A. BrownWR122.00

Raiders Rushing Leaders
GradeNamePAttYdsYdsATDs
D+67T. PryorQB910611.81
A-91D. McFaddenRB24733.02
--M. ReeceRB3103.30

Steelers Receiving Leaders
GradeNamePRecYdsYdsATDs
A-91E. SandersWR78812.61
B86A. BrownWR9829.10
C72J. CotcheryWR33913.00

ミズノMP64アイアン
Raiders Receiving Leaders
GradeNamePRecYdsYdsATDs
C+77R. StreaterWR44511.30
C73D. MooreWR23216.00
C-71J. MastrudTE199.00

Highlights of Sunday's National Football League games



Highlights of Sunday's National Football League games


Reuters
Oct 27 (The Sports Xchange) - Highlights of Sunday's National Football League games:
- - -
Broncos 45, Redskins 21
Peyton Manning threw three of his four touchdown passes in the second half, and the Denver Broncos ran off 38 straight points to rally past the Washington Redskins.
Manning, playing on a sore ankle, completed 30 of 44 attempts for 354 yards passing in helping the Broncos (7-1) bounce back from their only loss of the season last week in Indianapolis and spoiling Redskins' coach Mike Shanahan's Denver homecoming.
Shanahan, who won two Super Bowls in 14 years as the Broncos' coach, was honored in a pre-game video tribute.
Washington led 21-7 before being broken down by the Broncos. Robert Griffin III left the game with about four minutes remaining after a hit by 335-pound defensive tackle Terrance Knighton, who came down on Griffin's left knee.
- - -
Bengals 49, Jets 9
Quarterback Andy Dalton threw a career-high five touchdowns, four of them to wide receiver Marvin Jones, and the Bengals rolled to their fourth consecutive win against the New York Jets.
Cincinnati (6-2) outgained the Jets (4-4) 402-240, including holding them to just one yard of offense in the first quarter, and returned two interceptions off of Jets rookie quarterback Geno Smith for touchdowns.
The 40-point margin of victory was their largest in 11 seasons under coach Marvin Lewis. Dalton finished with 325 yards on 19 of 30 passing with one interception.
- - -
Raiders 21, Steelers 18
Quarterback Terrelle Pryor made NFL and franchise history with a 93-yard touchdown run on the game's first play from scrimmage, sparking the Oakland Raiders to a victory over the Pittsburgh Steelers.
Pryor's touchdown run was the longest by a quarterback in NFL history, breaking former Steeler Kordell Stewart's mark of 80 yards set on December 22, 1996, against Carolina.
It was also the longest run from scrimmage, regardless of position, in Raiders history, breaking Bo Jackson's franchise record of 92 yards set on November 5, 1989, against Cincinnati.
The Raiders improved to 3-4 while the Steelers, who had won two straight games after losing their first four, fell to 2-5.
- - -
Cardinals 27, Falcons 13
Speedy Andre Ellington rushed for 154 yards, including an 80-yard touchdown scamper, as Arizona wore down the visiting Atlanta Falcons.
Ellington started the game in place of veteran Rashard Mendehall, who didn't play because of a toe injury that has nagged him for much of the season.
The Cardinals (4-4) snapped a two-game losing skid. Matt Ryan was intercepted four times as Atlanta (2-5) lost for the fourth time in its past five games.
- - -
Patriots 27, Dolphins 17
The New England Patriots, waking up from a deep first-half slumber, stormed from behind to beat the Miami Dolphins and stay within range of the AFC leaders.
Down 17-3 in the third quarter, New England (6-2) reeled off 24 straight points in sending the Dolphins (3-4) to their fourth straight loss.
Tom Brady, saddled with a 30.6 quarterback rating through the first possession in the second half, finished strong to get the needed win. Brady was playing with an apparent right hand injury but finished 13-for-22 for 116 yards with one touchdown and one interception.
The AFC East leading Patriots entered the day two games behind Kansas City and one behind Denver for the conference lead.
- - -
Lions 31, Cowboys 30
Matthew Stafford scored on a one-yard keeper with 12 seconds remaining and Calvin Johnson had 329 receiving yards, second-most in NFL history, as the Detroit Lions edged the Dallas Cowboys.
The Lions drove 80 yards in six plays, using up just 57 seconds as Stafford knifed through the prevent defense of the Cowboys on the winning score.
Johnson caught 14 passes and a touchdown while Stafford passed for 488 yards for the Lions (5-3), who entered the day a half-game behind Green Bay in the NFC North.
Tony Romo threw three touchdown passes, two to Dez Bryant, for the Cowboys (4-4), who lead the NFC East.
- - -
Chiefs 23, Browns 17
Kansas City prevailed in a defense-dominated game to subdue the Cleveland Browns and remain the NFL's only undefeated team at 8-0 this season.
Cleveland's replacement quarterback, Jason Campbell, filled in for benched Brandon Weeden and finished with two touchdown passes and no interceptions.
The Browns rallied from a 20-7 deficit to pull within a field goal before the Kansas City defense turned up the heat.
- - -
Saints 35, Bills 17
Drew Brees threw for 332 yards and five touchdowns, including two each to rookie receiver Kenny Stills and tight end Jimmy Graham, and the Saints' defense hounded quarterback Thad Lewis to defeat the Buffalo Bills.
In improving their record to 6-1, the Saints, coming off a bye week, overcame a sluggish offensive start to score 21 unanswered points in a 13:28 span of the second and third quarters to take a 28-10 lead. Lewis had three first-half fumbles and an interception.
- - -
49ers 42, Jaguars 10
The San Francisco 49ers scored touchdowns on their first four possessions at the end of long drives and rolled over the Jaguars at London's Wembley Stadium.
The 49ers (6-2) have won five games in a row, scoring at least 31 points in each victory. The Jaguars (0-8) have lost their last 13 games, dating back to week 13 of the 2012 season. The last victory for Jacksonville was November 25, a 24-19 win over Tennessee.
Quarterback Colin Kaepernick scored two rushing touchdowns and hit tight end Vernon Davis with a two-yard TD pass to build a 28-0 lead. Frank Gore added two TDs on the ground.
- - -
Giants 15, Eagles 7
Josh Brown kicked five field goals and the New York Giants became the second straight team to shut down thePhiladelphia Eagles and their highly-touted offense.
Eagles quarterback Michael Vick started the game, after missing the last two games with a sore hamstring, but aggravated the injury and was replaced by rookie Matt Barkley with about two minutes left in the first half.
Vick completed six of nine passes for 31 yards and the interception.
Giants quarterback Eli Manning completed 25 of 39 passes for 246 yards and did not throw an interception for the second straight game as the Giants (2-6) won a second straight after their winless start.
(Editing by Gene Cherry and Nick Mulvenney)ミズノMP64

Pryor's record run leads Raiders to victory


Pryor's record run leads Raiders to victory


The SportsXchange
OAKLAND, Calif. -- The Oakland Raiders were looking for a fast start Sunday against the Pittsburgh Steelers, and quarterback Terrelle Pryor gave them one for the record books.
On the game's first play from scrimmage, Pryor made NFL and franchise history with a 93-yard touchdown run, sparking the Oakland Raiders to a 21-18 victory over the Pittsburgh Steelers at the O.co Coliseum.
Pryor's touchdown run was the longest by a quarterback in NFL history, breaking former Steeler Kordell Stewart's mark of 80 yards set on Dec. 22, 1996, against Carolina. It was also the longest run from scrimmage, regardless of position, in Raiders history. His 93-yard run broke running back Bo Jackson's franchise record of 92 yards set on Nov. 5, 1989, against Cincinnati.
"I think that was the longest run I've ever had in my life," Pryor said, looking back to his high school and college career.
Pryor had 100 rushing yards after two carries and finished the game with 106 yards on nine carries. He completed 10 of 19 passes for 87 yards with two interceptions but was sacked only twice.
The Raiders, who built a 21-3 halftime lead and held on for a slim win, improved to 3-4 and snapped their steak of 10 straight losses in games after a bye week.
The Steelers had won two straight games after losing their first four, but they fell to 2-5 as their winning streak came to a painful end. They lost for the third straight time in Oakland.
"Obviously we made too many errors early to give ourselves a legitimate chance," Steelers coach Mike Tomlin said. "We allowed them to control and dictate the flow of the game and how we started really in all three phases. The first 30 minutes of football was poor on our part, and I take responsibility for that. It starts with me. Obviously we can't choose to defer a kickoff and allow them to explode and spot them seven points on the first play of the game."
On the Raiders' first play, Pryor faked a handoff to running back Darren McFadden, who rammed up the middle, drawing almost the entire Steelers defense his way. Pryor bolted around right end, getting a huge block from wide receiver Rod Streater on safety Troy Polamalu, and raced untouched to the end zone.
Pryor said he was "reading" Steelers outside linebacker LaMarr Woodley on the play.
"The guy bit down that I was reading," Pryor said. "I came out, Rod made a phenomenal block, and it was off to the races."
Pryor said he couldn't believe how much open space he saw.
"I was very surprised, because it's never open like that," Pryor said. "Very surprised. But with the game plan, the way they put things together, it doesn't surprise me that sometimes it may happen like that."
McFadden rushed for 73 yards and two touchdowns -- one from the wildcat formation -- on 24 carries.
Steelers quarterback Ben Roethlisberger completed 29 of 45 passes for 275 yards and one touchdown. He was intercepted twice and sacked five times, two of those by linebacker Sio Moore.
"They're good," Roethlisberger said of the Raiders. "Good defense. They got after us, and they were better than us."
In the first half, the Raiders outgained the Steelers 244 yards to 90 and outrushing them 182-8.
Pittsburgh cut Oakland's lead to 21-10 on Roethlisberger's 9-yard touchdown pass to Emmanuel Sanders with 12:11 left to play, just two plays after Raiders wide receiver Jacoby Ford lost a fumble at the Oakland 11.
The Steelers threatened again after Antonio Brown returned a punt 44 yards to the Raiders 31 with 7:34 left. On third-and-3 from the 24, Brown caught a 4-yard pass, but Mike Jenkins forced a fumble, and Tracy Porter recovered for the Raiders at the 21.
The Steelers pulled to within 21-18 with 1:24 left. Le'Veon Bell scored on a 2-yard touchdown run, capping a 12-play, 83-yard drive. The Steelers went for two points, and Sanders converted, taking a pitch, heading left, then reversing course and reaching the end zone.
Oakland recovered an onside kick but nearly gave the ball back on first down. The ball popped loose at the end of McFadden's 1-yard run, but officials ruled he was down by contact, and the call stood after a video review.
"We made it our job to make sure we harassed the quarterback throughout the day and stop the run, and we were able to do that," Sio Moore said. "And the biggest thing is we were able to do that when it came down to the fourth quarter and were able to finish."
The Raiders needed just 19 seconds to take a 7-0 lead, thanks to Pryor's record-setting run on the read-option.
The Raiders increased their lead to 14-0 on McFadden's 7-yard touchdown run with 7:28 still left in the first quarter.
The Raiders had to drive only 26 yards for McFadden's score after Rashad Jennings partially blocked Zoltan Mesko's punt, which traveled only three yards. On third-and-10 from the 26, Pryor hit Denarius Moore in stride on a slant, good for 14 yards to the 12.
Taking a direct snap in the wildcat formation, McFadden faked a handoff to Ford on a sweep, then powered up the middle for 5 yards to the 7. McFadden scored on the next play, taking a handoff from Pryor and powering over left guard.
The Steelers answered with Shaun Suisham's 47-yard field goal, cutting Oakland's lead to 14-3 with 14:14 left in the first half.
The Steelers capitalized on a Pryor interception for their only first-half points. After spinning away from pressure and rolling to his left, Pryor overthrew a wide-open Brice Butler, and Polamalu intercepted the pass and returned it 17 yards to the Raiders' 48.
Pittsburgh drove 19 yards but stalled at the 29 and settled for Suisham's 15th straight field goal of the season.
The Raiders increased their lead to 21-3 with 1:55 left in the half on McFadden's 4-yard touchdown run out of the wildcat formation, capping an 11-play, 72-yard drive. Taking the direct snap, McFadden faked a handoff to Ford, headed right, then cut back up the middle and into the end zone.
"I love being back there at quarterback," McFadden said. "I feel like I can go back there and make the procedures, and the coaches have a lot of faith in me to do that. I saw three guys running outside, and I looked back, just cut across the grain. Nobody was there."
McFadden had a 19-yard run earlier in the drive, and Pryor completed both of his passes, both to Streater, for 28 yards.
The Steelers had a chance to cut into Oakland's lead before halftime after Cortez Allen intercepted a Pryor pass that deflected off of Butler's hands and returned it 3 yards to the Pittsburgh 46. The Steelers marched to the 16, but Suisham pushed his 34-yard field goal attempt wide right, missing for the first time this season after making 15 straight.
Suisham missed again, this time from 32 yards, with 5:49 left in the third quarter as the Steelers drove 64 yards and took 9:11 off the clock but came up empty.
NOTES: Steelers starting left guard Ramon Foster suffered a concussion midway through the first half and did not return to the game. Foster's backup, Guy Whimper, suffered a left knee injury early in the third quarter and left the game. ... Raiders starting RT Tony Pashos (hip) was inactive, and backup tackle Matt McCants made his second start of the season. ... C/G Andre Gurode (quad), OT Menelik Watson (calf) and S Tyvon Branch (ankle) were also among the Raiders' inactives. ... WR Markus Wheaton (finger) and TE Richard Gordon (toe), a former Raider, were among the Steelers' inactives. ... Raiders C Stefen Wisniewski (knee) returned to the starting lineup after missing two straight games. MP64アイアン