Las Vegas Review-Journal

Raiders not fit to be tied

Beat Browns in OT for first win of season

- COMMENTARY By Michael Gehlken Las Vegas Review-journal

Tennessee 26, Philadelph­ia 23, OT Houston 37, Indianapol­is 34, OT Seattle 20, Arizona 17

New Orleans 33, N.Y. Giants 18

L.A. Chargers 29, San Francisco 27 Oakland 45, Cleveland 42, OT Baltimore 26, Pittsburgh 14

Open: Washington, Carolina Monday’s game

OAKLAND, Calif. — One word haunted Raiders headquarte­rs this week.

It floated from room to room without prejudice, its presence seeping into the walls. Coaches stressed it during meetings and between strength-and-conditioni­ng sets. In practice, when breaking huddle, players shouted it in unison. This word, a subject of much frustratio­n, was heard again Sunday on the sideline and field.

Finish.

Finish.

Finish.

For a moment, those calls seemed sure to go unanswered. A miscommuni­cation between wide receiver Amari Cooper and quarterbac­k Derek Carr resulted in a fourth-down, red-zone incompleti­on with less than two minutes remaining.

“I think our stadium emptied out about halfway after that,” Carr said. “The people that stayed, they got a fun show.”

Following a forced threeand-out, Carr efficientl­y paced the offense downfield and fired a 7-yard touchdown to tight end Jared Cook with 30 seconds left. A successful 2-point conversion forced overtime where rookie Matt Mccrane converted a 29-yard field goal in his NFL debut, knocking the Raiders past the Cleveland Browns in a 45-42 slugfest.

It took until the fourth game, which lasted 4 hours, 4 minutes, to purge the past. So long, ghost.

“There were a lot of peaks and valleys in the game,” said Jon Gruden, who earned his first NFL coaching win since 2008. “We finished today.”

On the three-and-out, Browns running back Carlos Hyde initially was determined to have converted a third-and-2 run. But the ball spot was overturned upon an automatic review. He

RAIDERS

didn’t finish. Punt.

Down eight points, Carr and Cook connected. Wide receiver Jordy Nelson then converted the vital 2-point attempt on a back-shoulder fade route in the left corner of the end zone. He bobbled Carr’s pass slightly before securing possession. A finish. Tie game.

Browns quarterbac­k Baker Mayfield tossed 11- and 15-yard passes to cross into Raiders territory at the 49-yard line. He threw a deep pass for wide receiver Antonio Callaway, but safety Reggie Nelson diagnosed the ball’s trajectory as errant and ran to intercept it. A finish. Overtime.

And so it went late for the Raiders (1-3), things neatly falling into place.

The biggest hiccup in overtime came on a 50-yard field-goal attempt from the dirt infield at Oakland-alameda County Coliseum. Mccrane missed wide left, providing the Browns (1-21) favorable field position at their own 40-yard line. But the defense promptly forced a three-and-out.

Possession returned to the offense.

This was the first game in franchise history in which the Raiders had one player surpass 400 passing yards, two players surpass 100 receiving yards (Cook and wide receiver Amari Cooper) and one player top 100 rushing yards (running back Marshawn Lynch).

Cook, Cooper and Lynch all had first-down receptions of at least 11 yards on the final drive, setting up Mccrane for the closer.

On Sept. 16, the Raiders did not trail the Denver Broncos until the final six seconds of regulation. On Sept. 23, they faltered late against the Miami Dolphins, allowing wide receiver Albert Wilson both to catch and throw touchdowns of more than 50 yards. In their first three games, the Raiders were outscored 37-3 in the fourth quarter.

They outscored the Browns 21-14 in the fourth Sunday.

“This team has been working hard,” linebacker Derrick Johnson said. “We just hadn’t finished yet. It was a prime example today: finishing. That’s been the motto the last couple weeks: finish. Finish, finish, finish. Today, it didn’t look like the last couple of weeks. We finished, so hats off to us.”

Ravens (-2½) at Browns, 10 a.m. Sunday; Raiders at Chargers (-6),

1:05 p.m. Sunday

Contact reporter Michael Gehlken at mgehlken@ reviewjour­nal.com. Follow @Gehlkennfl on Twitter.

NEXT:

 ?? D. Ross Cameron ?? The Associated Press Raiders kicker Matt Mccrane (3) is jubilant after kicking the winning 29-yard field goal in overtime in a 45-42 victory Sunday over the Cleveland Browns in Oakland, Calif.
D. Ross Cameron The Associated Press Raiders kicker Matt Mccrane (3) is jubilant after kicking the winning 29-yard field goal in overtime in a 45-42 victory Sunday over the Cleveland Browns in Oakland, Calif.
 ??  ??
 ?? D.rosscamero­n ?? The Associated Press Raiders wide receiver Jordy Nelson converts a tying 2-point conversion in front of Cleveland Browns defensive back T.J. Carrie in the second half of Oakland’s 45-42 overtime victory Sunday in Oakland, Calif.
D.rosscamero­n The Associated Press Raiders wide receiver Jordy Nelson converts a tying 2-point conversion in front of Cleveland Browns defensive back T.J. Carrie in the second half of Oakland’s 45-42 overtime victory Sunday in Oakland, Calif.
 ??  ?? Raiders defensive back Reggie Nelson intercepts a pass by Cleveland Browns quarterbac­k Baker Mayfield in the second half Sunday.
Raiders defensive back Reggie Nelson intercepts a pass by Cleveland Browns quarterbac­k Baker Mayfield in the second half Sunday.

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