The Day

NATIONAL FOOTBALL LEAGUE ROUNDUP / WEEK 9

-

Bills 44, Seahawks 34

Josh Allen regained his early-season groove by throwing three touchdown passes and scoring one rushing, and Buffalo beat Seattle on Sunday. Buffalo's defense played a major role in rattling Seattle's Russell Wilson, who was sacked five times, threw two intercepti­ons and lost two fumbles. Buffalo (7-2) matched its best record through nine games since 1993, a season that ended with the Jim Kelly-led Bills making their fourth consecutiv­e, and final, Super Bowl appearance.

Allen — playing one day after the death of his grandmothe­r — finished 31 of 38 and equaled a career best set earlier this season with 415 yards passing. The Bills' offense came alive after Allen combined for just 846 yards passing and five touchdowns — including one rushing — in splitting the previous four games.

The Seahawks (6-2) blew an opportunit­y to match to match their best record through eight games. They were 7-1 in 2013.

Seattle became the NFL's sixth team to score 25 or more points in each of its first eight games, but was undone by turnovers and a defense that surrendere­d 420 yards.

The 44 points allowed were the most in coach Pete Carroll's 11 seasons in Seattle and the most for the franchise since a 48-10 loss at Green Bay on Dec. 27, 2009. It was just the eighth time since Week 9 of the 2011 season the Carroll-led Seahawks have lost by 10 points or more.

Dolphins 34, Cardinals 31

Tua Tagovailoa threw for 248 yards and two touchdowns in his second NFL start and Miami rallied in the fourth quarter to beat Arizona.

Miami (5-3) has won four straight. The Cardinals (53) had their three-game winning streak snapped. The 22-year-old Tagovailoa was on the winning end of an action-packed duel with Arizona quarterbac­k Kyler Murray, who finished with 283 yards and three touchdowns. Murray also had 106 yards rushing on 11 carries.

Arizona's Zane Gonzalez was short on a 49-yard field goal attempt that would have tied the game with 1:53 left.

Tagovailoa was more productive in his second start after throwing for 93 yards against the Rams last week. He showed great poise during two scoring drives in the fourth quarter. The left-hander also made some plays with his feet, extending drives with scrambles. He finished with 35 yards rushing. The Cardinals pushed ahead 31-24 late in the third quarter on Murray's 12-yard run. It was the seventh time in eight games the quarterbac­k has thrown and run for at least one touchdown.

But the Dolphins and Tagovailoa fought back on the next series, delivering an impressive 10-play, 93-yard drive that ended with an 11-yard touchdown pass to Mack Hollins. Miami pushed ahead 34-31 with 3:30 left on a 50-yard field goal by Jason Sanders.

Chiefs 33, Panthers 31

Patrick Mahomes threw for 372 yards and four touchdowns, Travis Kelce and Tyreek Hill each went over 100 yards receiving, and Kansas City held on to beat Carolina when Joey Slye missed a 67-yard field-goal attempt wide right on the final play. The Chiefs (8-1) were left clinging to the lead when Christian McCaffrey, just back from his ankle injury, scored from a yard out with 1:26 to go. The Panthers' onside kick was recovered by Kansas City, but they used their three timeouts to get the ball back,

and Teddy Bridgewate­r's 23-yard pass to Curtis Samuel with 9 seconds remaining gave them hope. Carolina (3-6) tried to get a bit closer with a pass to McCaffrey, but the incompleti­on brought on Slye, who had plenty of leg with the wind behind him. His kick dropped just outside the uprights, though, allowing the Chiefs to escape.

Slye also missed a 65-yard attempt late in a 27-24 loss to New Orleans in Week 7.

McCaffrey finished with 18 carries for 69 yards and a touchdown while catching 10 passes for 82 yards and another score. Bridgewate­r threw for 310 yards and two TDs with Samuel catching nine balls for 105 yards and the other score.

Kelce had 10 catches for 159 yards and Hill had nine for 113 and a pair of scores, helping the pass-happy Chiefs climb out of an early 14-3 hole and head into their bye with a bunch of new milestones and a big surge of momentum.

Raiders 31, Chargers 26

Justin Herbert's pass to Donald Parham Jr. for a 4-yard touchdown on the final play of the game was overturned after a replay review, and Las Vegas held on to beat Los Angeles.

Derek Carr threw two touchdown passes for Las Vegas (5-3), which improved to 4-1 on the road. Herbert was 26 of 42 for 326 yards and two touchdowns for the Chargers (2-6), all of whose losses have come by seven points or less.

This time, Los Angeles got the ball on its 25 with 4:37 remaining and drove to the Las Vegas 4. Herbert found Parham in the right corner of the end zone, but after a replay review, the touchdown was overturned when it was determined the tight end did not maintain possession throughout the catch. The Raiders trailed 17-14 at halftime but scored on their first two drives of the second half. Carr hit Nelson Agholor for a 45-yard TD and then Darren Waller had a 3-yard score to give Las Vegas a 28-17 advantage with 7:49 remaining in the third quarter. Michael Badgley's second field goal brought the Chargers within 28-20. On LA's next possession,

Herbert threw a screen pass to Gabe Nabers for a 4-yard touchdown, but the 2-point conversion attempt failed with 9:12 remaining.

The Chargers forced a three-and-out, but Las Vegas' Kyle Wilber recovered KJ Hill's muffed punt at the LA 31. The Raiders took advantage on Daniel Carlson's 31-yard field goal with 4:42 left.

Steelers 24, Cowboys 19

Ben Roethlisbe­rger threw all three of his touchdown passes after shrugging off a knee injury, rallying Pittsburgh past Dallas.

Pittsburgh is 8-0 for the first time in the storied franchise's history despite an upset bid from the Cowboys, who were the biggest underdogs they've been at home in at least 31 years.

Garrett Gilbert was the fourth different starting quarterbac­k in five games for Dallas (2-7), throwing a touchdown pass in his first career start and bringing some life to the offense for a team that lost its fourth straight game without Dak Prescott.

The Steelers erased a 10-point deficit in the fourth quarter with three scoring drives, the last two aided by Dallas penalties that kept drives alive. The goahead score was an 8-yarder to Eric Ebron with 2:14 remaining.

The drive to the decisive score appeared to have stalled before it started when Roethlisbe­rger threw incomplete on third down. But linebacker Jaylon Smith was called for hitting Roethlisbe­rger's facemask after the throw.

Ravens 24, Colts 10

Lamar Jackson turned up the tempo in the second half, and Baltimore broke the NFL record for consecutiv­e 20-point games in its win over Indianapol­is.

After Gus Edwards' 1-yard plunge gave Baltimore the lead midway through the third quarter, Jackson sealed the win with a 9-yard TD run.

The Ravens (6-2) have scored 20 or more points 31 straight times — breaking a tie with Denver, which set the mark from 2012-14.

Baltimore has won 10 straight road games, the league's longest active streak, and earned the franchise's first win at Indianapol­is in seven tries. The Ravens also had lost 20 straight games when trailing at halftime.

It was the first home loss for Indy (5-3) this season.

Titans 24, Bears 17

Ryan Tannehill threw two touchdown passes, and Tennessee never trailed as it beat Chicago to snap a two-game skid.

The Titans (6-2) avoided their longest skid since Tannehill took over as starting quarterbac­k and stayed atop the AFC South going into Thursday night's division showdown against Indianapol­is. They got big help from an undermanne­d and struggling defense missing three-time Pro Bowl linebacker Jadeveon Clowney with an injured knee. Cornerback Desmond King picked up a fumble and ran 63 yards for a TD only days after the Titans picked up the 2018 All-Pro from the Chargers for a sixth-round pick. King didn't join Tennessee until Saturday after clearing COVID-19 testing protocols and put the Titans up 17-0 late in the third quarter.

Vikings 34, Lions 20

Dalvin Cook kept his brilliant season rolling by rushing for a career-high 206 yards and two scores on 22 carries, leading Minnesota past Detroit. Kirk Cousins threw for three touchdowns — two to tight end Irv Smith Jr. — in his second straight turnover-free performanc­e for the Vikings (3-5), who averaged 8.9 yards per play on the way to their first home win this season.

Lions quarterbac­k Matthew Stafford, who didn't practice all week due to coronaviru­s exposure protocols, left the game in the fourth quarter for concussion evaluation after taking a knee to the head during a sack. He was picked off on consecutiv­e possession­s in the third quarter, first at the Minnesota 12 and then in the end zone. Chase Daniel threw another intercepti­on after taking over.

Falcons 34, Broncos 27

Matt Ryan took advantage of Denver's thin secondary to throw three touchdown passes and Atlanta turned back Denver's bid for a second consecutiv­e comeback.

Ryan completed 25 of 35 passes for 284 yards with one intercepti­on. Atlanta (3-6) improved to 3-1 under interim coach Raheem Morris.

Atlanta led 20-3 at halftime. Drew Lock threw two touchdown passes and ran for a 10-yard score in the final quarter that made it 34-27. With Atlanta leading by seven points, the Broncos (3-5) took the ball at their 20 with 44 seconds remaining and no timeouts. Following three incompleti­ons by Lock, a fumbled snap ended the possession.

Texans 27, Jaguars 25

Deshaun Watson had touchdowns passes of 57 and 77 yards, the second one appearing to come after the play clock expired, and Houston beat Jacksonvil­le for its sixth straight win in the series. Jacksonvil­le (1-7) lost its seventh straight and barely avoided making NFL history. The Jaguars would have become the first to allow at least 30 points in seven consecutiv­e games in a single season. Instead, they will share the record with the 1968 Denver Broncos and the 1984 Minnesota Vikings. Jacksonvil­le had a chance to tie it late, but rookie Jake Luton's 2-point conversion pass to DJ Chark landed at his feet. Luton, a sixth-round draft pick making his NFL debut in place of Gardner Minshew, scrambled for 13 yards to make it a two-point game with 1:39 remaining.

 ?? ROSS D. FRANKLIN/AP PHOTO ?? Miami Dolphins wide receiver Preston Williams (18) pulls in a touchdown catch as Arizona Cardinals free safety Jalen Thompson (34) defends during the first half of Sunday’s game in Glendale, Ariz. The Dolphins won 34-31.
ROSS D. FRANKLIN/AP PHOTO Miami Dolphins wide receiver Preston Williams (18) pulls in a touchdown catch as Arizona Cardinals free safety Jalen Thompson (34) defends during the first half of Sunday’s game in Glendale, Ariz. The Dolphins won 34-31.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States