Saskatoon StarPhoenix

Lions stun Cowboys with last-second TD

- LARRY LAGE

DETROIT — Calvin Johnson thought Matthew Stafford was going to spike the ball for at least another snap.

The Dallas Cowboys did, too.

Stafford’s one-yard lunge over a pile of linemen with 12 seconds left and Johnson’s 329 yards receiving lifted the Detroit Lions to a 31-30 win over Dallas on Sunday.

“I was yelling that I was going to spike the ball,” Stafford recalled. “But their linebacker­s were just standing there.”

The Cowboys weren’t just standing around letting Johnson make catch after catch, but he made them look helpless.

Johnson almost broke an NFL record and could celebrate the feat because of a comeback from a 10-point, fourth-quarter deficit that some people who entered Ford Field didn’t see because they had left.

“Even our fans didn’t think we could pull this one out,” he said.

Johnson’s total trails only the 336 yards receiving Flipper Anderson had for the Los Angeles Rams against New Orleans on Nov. 26, 1989 in a game that went into overtime. Anderson had 296 yards receiving in regulation.

The Cowboys dared Detroit to throw to Johnson with a lot of one-on-one coverage. They usually asked cornerback Brandon Carr to do the improbable by defending him by himself and sometimes attempted to slow him down with a zone.

“He had his way,” Carr said.

The Lions (5-3) overcame four turnovers without forcing a turnover, becoming the first team to do that and win since New England did against Miami in 2007, according to STATS.

On their last drive, Stafford threw a 22-yard pass to Johnson to set up the winning score. The quarterbac­k caught at least some Cowboys by surprise, including linebacker Sean Lee, who appeared to expect him to spike the ball to stop the clock.

“He kind of caught us off guard,” defensive tackle Jason Hatcher acknowledg­ed.

Dallas (4-4) seemed to set itself up to win three straight for the first time this year to build a bigger lead atop the NFC East when Tony Romo threw his second touchdown — and third of the game — to Dez Bryant with 6:45 left to take 27-17 lead.

The Cowboys, though, allowed Reggie Bush to cap an 80-yard drive with a oneyard TD with 3:33 left. They also had to settle for Dan Bailey’s third field goal with 1:02 left after Tyron Smith was flagged for holding on third down, a mistake that stopped the clock even though Detroit declined the penalty.

Dallas began the game without two starters on both sides of the ball: DeMarco Murray and Miles Austin on offence and DeMarcus Ware and J.J. Wilcox on defence.

Late in the first half, Romo threw two straight passes to Bryant — after not making him the intended receiver once — and he caught the second one with his left hand, pinning it against his shoulder pad for a go-ahead, five-yard TD with 46 seconds left in the first half.

 ?? DUANE BURLESON/The Associated Press ?? The Cowboys’ Dez Bryant hauls in a five-yard touchdown pass in front of two Lions defenders on Sunday in Detroit.
The Lions rallied for a 31-30 win.
DUANE BURLESON/The Associated Press The Cowboys’ Dez Bryant hauls in a five-yard touchdown pass in front of two Lions defenders on Sunday in Detroit. The Lions rallied for a 31-30 win.

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