Kuwait Times

49ers rout Packers

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SANTA CLARA: The San Francisco 49ers’ defense held Aaron Rodgers to just 104 yards passing while sacking him five times en route to a 37-8 rout of the Green Bay Packers on Sunday night in Santa Clara, Calif. The 49ers solidified their spot atop the NFC pecking order with a 10-1 record, while sending the Packers back to Green Bay at 8-3. Jimmy Garoppolo threw for 253 yards and two touchdowns on just 20 attempts, completing 14. His 145.8 passer rating was about double that of his counterpar­t, Rodgers, who had too little time and too few open receivers. Rodgers finished 20 of 33 with a touchdown, posting the lowest yards-per-attempt (3.15) in any start in his career and his second-lowest yardage total in a start in which he wasn’t injured.

PATRIOTS 13, COWBOYS 9

Tom Brady completed 17 of 37 passes for 190 yards and one touchdown, and New England held on to clip visiting Dallas on a cold, wet and windy afternoon in Foxborough, Mass. N’Keal Harry scored the lone touchdown for New England (10-1), which notched double-digit victories for the 17th straight season while beating the current NFC East leader. Julian Edelman led all receivers with eight catches for 93 yards, and Sony Michel led the ground attack with 20 carries for 85 yards. Cowboys quarterbac­k Dak Prescott struggled in the inclement weather, completing 19 of 33 passes for 212 yards and an intercepti­on.

SAINTS 34, PANTHERS 31

Wil Lutz kicked a 33-yard field goal as time expired to give host New Orleans the win over struggling Carolina. Drew Brees passed for 311 yards and three touchdowns and drove the Saints (9-2) 65 yards in less than two minutes to set up Lutz’s kick. New Orleans took over possession after kicker Joey Slye missed a 28-yard field-goal attempt with 1:56 to play for Carolina (5-6), which has lost four of five. Michael Thomas, the NFL’s leading receiver, caught 10 of Brees’ passes for 101 yards and a touchdown. He reached 100 pass receptions for the third consecutiv­e season on a first-quarter catch. He later surpassed 1,200 receiving yards for the season, making him the fifth player in NFL history to reach that total and 100 catches in three consecutiv­e seasons.

SEAHAWKS 17, EAGLES 9

Rashaad Penny rushed for a career-high 129 yards and a touchdown as Seattle defeated host Philadelph­ia on a windy afternoon. Seattle’s defense, without All-Pro defensive end Jadeveon Clowney because of a hip injury, forced five turnovers — four by Eagles quarterbac­k Carson Wentz (two intercepti­ons, two fumbles). The Eagles (5-6) had four starters on offense sidelined by injury — running back Jordan Howard (shoulder), wide receivers Alshon Jeffery (ankle) and Nelson Agholor (knee) and All-Pro right tackle Lane Johnson (concussion).

BILLS 20, BRONCOS 3

Josh Allen passed for 185 yards and two touchdowns while adding 56 yards on the ground, Cole Beasley and John Brown had a touchdown catch each, and host Buffalo’s defense took care of the rest against Denver. Frank Gore rushed for 65 yards to pass Hall of Fame running back Barry Sanders for third in career rushing yards with 15,289. He came into the game needing 46 yards to surpass Sanders. Devin Singletary added 106 yards on the ground to lead Buffalo.

BROWNS 41, DOLPHINS 24

Baker Mayfield threw a season-high three touchdown passes as host Cleveland scored the first 28 points of the game en route to a blowout over Miami, the Browns’ third straight win. Mayfield threw all three of his touchdowns in the first half. He finished 24 of 34 for 327 yards with one intercepti­on. Browns wide receiver Jarvis Landry had a monster game for Cleveland, reeling in 10 catches for 148 yards and two touchdowns. The Browns (5-6) worked past a shaky third quarter to put away the Dolphins (2-9) and keep their playoff hopes alive.

STEELERS 16, BENGALS 10

Devlin Hodges replaced Mason Rudolph at quarterbac­k in the second half and rallied Pittsburgh, keeping host Cincinnati winless on the season.

Hodges was 5 of 11 for 118 yards and hit James Washington on a 79-yard touchdown pass in the third quarter with his second throw of the game as the Steelers (6-5) extended their winning streak over the Bengals to 10, including playoffs, going back to 2015. Chris Boswell kicked a 47-yard field goal with 11:59 remaining to break a 10-10 tie and added a 26yard kick with 3:18 remaining.

TITANS 42, JAGUARS 20

Tennessee exploded for 28 third-quarter points and kept its playoff hopes alive with a runaway victory over Jacksonvil­le in Nashville, Tenn. Derrick Henry rushed for 159 yards and two touchdowns and quarterbac­k Ryan Tannehill accounted for four touchdowns as Tennessee (6-5) moved into a second-place tie with Indianapol­is in the AFC South, one game behind division-leading Houston. Jacksonvil­le (4-7) is now firmly entrenched in last place. Tannehill hit Dennis

Kelly for a 1-yard touchdown pass with 13:13 left in the third quarter to give the Titans a 14-3 lead, then Henry scored on 74- and 7-yard touchdown runs just 16 seconds apart to give the Titans a 28-3 lead.

BUCCANEERS 35, FALCONS 22

Jameis Winston shrugged off two first-quarter intercepti­ons to throw for 313 yards and three touchdowns as Tampa Bay dumped host Atlanta. Chris Godwin enjoyed a monster game for Tampa Bay (4-7), catching seven passes for 184 yards and two scores. The Buccaneers’ much-maligned defense, last in the league against the pass, applied the clinching blow when Ndamukong Suh recovered a fumble and rumbled 6 yards for a touchdown with 3:06 left in the game.

BEARS 19, GIANTS 14

In a battle of units that have been quite inept in recent weeks, Chicago’s offense got rolling in the third quarter as the host Bears handed the Giants their seventh straight loss. It was just the second time this season the Bears managed 300 yards of total offense (335). Wide receiver Allen Robinson II hauled in six receptions for 131 yards and a touchdown. But it was Khalil Mack and a solid defensive effort that gave Chicago (5-6) its second win in the past three games and kept the New York offense stuck in “inept” mode.

REDSKINS 19, LIONS 16

Dustin Hopkins kicked four field goals, including a goahead 39-yarder with 16 seconds remaining, and Washington edged visiting Detroit to snap a four-game losing streak. The game-winning kick was set up by a Quinton Dunbar intercepti­on in the final minute. Steven Sims returned a kickoff 91 yards for Washington’s lone touchdown. — Reuters

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