Orlando Sentinel (Sunday)

Lawrence rallies Jags from 27 down to stun Chargers in wild-card game

- By Mark Long

JACKSONVIL­LE — Trevor Lawrence followed four intercepti­ons with four touchdown passes — one of the most improbable turnaround­s in NFL postseason history — and rallied the Jacksonvil­le Jaguars to a 31-30 victory over the Los Angeles Chargers on Saturday night.

Lawrence engineered the winning drive, highlighte­d by Travis Etienne’s 25-yard run on a fourth-and-1 play, and put the Jaguars in position for Riley Patterson’s 36-yard field goal on the final play. It capped a 27-point comeback, the third largest in playoff history.

“You couldn’t write a crazier script,” Lawrence said. “We said in the locker room that’s kind of how our season’s going. We’re never out of the fight . ... I’m kind of speechless, honestly, just to see what belief can do and to see when a team believes in each other what you can accomplish.”

Patterson’s kick barely stayed inside the right upright and set off a raucous celebratio­n for a franchise that had won just four games the previous two years. The Jaguars (10-8) won their sixth consecutiv­e game and fifth straight at home — all five in come-from-behind fashion.

No one could have seen this one coming. Maybe not

even Lawrence. But he was the steady hand in charge after a debacle of a first half. He finished 28-of-47 passing for 288 yards, a shocker considerin­g he the way he started.

Lawrence was downright dreadful to begin Jacksonvil­le’s first playoff game since losing in the 2017 AFC title game. He became the third quarterbac­k in the Super Bowl era to throw four intercepti­ons in the first half of a playoff game, joining Detroit’s Gary Danielson and Denver’s Craig Morton.

But he bounced back as well as anyone in NFL history.

“I didn’t have a choice,” Lawrence said. “If we’re going to win that game, digging ourselves a hole like that, you’ve got to score a lot of points. By doing that, your quarterbac­k’s got to

play well. So I clearly didn’t have much of a choice.

“These guys have sacrificed way too much for me to be the reason we lose an opportunit­y. That’s what I was thinking about. I know I’m going to make the plays. I’ve just got to get back on track. The guys around me made plays. It’s not just me.”

The Jaguars, who also turned the ball over when a punt hit Chris Claybrook’s helmet, became the first team in the Super Bowl era to win a playoff game with a turnover differenti­al of minus-five or worse. Teams with that turnover deficit had been 0-19.

Lawrence misfired early and often and started getting booed long before halftime. His confidence seemed shot. His swagger appeared gone. All the progress he made in his first season with coach

Doug Pederson looked like it would be flushed in the team’s finale.

But Lawrence never wavered. He connected with Evan Engram, Marvin Jones, Zay Jones and Christian Kirk for touchdowns that increasing­ly raised the team’s belief in its quarterbac­k and its comeback.

Lawrence added one of the biggest plays when he jumped for a 2-point conversion with 5:25 to play that made it 30-28 — and put the Jaguars in position to win instead of tie.

Jacksonvil­le’s defense responded by sacking Justin Herbert and then forcing a punt. Lawrence took over from there, with a significan­t assist from Etienne.

“I feel like the running back, when it gets to that point of the game, you’re supposed to be the closer,” Etienne said. “Coach believed in me on that fourth-and-1, to give me the ball. I had to make something happen for my teammates.”

Herbert threw for 273 yards and a touchdown without an intercepti­on, but the Chargers’ offense was largely ineffectiv­e after a 62-yard TD drive that made it 24-0 midway through the second quarter. Los Angeles (10-8) finished with 320 yards of offense and 18 first downs, and it produced just three points on four second-half possession­s.

 ?? CHRIS O’MEARA/AP PHOTOS ?? Jaguars kicker Riley Patterson (center) celebrates his winning and game-ending 36-yard field goal with holder Logan Cooke (9) and long snapper Ross Matiscik (46) against the Los Angeles Chargers in an AFC wild-card game on Saturday night in Jacksonvil­le.
CHRIS O’MEARA/AP PHOTOS Jaguars kicker Riley Patterson (center) celebrates his winning and game-ending 36-yard field goal with holder Logan Cooke (9) and long snapper Ross Matiscik (46) against the Los Angeles Chargers in an AFC wild-card game on Saturday night in Jacksonvil­le.
 ?? ?? Jacksonvil­le quarterbac­k Trevor Lawrence completed 28 of 47 passes for 288 yards, a shocker considerin­g he the way he started. He became the third quarterbac­k in the Super Bowl era to throw four intercepti­ons in the first half of a playoff game.
Jacksonvil­le quarterbac­k Trevor Lawrence completed 28 of 47 passes for 288 yards, a shocker considerin­g he the way he started. He became the third quarterbac­k in the Super Bowl era to throw four intercepti­ons in the first half of a playoff game.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States