Texarkana Gazette

Unbeaten Bengals need overtime

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CINCINNATI—Andy Dalton led the Bengals from a 17-point fourth-quarter deficit to a 27-24 overtime victory on Sunday over the Seattle Seahawks, keeping Cincinnati undefeated with the second-biggest comeback in its history.

Trailing 24-7 as the fourth quarter started, Dalton threw for a touchdown, ran for another and led the Bengals on a 69-yard drive without a timeout. Mike Nugent tied it with a 31-yard field goal on the final play of regulation.

Nugent was good again from 42 yards with 3:36 left in overtime, the ball deflecting off the left upright before going through. It matched the second-biggest comeback in Cincinnati’s history when trailing in the fourth quarter.

The Bengals are 5-0 for the first time since 1988, the last time they went to the Super Bowl.

Seattle (2-3) punted twice in overtime, giving the Bengals a chance to pull it out.

FALCONS 25, REDSKINS 19, OT

ATLANTA—Robert Alford returned an intercepti­on 59 yards for a touchdown, keeping the Falcons unbeaten.

The Redskins had the first possession of OT, and Kirk Cousins moved the team to midfield. When wide receiver Ryan Grant slipped on a pass route, Alford caught Cousins’ pass and was left with open field down the Falcons’ sideline for the touchdown.

Devonta Freeman’s apparent 13-yard TD catch in the final minute of regulation was ruled incomplete on a review. Freeman scored on 6-yard run two plays later to give Atlanta a 19-16 lead. Dustin Hopkins’ 52-yard field goal on the final play of regulation forced overtime.

The Falcons (5-0) overcame two intercepti­ons and a lost fumble by Matt Ryan. Freeman had 27 carries for 153 yards and the touchdown.

The Redskins (2-3) were denied their attempt for their first back-to-back wins in almost a year—since Weeks 7 and 8 in 2014.

BROWNS 33, RAVENS 30, OT

BALTIMORE—Travis Coons kicked a 32-yard field goal in overtime and Josh McCown threw for a team-record 457 yards.

Cleveland (2-3) had lost 13 of the previous 14 meetings between these AFC North foes, but in this one the Browns rallied from a 12-point deficit to leave the Ravens (1-4) alone in the division cellar.

Playing its second straight overtime game, Baltimore went three-and-out on the first possession of the extra session. McCown then used more than seven minutes to move the Browns 51 yards before Coons kicked his fourth field goal with 6:43 left in OT.

McCown completed 36 of 51 passes with two touchdowns in becoming the first quarterbac­k in Browns history with three straight 300-yard games. He broke the team record of 444 yards passing set by Brian Sipe on Oct. 25, 1981, against the Baltimore Colts.

Joe Flacco ran for two 1-yard touchdowns and threw for a score, but fell to 13-2 against Cleveland.

PACKERS 24, RAMS 10

GREEN BAY, Wis.—Aaron Rodgers threw for two touchdowns and 241 yards, but his impressive string of not being intercepte­d at Lambeau Field ended.

Rodgers was 19 of 30 for 241 yards with long scoring strikes to receivers Ty Montgomery and James Jones. But NFL-record streaks of 587 pass attempts and 49 touchdown passes at home without an intercepti­on for Rodgers ended in the first quarter on linebacker James Laurinaiti­s’ diving pick of a tipped ball for the Rams (2-3).

Rodgers threw another intercepti­on in the second quarter before losing a fumble in the third.

Relentless pressure on quarterbac­k Nick Foles helped keep the Packers (5-0) unbeaten. Foles threw a career-worst four intercepti­ons, two in the fourth quarter inside the Packers 10.

Rookie cornerback Quinten Rollins returned an intercepti­on 45 yards for a touchdown for a 14-0 lead in the first quarter, and picked off another pass at the 7 with 23 seconds left.

BRONCOS 16, RAIDERS 10

OAKLAND, Calif.—Chris Harris Jr. returned a fourth-quarter intercepti­on 74 yards for a touchdown and the Broncos overcame a shaky day from Peyton Manning.

Manning was intercepte­d twice by 1998 draft classmate Charles Woodson and failed to lead the Broncos (5-0) to an offensive touchdown for the second time in five games this season. But Denver’s defense made sure it didn’t matter, getting a third defensive touchdown of 2015.

Derek Carr threw for 249 yards and one touchdown for the Raiders (2-3), but was done in by the intercepti­on midway through the fourth quarter with Oakland in position for a possible go-ahead field goal.

The Raiders added a late 50-yard field goal by Sebastian Janikowski following a 48-yard pass interferen­ce penalty on Bradley Roby, but Denver recovered the onside kick.

Manning finished 22 for 35 for 266 yards, was sacked twice and had two intercepti­ons. Denver ran for only 43 yards.

This was Denver’s second-lowest scoring regular season with Manning as quarterbac­k, ahead of only a seven-point effort last year against St. Louis.

The Broncos have now won eight straight in this series but the Raiders had plenty of chances in this one. Janikowski missed a pair of field goals before Carr’s late gaffe ended Oakland’s hopes.

CARDINALS 42, LIONS 17

DETROIT—Carson Palmer threw for three touchdowns, while Matthew Stafford was benched after throwing a third intercepti­on.

The Cardinals (4-1) have a two-game lead in the NFC West. The Lions (0-5) have the dubious distinctio­n of being the NFL’s only winless team and are off to their worst start since becoming the league’s only 0-16 team in 2008.

Palmer was poised and efficient, completing 11 of 14 passes for 161 yards, with a 14-yard pass to Darren Fells, an 18-yard connection to John Brown, and a 2-yard strike to Larry Fitzgerald for scores.

Stafford simply struggled, getting picked off on passes well short of receivers and missing at least one wide-open option. He was replaced in the third quarter by Dan Orlovsky. Orlovsky played on the 0-16 Lions.

BEARS 18, CHIEFS 17

KANSAS CITY, Mo.—Jay Cutler led the Bears to a pair of fourth-quarter touchdowns, the second an alert toss to Matt Forte with 18 seconds left.

Kansas City lost star running back Jamaal Charles to a potentiall­y season-ending right knee injury.

Chicago (2-3) trailed 17-3 early in the third quarter when Charles went down while trying to make a cut. The preliminar­y diagnosis was a torn ACL and Charles will have an MRI exam Monday.

The Bears quickly seized the momentum.

After Robbie Gould’s second field goal got them going, Cutler led an 88-yard drive that he capped with a 22-yard strike to Marquess Wilson with 3:05 left. The 2-point conversion came up short, but the Bears defense responded by forcing a quick three-and-out.

With help from a pass interferen­ce call on Chiefs rookie Marcus Peters, the Bears quickly moved downfield. That’s when Cutler took a snap from the shotgun, dropped the ball, picked it up and spotted Forte running past safety Husain Abdullah in the end zone for the go-ahead score.

The Chiefs (1-4) tried a 66-yard field goal that came up short as time expired.

BILLS 14, TITANS 13

NASHVILLE, Tenn.—Tyrod Taylor threw a touchdown pass, ran for another and even caught a pass in rallying the Bills.

With their top two running backs and top wide receiver injured, Taylor ran for 77 yards as the Bills (3-2) snapped a fivegame skid against Tennessee.

Taylor ran for a 22-yard TD late in the third quarter after a 26-yard run that was Buffalo’s biggest play of the game. Taylor also scrambled for 24 more on thirdand-23 from the Bills 7, jumpstarti­ng an 80-yard drive he capped with a 2-yard TD pass to Chris Hogan. Taylor caught a 4-yard pass from Hogan to set up that TD.

Stephon Gilmore intercepte­d Marcus Mariota’s pass with 1:32 left to seal the win.

The Titans (1-3) blew a second straight double-digit lead at home.

BUCCANEERS 38, JAGUARS 31

TAMPA, Fla.—Doug Martin ran for 123 yards and scored three touchdowns, helping Jameis Winston rebound from his worst pro performanc­e.

The Bucs (2-3) snapped an 11-game home losing streak that dated to December 2013, the same month the Jaguars (1-4) began an equally agonizing road skid that now stands at 12.

Winston threw for 209 yards and one touchdown without an intercepti­on, redeeming himself after turning the ball over five times in a 14-point loss to Carolina last week.

Blake Bortles passed for 303 yards and four TDs, but also threw an intercepti­on that set up a Bucs touchdown. The Jaguars gave up a 58-yard punt return that led to Martin’s 10-yard TD reception, and rookie Corey Grant lost a third-quarter fumble that defensive end Jacquies Smith returned 3 yards for a score that put Tampa Bay ahead for good.

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