NFL
roundup: Panthers drop champion Eagles to 3-4
Send a link to a friend
[October 22, 2018]
Cam Newton threw a 1-yard
touchdown pass to tight end Greg Olsen with 1:22 remaining as the
Carolina Panthers completed the biggest comeback in franchise
history to defeat the host Philadelphia Eagles 21-17 on Sunday
afternoon.
The Panthers (4-2) were dominated for the first three quarters
before scoring three touchdowns in a 9 1/2-minute span after punting
on all their other possessions. They overcame a 17-0 deficit in the
fourth quarter after never previously escaping more than a 10-point,
fourth-quarter hole.
Newton finished 25 of 39 for 269 yards and two touchdown passes in
leading the comeback. Philadelphia's final possession ended at the
Carolina 14-yard line on a failed fourth down.
Carson Wentz threw two touchdown passes and directed the Eagles
(3-4) on time-consuming drives that appeared to put them in ideal
shape. Wentz completed 30 of 37 passes for 310 yards. He had a
stretch when he completed a career-best 15 consecutive passes.
Rams 39, 49ers 10
Todd Gurley rushed for two touchdowns and caught a 12-yard pass for
a third score, helping Los Angeles go 7-0 for the first time since
1985 with a romp over San Francisco in Santa Clara, Calif.

Jared Goff threw two TD passes, Greg Zuerlein kicked three field
goals, and the Los Angeles defense forced four San Francisco
turnovers, leading the Rams to a road win in the California rivalry
for the second consecutive season. Aaron Donald had four sacks and
six tackles for loss.
George Kittle led all receivers with 98 yards on five receptions and
caught a 10-yard touchdown pass for San Francisco (1-6).
Saints 24, Ravens 23
Drew Brees engineered two fourth-quarter touchdown drives, and
Baltimore kicker Justin Tucker missed his first career extra point
with 24 seconds left to allow visiting New Orleans to escape with a
victory.
Brees, who had not beaten the Ravens (4-3) in four previous games in
his 18 NFL seasons, brought the Saints (5-1) back with consecutive
touchdown drives. Brees completed 22 of 30 passes for 212 yards and
two touchdowns, including the 500th of his career.
Flacco hit John Brown for a 14-yard touchdown to make it 24-23 in
the last minute. However, with just a PAT needed to force overtime,
Tucker pushed the kick wide right.
Patriots 38, Bears 31
Tom Brady tossed three touchdown passes, and New England held on at
Chicago when the Bears' late Hail Mary attempt came up a yard short.
Brady completed 25 of 36 passes for 277 yards with two touchdown
passes to James White and one to Julian Edelman with one
interception. New England (5-2) added two special teams touchdowns
thanks to a 95-yard kickoff return by Cordarrelle Patterson and a
29-yard blocked punt return by Kyle Van Noy.
Mitchell Trubisky completed 26 of 50 passes for 333 yards, two
touchdowns and two picks for Chicago (3-3). Trubisky and Jordan
Howard each rushed for a score, while Tarik Cohen and Trey Burton
each hauled in touchdown passes.
Redskins 20, Cowboys 17
Brett Maher's 52-yard field goal attempt hit the left upright as
time expired, and Washington held on to beat visiting Dallas.
Adrian Peterson rushed for 99 yards as the Redskins (4-2), who have
won back-to-back games for the first time this season, increased
their lead in the NFC East.
Dak Prescott went in from a yard out with 1:37 left to pull Dallas
within 20-17. After the Redskins' three-and-out, the Cowboys (3-4)
drove to the Washington 29. Maher lined up for a 47-yard field goal,
but a snap infraction pushed Dallas back 5 yards. Maher's ensuing
kick hit the goal post.
Buccaneers 26, Browns 23 (OT)
After missing a chance to win the game in regulation when his
40-yard attempt sailed wide right as time expired, Chandler
Catanzaro kicked a 59-yard field goal with 1:50 left in overtime to
lift Tampa Bay over visiting Cleveland.
The Buccaneers (3-3) won despite committing four turnovers and
allowing a safety. The Browns (2-4-1) participated in their fourth
overtime game of the season.
Cleveland committed just one turnover, but it was costly as Jabrill
Peppers fumbled a punt return in overtime to hand the ball back to
the Buccaneers and Jameis Winston. The Bucs were able to gain only 7
yards in six plays, but that was enough for Catanzaro to earn
redemption with the game-winning kick.
Chiefs 45, Bengals 10
Patrick Mahomes authoritatively recovered from his first defeat as
an NFL quarterback, passing for 358 yards and four touchdowns as
Kansas City trounced visiting Cincinnati.
[to top of second column] |

Panthers quarterback Cam Newton reacts to the crowd after throwing a
touchdown pass to tight end Greg Olsen (not pictured) in the fourth
quarter against the Philadelphia Eagles at Lincoln Financial Field.
Mandatory Credit: James Lang-USA TODAY Sports

Bouncing back from a last-second loss in prime time against New
England, the Chiefs (6-1) built a 17-point halftime lead, scored on
five of their first six possessions and totaled 551 yards. Kareem
Hunt scored three touchdowns and finished with 86 yards rushing and
55 yards receiving on 20 total touches.
A.J. Green had seven catches for 117 yards to lead the Bengals
(4-3).
Lions 32, Dolphins 21
Matthew Stafford threw two touchdown passes to tight end Michael
Roberts as Detroit won at Miami.
Rookie running back Kerryon Johnson also starred for Detroit (3-3),
rushing 19 times for 158 yards. Matt Prater was perfect on four
field-goal attempts, including a 50-yarder with two minutes left to
ice the victory as the Lions won their second straight.
Miami (4-3) was without starting quarterback Ryan Tannehill, who
missed his second consecutive game due to a shoulder injury.
Texans 20, Jaguars 7
Jadeveon Clowney posted a pair of sacks while Tyrann Mathieu
recorded a late interception as Houston extended its winning streak
to four games with a dominating defensive performance at
Jacksonville.
The Texans (4-3) took over sole possession of first place in the AFC
South by limiting the Jaguars (3-4) to 259 total yards. Jacksonville
dropped its third consecutive game, was held scoreless in the first
half for a third straight week and benched quarterback Blake Bortles
in the third quarter.
Bortles fumbled twice on scrambling attempts, and the Texans
converted both of his turnovers into 10 points. Cody Kessler
completed 21 of 30 attempts for 156 yards in relief of Bortles, who
went 6 for 12 for 61 yards. Kessler was sacked four times.
Chargers 20, Titans 19
Philip Rivers tossed two long touchdown passes, and quick-strike Los
Angeles survived a late challenge by Tennessee for a tight victory
at Wembley Stadium in London.
Rivers found Tyrell Williams for a 75-yard touchdown on the
Chargers' first play from scrimmage and fired a 55-yard TD to a
wide-open Mike Williams on the third play of the second half. It was
the fourth straight win for the Chargers (5-2) and the third
straight loss for the Titans (3-4).
Trailing by one with 31 seconds left, Tennessee scored and coach
Mike Vrabel elected to go for a two-point conversion and the win.
Mariota's pass to Tajae Sharpe was incomplete, but a defensive
holding penalty gave him another shot. However, his pass to Taywan
Taylor was tipped and fell incomplete.

Vikings 37, Jets 17
Kirk Cousins threw for two touchdowns, Latavius Murray rushed for
two more, and Minnesota defeated New York in East Rutherford, N.J.
Cousins completed 25 of 40 passes for 241 yards. Murray gained 69
yards on 15 carries. Adam Thielen, the NFL's leading receiver,
caught nine passes for 110 yards and a touchdown, becoming the first
player in the Super Bowl era to open a season with seven consecutive
100-yard games.
Dan Bailey made three of four field goal tries as Minnesota (4-2-1)
collected its third straight victory. New York rookie Sam Darnold
completed just 17 of 42 pass attempts for 206 yards. He threw a
touchdown pass but was picked off three times for the Jets (3-4),
who won their previous two games.
Colts 37, Bills 5
Andrew Luck threw four touchdown passes and Adam Vinatieri moved
within five points of the NFL's all-time scoring record during
Indianapolis' rout over visiting Buffalo.
Marlon Mack rushed for a career-high 126 yards and a touchdown and
added 33 yards and another score receiving for the Colts (2-5).
Indianapolis, which scored 25 points off of five Buffalo turnovers,
snapped a four-game losing streak and won at home for the first time
this season.
The Bills (2-5), who failed to score a touchdown for the third time
this season, played most of the game without Pro Bowl running back
LeSean McCoy, who was ruled out after getting upended and hitting
his head on the turf running to the sideline on the opening drive.
--Field Level Media
[© 2018 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2018 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |