The Washington Post - 21.10.2019

(Wang) #1

MONDAY, OCTOBER 21 , 2019. THE WASHINGTON POST EZ M2 D7


BY MICHAEL MAROT

indianapolis — The Indian-
apolis Colts kept insisting Jacoby
Brissett could win games with his
arm.
On Sunday, he showed every-
one else what the team knew all
along.
With Indianapolis’s suddenly
strong running game essentially
grounded, Brissett shouldered
the burden by throwing for
326 yards and a career-high four
touchdowns to lead the Colts past
Houston, 30-23, to retake the
AFC South lead.
“It just says he’s legit. He’s the
man,” Colts Coach Frank Reich
said. “We believed that from Day
1, and we’ve never wavered in our
conviction or our faith in Jacoby.


But he knows he’s still got to
prove it. He’s still got to make
plays to win this game, and he did
that today.”
Brissett was masterful with the
exception of a dropped snap the
Texans (4-3) recovered at the
Indianapolis 4-yard line.
He finished 26 for 39, with six
of the incompletions being
throwaways. He had a career best
passing total and a career best
passer rating (126.7), endured
only one sack and had the perfect
counterpunch each time Hous-
ton fought its way back into
contention.
The Colts (4-2) also were tough
against Houston’s running game,
holding tailback Carlos Hyde to
just 35 yards on 12 carries and
finishing their 24th consecutive

game without allowing a 100-
yard rusher.
Indianapolis has won two
straight overall and three
straight in the series.
“It just makes us more bal-
anced, and I think that’s what we
proved today — that we can
throw the ball,” Brissett said. “It
was just a great day for us as a
whole.”
And it only added to the Tex-
ans’ misery.

They were held to field goals
on three red-zone trips in the first
half. Houston also had to contend
with a rare “in the grasp” call that
took one touchdown off the
board, an overturned replay re-
view that put another one on the
board for Indianapolis and a
plethora of penalties that Brissett
used to his advantage.
“I’m not going to answer any
officiating questions,” Texans
Coach Bill O’Brien said twice
after Houston was called for
10 penalties.
Then there was the fourth
quarter.
Houston (4-3) started it by
failing to convert a second
fourth-and-one attempt, and De-
shaun Watson threw an intercep-
tion on the Texans’ next series

before Darius Leonard sealed the
win by picking off a tipped ball
with 26 seconds left.
Watson was 23 for 34 for
308 yards and one touchdown
and was sacked three times as the
Texans were forced to play catch-
up. Houston’s modest streak of
consecutive games without al-
lowing Watson to be sacked end-
ed at two.
Brissett started the opening
flurry with an 11-yard touchdown
pass to Zach Pascal, who finished
with six catches for 106 yards. He
rebounded from the fumbled
snap by connecting with T.Y.
Hilton on a nifty two-yard touch-
down pass, one of Hilton’s six
receptions for 74 yards, to make it
14-6 late in the second quarter.
After the Texans made it 14-9,

Brissett opened the second half
with a four-yard scoring pass to
Eric Ebron, who was originally
ruled out of bounds at the end
line. But the replay showed he got
both feet down to give Indian-
apolis a 21-9 lead.
Houston cut the deficit to 21-16
on Keke Coutee’s four-yard scor-
ing run, but Brissett — with the
help of three of the Texans penal-
ties — answered with a three-
yard touchdown pass to Pascal.
Watson made it 28-23 with a
four-yard touchdown pass to De-
Andre Hopkins, but the Texans
couldn’t get any closer.
“[Brissett] is a very productive
player, a very smart player,”
O’Brien said. “He makes good
decisions, just a good player.”
— Associated Press

BY KEITH JENKINS

green bay, wis. — The Green
Bay Packers gave the NFL its first
true glimpse of what Matt La-
Fleur’s offense can look like with
Aaron Rodgers at the helm.
And it was scary.
Rodgers had his best game by
far under his new coach, throwing
for 429 yards and five touchdowns
and running for another as Green
Bay beat the Oakland Raiders, 42-
24, on Sunday.
Rodgers completed 25 of
31 passes to eight targets and fin-
ished with the first perfect passer
rating of his career, leading to a
season high in points.
“A lot of times that ball leaves
his hand, I’m always like in awe.
So, yeah, he’s pretty good,” LaFleur
said of the two-time MVP.
Even with top target Davante
Adams sidelined for the third
straight game with turf toe, Rodg-
ers threw for his most touchdowns
in a game since Sept. 28, 2015,
against the Chiefs.
“Yeah, I think this was the most
complete that I’ve played,” Rodg-
ers said. “I felt good about the


timing. There was a lot of balls
thrown on time, and obviously the
line played fantastic.”
Derek Carr finished 22 for 28 for
293 yards, two touchdowns and
two costly turnovers for the Raid-
ers (3-3), who lost their eighth
straight against Green Bay dating
from 1990. The Packers (6-1) have
scored 30-plus points in each of
their past five games against the
Raiders.
“Carr was rolling,” Oakland
Coach Jon Gruden said. “We were
rolling offensively today. It was an
offensive game. We just had a cou-
ple turnovers, and they finished
some drives.”
Green Bay took the lead for
good on a two-yard touchdown
from Rodgers to Jamal Williams
with 3:27 to go in the first half. The
score capped an 11-play, 82-yard
drive that took up 8:06 — the
Packers’ longest drive of the sea-
son — and made it 14-10.
Carr put the Raiders in position

to retake the lead with a 48-yard
completion down the middle to
Waller, giving Oakland first and
goal at the 3-yard line. On second
down, as Carr scrambled for the
pylon, Blake Martinez forced a
fumble and the ball went through
the end zone for a touchback.
“I’ll have to look at it again. I
think he’s trying to give a great
effort, trying to lay out for the
score,” Gruden said of Carr on the
play. “I think the ball slipped out of
his hands. If he would have scored,
we would have felt pretty good.
But, unfortunately, after that play,
the next time we got the ball we
were down 28-10. We were going
in to make it 17-14 Raiders. That
was a big play in the game.”
Kevin King picked off Carr in
the end zone with 8:09 to play.
That led to Rodgers’ sixth score of
the day, a 74-yard pass to Marquez
Valdes-Scantling, who finished
with the two catches for 133 yards.
“We had a lot of guys step up,
specifically Marquez and G-mo,”
LaFleur said. “Shoot, two days ago,
we didn’t even know if they were
going to play.”
— Associated Press

Rodgers simply perfect for Green Bay


BY TERESA M. WALKER

nashville — The Tennessee Ti-
tans came up with an amazing
goal-line stand to stop the Los
Angeles Chargers.
Not once or twice but thrice.
Each time, they needed the
replay official to overturn a call on
the field, reversing what the Char-
gers thought were a pair of go-
ahead touchdowns and a downed
running back and instead giving
the ball — and the game — to the
Titans.
Jurrell Casey recovered a fum-
ble by Melvin Gordon at the goal
line with 15 seconds left, and
Tennessee pulled out a 23-20 vic-
tory after a frantic finish.
Gordon initially was ruled
down shy at the 1-yard line. Casey
came out of the pile with the ball,
and the Titans started celebrat-
ing. The play was reviewed, and
the on-field ruling that Gordon
was down was overturned.
The call was a fumble forced by
Titans linebacker Wesley
Woodyard that was recovered by
Casey for a touchback. Ryan Tan-
nehill knelt down to run out the

clock as the Titans (3-4) snapped
a two-game skid.
“Once I felt the ball come out,
I’m like: ‘I got to recover it. I got to
recover it,’ ” Casey said. “And
shoot, sure enough, the ball sat in
my hands. Kind of popped out for
a quick second, and I thought I
was about to lose it. Kind of pan-
icked for a moment. If I let them
recover it, that’s a touchdown.”
“You don’t get one yard, you
don’t deserve to win the damn
game, and that’s the way it is,”
Chargers Coach Anthony Lynn
said.
First, Philip Rivers’s pass that
Austin Ekeler took 16 yards was
ruled a touchdown only to be
reversed by the replay official,
who said he did not break the
plane before he was tackled by
Kenny Vaccaro and Logan Ryan.
After a false start, Malcolm Butler
then was flagged for defensive
pass interference on Mike Wil-
liams in the end zone.

Then Gordon went over right
tackle with 34 seconds left for
what officials ruled a one-yard
touchdown, and the replay offi-
cial reversed the call for the sec-
ond time to make it a run for no
gain. That set up Gordon’s final
run with 19 seconds left.
Titans Coach Mike Vrabel said
there has to be obvious visual
evidence the ball had come out
and a clear recovery.
“By the grace of God, we had
both of those in that play for it to
be able to be overturned,” Vrabel
said.
Tannehill threw for 312 yards
and two touchdowns in his first
start since the Titans benched
Marcus Mariota after losing four
of their previous five. The Titans
not only won their first game at
home this season but posted a
season-high 403 yards. He outdu-
eled Rivers on a day the 16-year
veteran moved to sixth in career
passing yards.
The Chargers (2-5) have lost
three straight and five of their
past six. Rivers finished with
329 yards and two touchdowns.
— Associated Press

On further review, Tennessee survives


nfl Week 7


TITANS 23,
CHARGERS 20

DOUG MCSCHOOLER/ASSOCIATED PRESS

Jacoby Brissett shows the Colts still have life after Andrew Luck’s retirement by throwing for 326 yards and a career-high four touchdowns as Indianapolis improved to 4-2 with a win over Houston on Sunday.


Brissett rewards Indianapolis’s faith in him with big day


COLTS 30,
TEXANS 23

Quarterback helps seize
control of AFC South

PACKERS 42,
RAIDERS 24

LEADERS

PASSING
CMP-ATT PCT. YARDS TDINT
Aaron Rodgers, Packers 25-31 80.6 429 50


Matthew Stafford, Lions 30-45 66.6 364 41


Kirk Cousins, Vikings 24-34 70.5 337 40


Philip Rivers, Chargers 24-38 63.1 329 20


Jacoby Brissett, Colts 26-39 66.6 326 40


Ryan Tannehill, Titans 23-29 79.3 312 21


Deshaun Watson, Texans 23-34 67.6 308 12


Derek Carr, Raiders 22-28 78.5 293 21


Ryan Fitzpatrick, Dolphins 23-35 65.7 282 11


Teddy Bridgewater, Saints 23-38 60.5 281 20


RUSHING
ATT YARDS AVG. TD
Dalvin Cook, Vikings 25 142 5.7 2
Leonard Fournette, Jaguars 29 131 4.5 0
Chase Edmonds, Cardinals 27 126 4.7 3
Josh Jacobs, Raiders 21 124 5.9 0
Latavius Murray, Saints 27 119 4.4 2
Lamar Jackson, Ravens 14 116 8.3 1
Ezekiel Elliott, Cowboys 22 111 5.0 1
Derrick Henry, Titans 22 90 4.1 1
Adrian Peterson, Redskins 20 81 4.0 0
Saquon Barkley, Giants 18 72 4.0 1

RECEIVING
TARGETS REC YARDS AVG. TD
Stefon Diggs, Vikings 8 7 142 20.3 0
Alex Erickson, Bengals 14 8 137 17.1 0
Marquez Valdes-Scantling, Packers 3 2 133 66.5 1
Michael Thomas, Saints 11 9 131 14.6 0
Darren Waller, Raiders 8 7 126 18.0 2
Austin Ekeler, Chargers 8 7 118 16.9 1
Amari Cooper, Cowboys 5 5 106 21.2 0
DeAndre Hopkins, Texans 12 9 106 11.8 1
Zach Pascal, Colts 7 6 106 17.7 2
Danny Amendola, Lions 11 8 105 13.1 0
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