Mauricio Pochettino ‘so happy’ as UMSNT starts new era with win

Mauricio Pochettino ‘so happy’ as UMSNT starts new era with win

AUSTIN, Texas — United States men’s national team manager Mauricio Pochettino hailed his side’s “professional performance” in defeating Panama 2-0, giving him a win in his first match in charge.

The U.S. broke on top in the 49th minute through Yunus Musah, who received a centering pass from club teammate Christian Pulisic to side-foot one into the Panama goal.

The USMNT then had to survive some nervous moments, with goalkeeper Matt Turner delivering a fabulous double-save three minutes after Musah’s goal, and then seeing a glorious chance be created for Panama forward José Fajardo in the 87th minute, only for him to push his shot wide.

Substitute Ricardo Pepi then made the game safe for the U.S. four minutes into stoppage time with a cool finish from Haji Wright‘s feed.

“I think it was a very professional performance and I think we are happy because I think all the goals that we said before the game, I think that we got and I think it’s an important victory,” Pochettino told reporters. “And to start that period with the victory always is very helpful.

“Yes, so happy. Happy because I see the staff and the players made a fantastic show and of course with the help of the fans here in Austin.”

Pochettino, who was hired last month to replace Gregg Berhalter, added that it was “amazing” how well the U.S. players took things on board given they had spent only a few days together. It’s an area of the U.S. team he says he expects will improve, especially heading into Tuesday’s match against bitter rival Mexico in Guadalajara.

“I think it’s the basis for the first step, to start to grow and be better,” he said. “Now we are going to have a few days to recover and see and to analyze and assess all the players and to take the best decision for the team and for the players playing Tuesday, another tough game.”

Pochettino also praised the near-capacity crowd of 20,239 at Q2 Stadium, and made note of a banner behind one of the goals that had his face on it.

“It was a massive shock for me to see my face behind the goal, like you say and a different picture,” he said. “I think I am so happy; very good connection with the fans.

“That’s really important to relate this connection, the team with the fans, that is a thing that is really important. Players need to feel the support.”

Pochettino deployed Musah out on the right flank, a position that was unusual for him, at least with the U.S. team. For the U.S. manager, it was all about helping Musah’s confidence, given that he has logged only 147 minutes of playing with club side AC Milan this season.

“He’s not playing a lot. The last few games that played, I think he didn’t feel comfortable in that situation,” Pochettino said. “When he arrived, we were talking and … tried to build his confidence maybe from starting in a different position than he was starting in the past. I think that was a good decision.

“I think he’s always trying to build his confidence and to feel again that he’s a player that can perform on the pitch.”

And about Musah’s goal, Pochettino added, “Fantastic for him, fantastic for the team, and now maybe he starts to perform and behave a different way, [where he’s] full of confidence. That is the important thing in our decision, [to] try to help.”

The goal was also heralded by his Milan colleague.

“I told him it was goal-scoring instincts. He’s been watching me,” said Pulisic, who has five goals in seven Serie A matches this season. “He’s been learning a thing or two. But honestly, that moment … it’s great to see that.”

One player who didn’t play was Weston McKennie. Pochettino indicated the Juventus midfielder wasn’t 100% fit, and was held out as a precaution.

“We wanted to protect him,” Pochettino said, though there remains a possibility McKennie will play against Mexico.

Information from The Associated Press was used in this report.


Source link

Jim Harbaugh misses part of Chargers’ win over Broncos for treatment of irregular heartbeat

Jim Harbaugh misses part of Chargers’ win over Broncos for treatment of irregular heartbeat

Jim Harbaugh listened to his heart when he began to feel a little bit off in pregame warmups.

The Los Angeles Chargers coach went into the medical tent and then to the locker room in the first quarter Sunday to get checked out for an irregular heartbeat. An EKG showed his heart was back in normal rhythm and he returned to the sideline with his team already up 3-0.

His team didn’t miss a beat in a 23-16 win over the Denver Broncos. In fact, his quarterback, Justin Herbert, didn’t even know he wasn’t on the sideline. His brother sure did, as Baltimore coach John Harbaugh cut short his postgame news conference after a win over Washington to check in on his brother.

“Everything ended up turning out to be OK,” said Jim Harbaugh, who received IV fluids. “The doctors checked me out, and it got back into normal rhythm. So came back.

“It’s the heart so you take it seriously.”

For quite a while, Harbaugh said he’s dealt with atrial flutter, a condition that can cause the heart to beat too quickly. He had an ablation procedure in 1999 to treat the irregular heart rhythms. He also had another one in 2012 when he was coaching the San Francisco 49ers. He vividly remembers that procedure because it was after a Monday night game where Colin Kaepernick led the 49ers to a 32-7 win over the Chicago Bears.

Harbaugh said he hadn’t really experienced another episode until this weekend.

“I started feeling it last night, but wasn’t really sure,” Harbaugh said. “Just like in 2012, it was during the pregame warmups — I kind of started feeling.”

Harbaugh tried to interject some humor — “2-0 in arrhythmias,” he cracked.

Herbert was caught off guard by the news that his coach had left the sideline — or that anything was amiss. Although, he said Harbaugh mentioned something about his health Saturday night.

“He said he was really excited for the game. He said his blood was flowing and he was excited,” said Herbert, who completed 21 of 34 passes for 237 yards and one touchdown. “I thought everything was good to go. That’s definitely something he should get checked out. He’s a tough guy, though.”

Harbaugh said that when he was in the locker room, the medical staff took his pulse and conducted an EKG.

“Trust the doctors. If you’re not going to trust your doctors, who are you gonna trust?” he said. “Came back in to the locker room, and the paramedics came, got an EKG and said it was back to the sinus (normal) rhythm, and I said, ‘I feel good.’ I went back out there on the field.”

Harbaugh plans to follow up with his cardiologist on Monday.

When he left the sideline as the game started, the Chargers described his absence as an illness. Defensive coordinator Jesse Minter took over until Harbaugh returned midway through the first quarter with the Chargers ahead 3-0 and driving toward another score. The Chargers jumped out to a 23-0 lead in the second half before the Broncos made a late surge.

“It was a great and glorious win for the team,” Harbaugh said. “Really proud of our team, pleased. They’re playing good football, offense, defense and special teams, four quarters of it.

“I felt great about that.”


Source link

No. 13 LSU shocks No. 9 Ole Miss with comeback OT win in crucial SEC game

No. 13 LSU shocks No. 9 Ole Miss with comeback OT win in crucial SEC game

LSU’s Kyren Lacy secures the game-winning catch against Ole Miss on Saturday in Baton Rouge, Louisiana. (Jonathan Bachman/Getty Images)

Garrett Nussmeier hit Kyren Lacy down the right sideline for a 25-yard touchdown pass on LSU’s first play of overtime to give the No. 13 Tigers a thrilling 29–23 win over No. 9 Ole Miss.

The game-winner came after Ole Miss kicker Caden Davis kicked a 57-yard field goal for the Rebels on their opening possession of overtime. The offense was pushed back to the LSU 40-yard line after a holding penalty and false start, both on offensive lineman Reese McIntyre, and Davis drilled the deep kick to keep the Rebels alive momentarily.

But the relief from the kick was short-lived when Nussmeier found Lacy in the end zone on the next play to end the game.

LSU scored the game-tying touchdown with 27 seconds remaining in the fourth quarter on a 23-yard pass from Garrett Nussmeier to Aaron Anderson. The Tigers got into position to score on a 19-yard pass play from Nussmeier to Mason Taylor that moved the ball to the Ole Miss 38-yard line.

Taylor thought he eluded a tackle to score a touchdown, but officials correctly ruled that his elbow had touched the ground when he turned up the field. Yet four plays later, LSU was in the end zone.

Nussmeier threw for 337 yards with three touchdowns and two interceptions, completing 22-of-51 passes. Lacy had five receptions for 111 yards and the game-winning score. Aaron Anderson added 81 yards and a TD on three catches.

Ole Miss had a 17–7 lead with less than two minutes before halftime when Tre Harris caught a 15-yard pass from Dart over LSU safety Major Burns in the end zone.

The Tigers appeared to score a touchdown with 44 seconds remaining in the first half with Garrett Nussmeier making a desperate 16-yard throw from his back foot to Zavion Thomas.

Thomas made a diving attempt at a catch in the end zone, but a replay review ruled that the ball hit the ground. LSU had to settle for a field goal and a 17–10 deficit.

 

Ultimately, that didn’t play a major factor as the Tigers came back to win in overtime.

Jaxson Dart threw for 284 yards, completing 24-of-42 passes with one touchdown and an interception. Cayden Lee led the Rebels with 132 yards receiving on nine receptions. And Harris finished with seven catches for 102 yards before leaving the game in the third quarter with an apparent leg injury. Bentley also rushed for 107 yards and a score on 11 carries.

LSU improves to 2–0 in the SEC — one of three undefeated teams in the conference with Texas A&M (3–0) and Texas (2–0) — and 5–1 overall. Ole Miss drops to 5–2 and 1–2 in conference play.


Source link

How the Lynx rallied to beat the Liberty, win WNBA Finals Game 1

How the Lynx rallied to beat the Liberty, win WNBA Finals Game 1

Are you not entertained?

A four-point play in the final 6 seconds of the fourth quarter. A missed free throw that could have won it in regulation. The first team in WNBA postseason history to win after trailing by 15-plus points with less than 5 minutes to play.

Overtime in the opening game of the WNBA Finals.

And now, the Minnesota Lynx have stolen Game 1 in Brooklyn, beating the top-seeded New York Liberty 95-93 in overtime Thursday.

The Lynx trailed by as many as 18 points in Game 1 of the WNBA Finals. But the No. 2 seed rallied to take a one-point lead, 84-83, with 5.1 seconds left in regulation on Courtney Williams’ four-point play.

But it wasn’t over yet. With 0.8 seconds to play, Breanna Stewart converted one of two free throws to knot the score and force overtime, just the sixth WNBA Finals game to need extra time.

Williams added five more points — she led the Lynx with 23 — to seal the win.

New York fell to 0-6 all-time in Game 1 of the Finals, but the Liberty looked in control after pouring on 32 points in the opening period.

ESPN looks at how Minnesota made an improbable rally to take a 1-0 lead in Sunday’s Game 2 (3 p.m. ET, ABC) in Brooklyn.

How did the Lynx pull off one of the greatest comebacks in WNBA playoff history?

Call it belief. Call it resilience. Call it mental toughness. Minnesota had it all to win a game that appeared lost numerous times.

The Lynx were down by as many as 18 and matched the largest comeback in WNBA Finals history, largely on the spark lit by Williams, who scored 12 of her 23 points in the final 2:33 of regulation and overtime. Her four-point play gave Minnesota its first lead with 5.1 seconds left in regulation. It was the first four-point play in the final 10 seconds that gave the team the lead with the free throw in WNBA history — regular season or playoffs.

Notably, that play came off an offensive rebound and pass to the perimeter by Alanna Smith. It was just one of five offensive rebounds for Minnesota — New York had 20 — but it was the biggest one of the game.


play

4:41

Lynx overcome 18-point deficit to steal Game 1 from Liberty

The Lynx mount a remarkable comeback to wipe away an 18-point deficit and take Game 1 of the WNBA Finals from the Liberty.

What does the Lynx’s Game 1 win mean for the rest of the series?

Not only did the Lynx win in shocking fashion, they did it on the road. That gives Minnesota a huge advantage mentally — from the comeback — and historically. The winner of Game 1 of the Finals has won 20 of the 27 WNBA titles (the last to lose the series after winning Game 1 was the 2017 Los Angeles Sparks).

The Liberty have to find a way to recover from a loss they likely still can’t believe happened. New York can focus on the fact that Jonquel Jones scored 24 points and had 10 rebounds (this was just the Liberty’s fourth loss in 33 games in which Jones had a double-double) and that Leonie Fiebich made 5 of 9 3-pointers.

If those kinds of performances can be duplicated, and just one of Stewart (6-of-21 from field) or Sabrina Ionescu (8-of-26, though 3-for-9 beyond the arc) shoots better, the Liberty can recover.

It’s a long series. As we saw Thursday, things can change in an instant. But if the Lynx go on to win their fifth championship, this game will be remembered in Minnesota and the league, and perhaps haunt New York, for a long time.


What adjustments need to be made by both teams?

Minnesota won despite being dominated on the glass 44-32. New York took 19 more shots thanks to 20 offensive rebounds. The result would have been different if New York had shot better than 37.8% from the field.

Credit Minnesota’s defense for much of that. Stewart and Ionescu combined to shoot 14-for-47. Stewart’s missed free throw at the end of regulation and missed layup at the buzzer in overtime were nearly as big as Williams’ heroics. Napheesa Collier had 21 points on 10-for-16 shooting, but she also showed why she won WNBA Defensive Player of the Year with her work on Stewart, who was just 1-of-9 when Collier was the primary defender. Collier also blocked six shots, the third most in Finals history, including one each on Jones and Stewart late in the fourth quarter.

But Minnesota used plenty of secondary help to contain Stewart. New York coach Sandy Brondello will have to counter in Game 2 to get her star more open looks.


play

0:20

Napheesa Collier stuns Brooklyn crowd with OT go-ahead jumper

Napheesa Collier buries a turnaround jumper with a hand in her face to put the Lynx back in front late in overtime.

How does New York shake off this loss?

These will be a long 2½ days for New York until Game 2 tips off. Following the disappointment of losing to the Las Vegas Aces in last year’s WNBA Finals, this will test the mental toughness of the Liberty players.

What might help is if all of their film sessions in the next 48 hours focuses on the first quarter. The Liberty dominated the first 10 minutes and led by 13. Their 32 points were the most they scored in any quarter this season. The offense looked smooth and efficient. Jones was dominant early and Ionescu hit two 3-pointers late.

The offense had good moments the rest of the game, but got ragged in the fourth quarter and overtime. It’s always surprising to see comebacks like Thursday’s. Seeing a veteran team like the Liberty lose a game like this is even more shocking.


Source link

Niners’ Jordan Mason injures shoulder during Thursday night win vs. Seahawks

Niners’ Jordan Mason injures shoulder during Thursday night win vs. Seahawks

The running back’s ability to return to the game hasn’t alleviated Shanahan’s concern that it could be serious.

“I don’t know, you never know,” Shanahan said. “I mean, adrenaline on these days during games is a little bit different. We’ll find out more tomorrow.”

Mason rushed for 73 yards on nine carries, increasing his NFL-leading season rushing total to 609 yards.

In his absence, rookie Isaac Guerendo and Patrick Taylor, along with wide receiver Deebo Samuel, filled in at running back with the operation chugging along. The 49ers produced 228 yards rushing, 155 coming from runners other than Mason.

Just how serious Mason’s ailment is remains to be seen.


Source link

49ers Secure 36-24 Win on ‘Thursday Night Football’

49ers Secure 36-24 Win on ‘Thursday Night Football’

Purdy Perfect Against the Seahawks

San Francisco’s QB1 has yet to lose a game to Seattle and his win streak now extends into the 2024 season. In his fourth regular season start versus the Seahawks, Brock Purdy completed 18-of-28 pass attempts for 255 yards and three touchdowns and a quarterback rating of 129.3. Purdy’s two favorite targets of the night were wide receiver Deebo Samuel Sr., who caught three passes for 102 yards, and tight end George Kittle, who had five catches for 58 yards and two touchdown. Samuel Sr.’s second quarter score was one of the top plays of the night – the veteran pass catcher hauled in Purdy’s shot near midfield and added another 50-plus yards after the catch for the 76-yard touchdown. Kittle’s first touchdown was equally as impressive – the veteran made the end zone grab and toe tapped at the pylon for the 10-yard score.

Rookie Standouts in Seattle

With veteran safety Talanoa Hufanga back on the Injured Reserve list, the team turned to rookie Malik Mustapha to start in his place alongside sophomore Ji’Ayir Brown. Thursday marked Mustapha’s second NFL start, and the rookie wasted no time making his presence known, picking off Seattle’s quarterback Geno Smith as he was leading his team down the field in their opening drive. Defensive lineman Nick Bosa recorded a quarterback hit and Mustapha was ready to grab Smith’s shot to wide receiver Tyler Lockett. The interception was the first of Mustapha’s young career.

Fellow rookie Renardo Green had a pick of his own midway through the fourth quarter on what could have been Seattle’s go-ahead drive. Green jumped the route and picked off a pass intended for Seahawks receiver D.K. Metcalf and swung the momentum back in San Francisco’s favor. The 49ers went on to score two touchdowns after that interception to seal the victory.

Jordan Mason‘s Productive Night in Seattle

Mason entered Week 6 as the NFL’s second leading rusher and added another nine carries for 73 yards on Thursday night. However, the third-year back did not play the entirety of the team’s Week 6 matchup. Midway through the second quarter, Mason ran to the left side for a 14-yard gain but landed hard on his left shoulder when he was brought down by a swarm of defenders. He was labeled as questionable to return initially, but after further examination, was cleared to return for the start of the third quarter.

It appears the injury did affect him, however, since he only had one carry for eight yards in the second half. Mason opened up the game in a big way, ripping off 38 yards on his third rushing attempt to set up San Francisco’s 25-yard opening drive field goal. With his 73 yards on the ground, Mason overtook Baltimore Ravens running back Derrick Henry to lead the league in rushing yards with 609 yards on the year.

Welcome to Crew, Matthew Wright

After touching down in The Bay roughly 48 hours ago, kicker Matthew Wright made his 49ers debut on Thursday night. The fifth-year pro had his first kicking opportunity on San Francisco’s first offensive series, and he nailed it, capping off a 13-play, 90 yard drive with a 25-yard field goal. He added a 41-yard field and 35-yard kick in first half and hit all three of his extra point attempts on the night.

Special Teams Big Play of the Night

In addition to Mustapha’s first quarter interception and Green’s fourth quarter pick, San Francisco added a special teams takeaway in their Week 6 matchup. The team’s second turnover is credited to the 49ers special teamers who turned a Seattle kickoff return into an extra possession for San Francisco early in the second quarter. Cornerback Darrell Luter Jr. made contact with Seahawks returner Laviska Shenault Jr. and linebacker Tatum Bethune recovered the fumble. The 49ers capitalized on the turnover, turning it into three points on the ensuing drive.

  • S Malik Mustapha (ankle): exited the game in the second quarter and was downgraded to out in the third quarter.
  • RB Jordan Mason (shoulder): questionable to return in the second quarter and returned to action in the third quarter.
  • OL Aaron Banks (cramps): was labeled as questionable in the fourth quarter and was replaced by Spencer Burford.
  • K Matthew Wright (shoulder)

Source link

Warriors make a splash with 28 3-pointers in preseason win

Warriors make a splash with 28 3-pointers in preseason win

SACRAMENTO, Calif. — The Golden State Warriors want to maintain their identity with a fast-paced offense and 3-point shooting.

Still searching for the best combinations with a new set of players, coach Steve Kerr believes high-volume scoring and playing in transition needs to be an emphasis. Wednesday night’s 122-112 preseason win over the Sacramento Kings was the evidence Kerr sought.

The Warriors made 28 of their 52 3-point attempts, the most the team has ever made in a game.

Jonathan Kuminga, when told of the stat, wore a surprised look on his face and said, “Really?” Golden State’s regular-season 3-point record is 27, which it has reached twice.

“I think almost all of them were good shots,” Kerr said of the Warriors’ performance Wednesday.

Kerr doesn’t have a projected number of 3s he wants his team to shoot, but he has said he’d like to see Kuminga attempt several good 3s per game, and for Andrew Wiggins to take six to seven. He also named Brandin Podziemski, Moses Moody and De’Anthony Melton as players he wants to shoot them more.

Shooting depth is how the Warriors plan to make up for the void Klay Thompson left. Thompson attempted nine 3-pointers per game last season. There’s an understanding that no one player will be able to make up for that, so they want an all-hands-on-deck approach.

“What I like about this team is, even though we’ve lost Klay, we’ve got more shooting depth,” Kerr said. “We have more guys who can step in from one night to the next and make 3s. It’s going to be a big part of our team for sure.”

Against the Kings, Buddy Hield shot 6-of-7 from 3, and postgame said that he feels his shot could get even better as he shakes off the off-season rust and gets more acclimated to his new team.

Kuminga went 4-of-7. Melton also hit four, Stephen Curry and Lindy Waters III both hit three, and Podziemski, Green and Moody hit two.

“Steve actually encourages it,” Podziemski said. “It’s what we’ve been focusing on in camp. It’s been transition both ways and shooting 3s. … We have the personnel to do it. It’s a little different that we have more guys who can shoot the 3 besides Steph and Klay.”

Podziemski led the team with eight assists in a starting spot. His connectivity has been highlighted through the preseason, as the Warriors adjust from losing Chris Paul in the backup point guard role.

As the Warriors continue to try pushing the pace, they will lean on him to bridge the starters and second unit, whether or not he comes off of the bench.

“That’s all I’m thinking about — just making the right play,” Podziemski said. “I don’t need to score the ball to impact the ball.”

He continued: “A lot of [our 3s] came off the edge or one more pass. When you feel that and when the ball is moving around it feels like everybody is in rhythm because everybody is touching it. Even if they’re not shooting it, they got to touch the ball. I think that’s super important.”


Source link

Why Sean Payton “loved” Bo Nix’s fiery demeanor on the sideline in the Denver Broncos’ win over the Las Vegas Raiders

ENGLEWOOD, Colo. — Bo Nix didn’t hold back when addressing his head coach Sean Payton on the sideline midway through the Denver Broncos‘ dominant 34-18 victory over the Las Vegas Raiders on Sunday.

Fiery. Animated. Passionate.

Those are all words that could have been used to describe the emotions, temperament and actions of the 24-year-old quarterback toward his 61-year-old head coach.

And despite Payton being the head coach and Nix just the quarterback, the head coach loved it.

“Absolutely. Absolutely,” Payton said on Monday morning, when asked if he liked Nix speaking up in the animated moment during the game that was caught on national television. “All good. All good.”

“It’s the heat of the moment, it’s the game. It’s competitive, he’s fiery,” the head coach added, playing down the significance of the moment. “We’re in the business of passion.”

And being in the business of passion, as Payton said, the Broncos are looking for that type of passion Nix displayed.

“We’re looking for passion, and we’re looking for people who have passion for the game—not other things,” the head coach said. “I think that it’s so important to him. Again I loved his response. We’re on to the next play, and it’s nothing.”

One more thing Payton will love about that exchange is how Nix responded. After taking a few minutes to cool down, the rookie quarterback played the best stretch of football he’s played in his short NFL career.

To finish off the game, after the sideline exchange, Nix went 5-for-5 for 54 yards and had a passing touchdown and a rushing touchdown.

“He played well,” Payton said, evaluating Nix’s performance against the Raiders. “He used his feet, went through his progressions, threw the ball well, got it down the field, took the underneath throws. He handled the two-minute again. That’s happened a number of times now, where we’ve been able to get some points at the end of the half. He had good command of what we were doing, and I was pleased.”

On top of that, the Broncos’ scored a season-high 34 points, got their first division win, snapped their eight-game losing streak to the Raiders, extended their win streak to three games and started AFC West divisional play 1-0.

No wonder Sean Payton had no issue with Bo Nix showing passion on the sidelines.


Source link

Lamar Jackson, Derrick Henry lead Ravens to massive, chaotic win over Joe Burrow, Bengals

Week 5 is a bit early for a playoff game, but it sure felt that way when the Baltimore Ravens squared off against the Cincinnati Bengals in what turned out to be a magnificent quarterbacks’ duel and 41-38 overtime win for Baltimore.

Week 5 is also a bit early for a referendum game, but it sure felt that way for Joe Burrow and the Bengals.

Week 5 is definitely a bit early for crowning the touchdown pass of the year, but Lamar Jackson may have pulled it off for the Baltimore Ravens.

Jackson appeared to have made a catastrophic overtime mistake, fumbling away a snap, but Cincinnati missed a winning field goal attempt, and Derrick Henry made the Bengals pay on the very next play with a 51-yard sprint that set up Baltimore’s walkoff field goal.

The instant-classic showdown began as a typical AFC North rock fight, but the second half turned into an Olympic sprint. The teams combined for an astounding six straight touchdowns to start the second half, then settled matters with a chaotic back-and-forth overtime.

The game began with a bit of history. On the Ravens’ first series, Henry rumbled into the end zone for his 100th career touchdown; he’s only the 27th player in NFL history to hit triple digits in touchdowns. Jackson later found Rashod Bateman to take a 14-7 lead midway through the second quarter.

But then the 2024 Bengals began to look more like the Bengals of yore — or the Tigers of Burrow’s college days at LSU. Cincinnati halted Henry in the end zone for a safety, then ran off another 15 unanswered points to take a 24-14 lead.

Burrow, who has effectively addressed all lingering injury concerns, delivered two highlight-reel passes in that run, starting with a 41-yard touchdown pass to Ja’Marr Chase:

He later found Andrei Iosivas in double coverage with a pinpoint rainbow that set up Burrow’s third touchdown pass, and second to Tee Higgins:

Also in the mix: a strange play where the officials wouldn’t let Cincinnati snap the ball … then dinged the Bengals for a delay-of-game penalty because they didn’t snap the ball.

The second half was a flat-out sprint, with the first six combined possessions ending in touchdowns, none smoother than Jackson’s brilliant disaster-to-glory touchdown pass with less than six minutes remaining in the game:

Burrow’s interception late in the fourth quarter ended the nothing-but-touchdowns second-half run at the worst possible time for Cincinnati. Fortunately for the Bengals, Jackson and the Ravens weren’t able to flip that into another touchdown; they managed to wrangle a 56-yard field goal from Justin Tucker to tie the game at 38-38.

Then came overtime, and Jackson’s crucial mistake. In Cincinnati territory and driving, the Ravens appeared primed to nail down a game-winning touchdown. But Jackson fumbled the snap, and Cincinnati played conservatively to set up a field goal … that Evan McPherson missed after a botched hold.

On the very next play, Henry stomped for 51 yards, setting up Tucker’s winner.

The loss spoiled what had been an outstanding day for Burrow. He threw for 392 yards and a career-high five touchdowns, but that fourth-quarter interception when the Bengals led by 3 allowed the Ravens to force overtime. Jackson, meanwhile, was 26 of 42 for 348 yards and four touchdowns, and the missed field goal meant his overtime fumble didn’t end up costing Baltimore the game. Henry carried the ball 15 yards for 92 yards.

Cincinnati is now in a world of trouble, at 1-4 and looking at a huge mountain to climb to get back into the playoff hunt. Baltimore, meanwhile, has resolved all concerns after its 0-2 start, with three straight wins and an offensive attack that’s clearly working to (near) perfection.

Looking ahead, the Ravens have the Battle of I-95 next week, facing off against Washington, followed by road games against Tampa Bay and Cleveland. Cincinnati, meanwhile, will have road games against the Giants and Cleveland before welcoming in the Eagles. By then, the identity of both of these teams will be a lot clearer, for better or worse.


Source link

Lamar Jackson Delivers Arguably His Greatest Highlight in Shootout Win

“I have to give the receivers [credit],” Flowers said. “Everybody came through and made plays when they were supposed to make plays, and [Jackson] kept us alive.” 

Despite the win and his performance, Jackson was annoyed after the game. He was mad at himself for fumbling in overtime, which nearly cost the Ravens the game.

Jackson explained that the miscue happened because he took his eyes off the snap to see if the Ravens were got it off before a delay of game penalty. He said he was “furious” walking off the field.

“This is not an exciting win for me at all, not [with] how the game ended, especially with us in overtime dropping the ball, and then the fumble happened. I’m ticked off about that,” Jackson said.

“I didn’t want to put my defense back out there, and our offensive line was doing a great job, our receivers were doing a great job, but we got it done, so it’s cool. We got the win; that’s all that matters.”


Source link