NFL ROUNDUP: Overtime field goal helps Cincinnati Bengals top Seattle Seahawks

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The Sports Xchange

CINCINNATI — Mike Nugent’s 42-yard field goal in overtime capped a 17-point comeback in the fourth quarter, lifting the Cincinnati Bengals past the Seattle Seahawks 27-24 on Sunday.

Andy Dalton passed for 331 yards and two touchdowns and tight end Tyler Eifert had eight catches for 90 yards and two TDs in helping Cincinnati improve to 5-0 for the first time since 1988, when they last reached the Super Bowl.

Starting in place of injured Marshawn Lynch, rookie Thomas Rawls rushed for 169 yards and a touchdown for Seattle (2-3), which for three quarters on Sunday looked more like a two-time Super Bowl participant.

Seahawks quarterback Russell Wilson was sacked four times and picked off once while passing for 213 yards and a touchdown.

Browns 33, Ravens 30 (OT)

Travis Coons hit a 32-yard field goal in overtime to lift Cleveland over Baltimore, snapping a seven-game losing streak at M&T Bank Stadium.

The Ravens blew a fourth-quarter lead for the fourth consecutive game and fell to 1-4.

Browns quarterback Josh McCown completed 36 of 51 passes for 457 yards with two touchdowns. He also ran for a score. It was the fourth most passing yards allowed by Baltimore in franchise history. Tight end Gary Barnidge caught eight passes for 139 yards with a crucial touchdown for Cleveland (2-3).

Eagles 39, Saints 17

Defensive end Fletcher Cox had two sacks resulting in two fumbles that led to scores as Philadelphia beat New Orleans.

Cox’s first sack and forced fumble on Saints quarterback Drew Brees, in the second quarter, gave the Eagles (2-3) possession on the Saints’ 46 and led to a field goal and a 10-7 Eagles lead at halftime. Then Cox did it again in the third quarter after the Eagles took a 17-10 lead. This time he knocked the ball out of Brees’ hands and recovered it himself. That set up a 13-yard touchdown pass from Sam Bradford to tight end Brent Celek to give the Eagles a 23-10 lead with 6:31 left in the third quarter.

Bradford completed 32 of 45 passes for 33 yards and two touchdowns, while running back DeMarco Murray had his best game as an Eagle, rushing for 83 yards on 20 carries after just 47 yards in his previous three games. For New Orleans (1-4), Brees completed 26 of 43 passes for 336 yard and two touchdowns, but he was also sacked five times.

Bills 14, Titans 13

After struggling just to gain first downs for most of three quarters, Buffalo quarterback Tyrod Taylor brought his team from behind by leading two 80-yard second-half touchdown drives.

Taylor’s 22-yard scramble with 1:20 left in the third quarter pulled the Bills within 10-7. They hadn’t crossed midfield during the game until Taylor’s 26-yard run got them to the Tennessee 26 two plays before the touchdown. Buffalo leaned on Taylor again as his 24-yard scramble on third-and-23 at the 7, teamed with a 15-yard penalty on linebacker Zach Brown for a horse-collar tackle, got the Bills to the 46. Three plays after connecting with wide receiver Chris Hogan for a 47-yard gain, Taylor hooked up with Hogan for a 2-yard scoring strike with 5:25 remaining for the winning score.

Taylor finished 10 of 17 for 109 yards and also rushed for a game-high 76 yards on eight attempts as the Bills improved to 3-2 and beat Tennessee (1-3) for the first time in seven games, dating back to 2000.

Bears 18, Chiefs 17

Jay Cutler threw two touchdown passes in the game’s final three minutes to lead Chicago to a come-from-behind victory over Kansas City.

The Bears (2-3) were down 17-3 at halftime, and trailed 17-6 going into the fourth quarter before Cutler was able to avoid pressure from the Chiefs defense and took the offense down the field for a 22-yard touchdown to wide receiver Marquess Wilson. He then threw the winning score on a 7-yard play to running back Matt Forte with seconds left.

The Chiefs (1-4) attempted a 66-yard field goal on the game’s final play, but the attempt by kicker Cairo Santos was well short, barely making it into the end zone. Pro Bowl running back Jamaal Charles left the game six minutes into the third quarter with what appeared to be a serious injury to his right knee.

Buccaneers 38, Jaguars 31

Everything came together for Tampa Bay, which got three touchdowns from Doug Martin, mistake-free football from rookie Jameis Winston and reliable kicking from Connor Barth.

The Buccaneers ended an 11-game home losing streak with their first home win under coach Lovie Smith, while the Jaguars lost their 12th straight road game.

The Jaguars (1-4) had rallied from a 20-7 deficit with 17 straight points for a 24-20 lead, but the Bucs (2-3) answered with 18 straight, including a defensive touchdown when Jacquies Smith recovered a fumble forced by George Johnson for the lead.

Packers 24, Rams 10

For the second consecutive week, it was the Green Bay defense — not two-time MVP quarterback Aaron Rodgers — that was the reason why the Packers stayed undefeated.

The Packers (5-0) made four interceptions of Nick Foles. Rodgers was 19 of 30 for 241 yards and two touchdowns but St. Louis picked him off twice and also stripped him with a fumble. That gave the Rams (2-3) a fighting chance to pull off back-to-back road upsets after knocking off Arizona last week.

While Rams rookie running back Todd Gurley pounded out 159 yards on 30 attempts, Foles was miserable. Foles was sacked three times and faced constant pressure, finishing 11-of-30 passing for 141 yards.

Broncos 16, Raiders 10

Cornerback Chris Harris Jr. returned an interception 74 yards for a touchdown with 6:53 left to play, leading the Denver Broncos to a victory against the Oakland Raiders at the O.co Coliseum.

On third-and-5 from the Broncos’ 31, Raiders quarterback Derek Carr tried to hit wide receiver Seth Roberts over the middle on a slant but threw behind him. Harris knifed in for the interception and raced untouched into the end zone, extending Denver’s 9-7 lead to 16-7.

Sebastian Janikowski drilled a 50-yard field goal — on first-and-10 from the Broncos 32 — with 1:40 left. The Raiders attempted an onside kick, but Denver recovered.

Denver (5-0) remained undefeated and beat the Raiders (2-3) for the eighth straight time. The Broncos won their 14th straight AFC West road game, an ongoing NFL record for divisional road victories.

Cardinals 42, Lions 17

Carson Palmer tossed three touchdown passes and Arizona’s defense forced six turnovers as the Cardinals cruised past the winless Detroit Lions at Ford Field.

Palmer passed for 161 yards and running back David Johnson added two rushing touchdowns. Running back Chris Johnson gained 103 yards on 11 carries, strong safety Rashad Johnson had two interceptions and Andre Ellington added a 63-yard scoring run for the Cardinals (4-1), who lead the NFC West by two games after losses by St. Louis and Seattle on Sunday.

Lions quarterback Matthew Stafford was intercepted three times. He was benched in favor of Dan Orlovsky midway through the third quarter. Orlovsky threw for 191 yards and a touchdown for the Lions (0-5).

Patriots 30, Cowboys 6

New England quarterback Tom Brady threw for two touchdowns and ran for another as the Patriots remained undefeated by downing the Dallas Cowboys at AT&T Stadium.

The Patriots (4-0) weren’t the same offensive juggernaut as their first three games, but New England did more than enough coming off a bye week to wear down the undermanned Cowboys.

Brady and the Patriots came in averaging nearly 40 points in their first three wins. They won this one with defense, giving up a season-low points total.

Brady worked around five sacks — all in the first half — to pass for 275 yards (20 of 27) with two scores and no interceptions. The veteran has 11 touchdown passes this season and has yet to throw a pick.

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