Marin Independent Journal

Raiders edge Broncos to end season at .500

- By Jerry McDonald

Derek Carr hit Darren Waller with a two-point conversion with 24 seconds left for a 3231 win in Denver.

Derek Carr hit Darren Waller with a two-point conversion with 24 seconds to play Sunday to allow the Raiders to escape the 2020 season with an 8-8 record and a 32- 31 win over the host Denver Broncos.

The play followed a 1-yard run by Josh Jacobs on fourth- andgoal, capping a 77-yard, sevenplay drive.

Denver quarterbac­k Drew Lock threw a 92-yard touchdown pass to Jerry Jeudy with 6:29 to play after the Raiders had recovered from their own mistakes to tie the game 24-24.

The Raiders scored on a 33yard field goal by Daniel Carlson, touchdown passes of 28 and 26 yards from Derek Carr to Darren Waller and Bryan Edwards and runs of 28-yards and 1 yard by Jacobs.

Denver had field goals of 22, 37 and 26 yards by Brandon McManus, a 1-yard pass from Lock to Tony Fumagalli, a 12-yard run by Melvin Gordon and the 92-yard strike to Jeudy.

The Raiders end the season at .500, improving by one game over their 2019 record. The Broncos finish 5-11.

Carr finished 24 of 38 for 371

yards, two touchdowns and two intercepti­ons, Jacobs rushed for 89 yards on 15 attempts and two scores and Waller had nine catches for 119 yards, a touchdown and the game-winning twopoint conversion.

Denver’s Lock was 25 of 41 for 339 yards, two touchdowns and no intercepti­ons.

Gaffes in the secondary have been prevalent throughout the season, and the finale was no different. This time, it was allowing Jeudy to get loose for a 92yard touchdown pass form lock on a third-and-10 play.

The Raiders recovered from their spate of turnovers to tie the game 24-24 on a 28-yard run by Jacobs, capping a 90-yard, nine-play drive with 7:27 remaining.

Carr had a 25-yard completion to Edwards and three completion­s to Waller, who eclipsed Tim Brown’s single-season receiving record with his 105th catch.

Henry Ruggs III lost a fumble on a reverse on a crushing hit by Michael Ojemudia — giving the Raiders two turnovers in three snaps — to set up Gordon’s 12-yard touchdown run with 14:54 to play. Lock threw to Jerry Jeudy for the two-point conversion and a 24-17 Denver lead.

The Broncos closed the Raiders’ margin on their first possession of the second half on McManus’ 37yard field goal to make it 1713. The attempt was set up by a questionab­le 27-yard pass interferen­ce penalty against Nevin Lawson, who was covering DaeSean Hamilton along the sideline.

Following a Carr intercepti­on which glanced off the hands of Waller and in to the hands of Justin Simmons, Denver got a 20-yard pass on a back shoulder fade from Lock to Noah Fant, setting up a 27-yard field goal to make it 17-16 with 3:07 let in the third quarter.

The Raiders took a 17-10 lead at halftime with some complement­ary football the likes of which were seen far too infrequent­ly through 15 games.

First, the Raiders forced a Denver punt with 1:52 to play, which was returned 21 yards by Hunter Renfrow to the Las Vegas 44-yard line.

With the defensive and special teams having set the table, the Raiders converted the sequence in to points when Carr threw a 26-yard strike to Edwards on thirdand-15 with 26 seconds to go in the half.

It was the first career touchdown for Edwards, a third-round draft pick out of South Caroliina who had a strong training camp, was injured in Week 2 and has been struggling to become a target for Carr all season.

Trailing 10-3, the Raiders tied it with 11:15 left in the half when Carr hit Waller for a 23-yard touchdown play on third-and-2 in about the same place Edwards made his touchdown reception.

A 57-yard Carr to Nelson Agholor pass had the Raiders set up at the Broncos’ 7-yard line on their second possession, but a touchdown pass to Agholor was erased on Zay Jones’ offensive pass interferen­ce. The Raiders ended up settling for Carlson’s 33-yard field goal following a false start penalty.

The Broncos opened with McManus’ 22- yard field goal after Denver stalled on its opening drive and took a 10-3 lead on a 1-yard flip from Lock to Fumagalli, who was open in between linebacker­s Nicholas Morrow and Raekwon McMillan.

 ?? DAVID ZALUBOWSKI — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Denver Broncos inside linebacker Josey Jewell (47) tackles Las Vegas Raiders tight end Darren Waller (83) during the second half on Sunday, in Denver.
DAVID ZALUBOWSKI — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Denver Broncos inside linebacker Josey Jewell (47) tackles Las Vegas Raiders tight end Darren Waller (83) during the second half on Sunday, in Denver.

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