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Chargers beat Raiders for 10th time in a row

San Diego Chargers quarterback Philip Rivers (17) is about to be sacked by Oakland Raiders defensive end Kalimba Edwards (58) in the second quarter of their NFL football game in Oakland, Calif., Sunday, Sept. 28, 2008. (AP Photo/Paul Sakuma)
AP

last updated: September 29, 2008 02:49:58 AM

OAKLAND -- For three quarters, the Oakland Raiders stopped LaDainian Tomlinson and appeared poised to stop a long losing streak to the San Diego Chargers.

Then Tomlinson got loose, the Chargers pressured JaMarcus Russell and the longest winning streak any team has held against the Raiders grew to 10 games.

Darren Sproles' long kickoff return set up Nate Kaeding's go-ahead 47-yard field goal with 1:51 to play and Tomlinson sealed the 28-18 victory Sunday with his second fourth-quarter touchdown that gave him yet another 100-yard game.

"Every year is different. They're a better team," said Tomlinson, who had 75 of his 106 yards in the fourth quarter. "We pride ourselves on now matter how we start, finishing the game strong. It didn't matter that it was against the Raiders."

Closing out a game was important for the Chargers (2-2), who lost their first two games of the season in the final minute. But those games weren't against the Raiders (1-3), who showed they can blow a lead against the Chargers as easily as they can get blown out.

"Obviously when you've won that many in a row, you've got a grasp on how to beat them," said quarterback Philip Rivers, who went 14 for 25 for 180 yards, a touchdown and two interceptions. "We just kept fighting."

The loss marked the second consecutive week the Raiders (1-3) were unable to hold onto a two-score lead in the fourth quarter and might finally signal the end of coach Lane Kiffin's tenure in Oakland.

The Raiders blew a nine-point fourth-quarter lead last week in Buffalo. They led 15-0 at halftime Sunday and went into the fourth quarter with a 15-3 lead. Now with a bye coming up this week, the questions about Kiffin's job security will only intensify.

"That's not my call," he said. "I don't know what I expect. I'm not going to do anything different than I've been doing, keeping this team together the best I can."

The Raiders once again wilted as the game progressed, struggling to stop San Diego's high-powered offense and generating only one first down in the first 22 minutes of the half.

Two turnovers by Russell led to two touchdowns in the fourth quarter that gave San Diego its first lead on a 13-yard run by Tomlinson and a 2-point conversion.

After Kaeding missed his second field goal for the Chargers, Russell finally got the Raiders offense moving with help from a pair of penalties by defensive back Antonio Cromartie. That set up Sebastian Janikowski's 32-yard field goal that tied the game at 18 with 2:47 to go.

But before the Raiders could even finish celebrating, Sproles returned the ensuing kickoff to the Raiders 35. The Chargers were unable to get a first down, but Kaeding didn't miss this kick, giving San Diego the lead and the win.

Russell's first interception of the season on a deflected screen pass to Darren McFadden set up San Diego's first touchdown of the game when Rivers hit Antonio Gates from 9 yards to make it 15-10 on the second play of the fourth quarter. Just over a minute later, Marques Harris beat Kwame Harris, stripped the ball from Russell and recovered at the 13. Tomlinson ran it in on the next play and a 2-point conversion made it 18-15.

The Raiders could have had an even bigger halftime lead. But they settled for a field goal on the opening drive after moving inside the 5 and had another touchdown called back on a holding penalty against Cornell Green. They settled for a field goal on that drive as well.

"As an offense, when you get those opportunities you can't settle for 3, especially against a team as talented as the Chargers," said tight end Zach Miller, who scored Oakland's only touchdown on a 63-yard reception in the second quarter. "They're a good team so that hurt us taking those 3 points."

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