• Font Size    
Advertising
E-mail

Close Window E-mail This Page

Dolphins Rally Late To Beat Raiders, 17-15

Required fields are marked with an asterisk(*)



The information you provide will be used only to send the requested e-mail and will not be used to send any other e-mail communications. Read more in our Privacy Policy

Send E-mail

   Print     Share +    Comments

Dolphins Rally Late To Beat Raiders, 17-15

 Box Score
 Raiders Team Page

MIAMI (CBS 5 / AP) ― Dan Carpenter nailed a 38-yard field goal with 38 seconds left to cap a 61-yard drive, and the Miami Dolphins earned their fourth consecutive victory Sunday by beating woeful the Oakland Raiders 17-15.

The Dolphins have been good closers all season, outscoring opponents 59-39 in fourth quarter.

Johnnie Lee Higgins scored on a 93-yard punt with 4:30 left to give the Raiders their first lead, but Miami shook off the stunning score. Chad Pennington moved the Dolphins down the field in 10 plays, completing a 7-yard pass on fourth-and-5 to Ted Ginn Jr. to keep the drive alive.

"It was my first fourth-and-5 with a minute or so left in the game," said Ginn, a second-year pro. "It was probably Chad's 20th. He's cool, calm and collected. He went out there and got the job done." 

With the win, the Dolphins (6-4) set up a showdown at home next Sunday against AFC East rival New England. Both teams trail the division-leading New York Jets by one game.

Oakland (2-8) lost its fourth in a row, and Tom Cable fell to 1-5 as interim coach.

"This is good for us," Cable said. "It hurts because we lost, but we're getting closer. We've just got to keep pounding away, and we'll get a break one of these days."

The Raiders generated only two field goals on offense, and scored two points when Jay Richardson sacked Chad Pennington for a safety.

Reinforcements failed to spark the Raiders' sputtering offense. Quarterback JaMarcus Russell returned after missing one game with a knee injury, and he went 15-for-22 for 156 yards, but Miami had five sacks. His last pass was a completion to the Oakland 30 before time ran out.

Teammate Darren McFadden, nursing a toe injury that has hampered him most of the season, played for the first time in four games as a reserve. He carried only three times for 13 yards and the Raiders totaled just 70 yards on the ground.

"You can't have an offense that doesn't score points," running back Justin Fargas said. "We have to pick up our side of it."

Ginn had a 40-yard touchdown run on an end-around for Miami, and Ronnie Brown rushed for 101 yards in 16 carries. The Dolphins ran from the Wildcat formation 10 times for 52 yards, while Oakland didn't use the package despite the return of triggerman McFadden.

Still, the Raiders nearly pulled out a win thanks to Higgins. The Dolphins' punt coverage unit ranks second worst in the NFL, and he found a gaping crease. The closest would-be tackler was the last line of defense, punter Brandon Fields, who may have nicked Higgins' heel in an unsuccessful diving attempt to prevent the score that put Oakland ahead 15-14.

"We keep putting ourselves in these dogfights," Porter said. "You don't want them to come back and bite you. When you've got a team down, you've got to figure out how to put them away. Having last-second wins is not something you want to be hoping for every time."

The Dolphins drove 93 yards on their opening possession and scored on the run by Ginn, who broke one tackle and juked past another defender. Their other touchdown drive covered 64 yards in the third period and was capped by Patrick Cobbs' 10-yard run for a 14-5 lead.

The Raiders drove 75 yards late in the first half, but with first-and-goal at the 5, they committed two penalties, lost 5 yards on a broken play and settled for a field goal and a 7-3 halftime deficit.

Sebastian Janikowski had a chance to give Oakland an 8-7 lead in the third quarter, but his 46-yard field goal attempt deflected off the right upright. He made a 37-yarder with 8 minutes left to cut Miami's lead to 14-8.

Notes: Russell was informed after the game of a death in his family, the Raiders said. He didn't talk to reporters. ... Ginn's touchdown rushing was the first by a Dolphins receiver since 2003. ... For the fourth consecutive game, Miami had the ball for more than 10 minutes in the fourth quarter. ... Shane Lechler continues to be one of Oakland's few bright spots. He averaged 52.7 yards on six kicks, four inside the 20.


(© 2010 CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.)

Add Comment

here. here. Need a log in? Register here
  •  * Will not be displayed with comment
  •  * e.g. (http://www.mywebsite.com)
  •  
  • Click here to refresh with new letters

Close Window Login


Close Window Flag Comment


loading...
You need the latest Flash player to view video content.
Click here to download.

Click here to bypass this detection if you already have the latest Flash Player.