Broncos trounce San Diego



Chargers quarterback Philip Rivers replaced injured starter Drew Brees.
SAN DIEGO (AP) -- Drew Brees hustled out of the locker room with his right arm in a sling.
LaDainian Tomlinson said he played the last 41/2 games with a cracked rib that made it tough to breathe every time he got hit.
It was a painful ending to a lost season for the San Diego Chargers, who were roughed up Saturday in a 23-7 loss to the playoff-bound Denver Broncos.
Denver safety John Lynch, who's from San Diego, did a lot of the damage himself, helping knock Brees out of the game with a dislocated shoulder, then forcing Philip Rivers to fumble in the end zone, resulting in a safety. The game, played on a rainy afternoon in front of a crowd that included thousands of Broncos fans, meant nothing in the standings.
Playing hard
That didn't keep the Broncos (13-3), who had already clinched the AFC West title and a first-round bye, from playing all-out.
"In my mind, every time you get an opportunity to play in the NFL, you owe it to yourself, to your team and to the people who pay to watch the game, to play hard," said Lynch, whose high school coach was in the stands.
Quarterback Jake Plummer got banged around a bit, but led the Broncos to a 14-7 halftime lead before making way for Bradlee Van Pelt.
"It's going to mean nothing if we don't do something in the playoffs," said Plummer, who was 8-of-14 for 91 yards.
Tatum Bell scored three touchdowns for Denver, but was held to 52 yards on 17 carries. He needed 131 yards for 1,000. He and Mike Anderson were trying to become the fourth running back tandem in NFL history to finish with 1,000 yards each.
San Diego (9-7), which won the division last year, lost three of its last four games. After ending Indianapolis' shot at a perfect season on Dec. 18, the Chargers were knocked out of the playoff picture with a listless performance in a 20-7 loss at Kansas City on Christmas Eve.
Club records
Tomlinson did set two club records.
His 6-yard scoring run in the second quarter was his 20th touchdown of the season, breaking out of a tie with Chuck Muncie, who scored 19 TDs in 1981. He also eclipsed Hall of Famer Lance Alworth's team career mark of 9,721 yards from scrimmage, pushing his total to 9,755.
Tomlinson hadn't scored in the previous four games, matching the longest drought of his five-year career. He gained 92 yards on 19 carries, his fifth straight game under 100 yards.
He sustained what the team thought were bruised ribs in a win over Oakland on Dec. 4. X-rays the next day didn't show a break, but Tomlinson said an MRI last week revealed a cracked rib.
"It's tough when you are playing with ribs that are more than just bruised. But as football players, it's hard to take us off the field," he said. "You have to be really pretty much dying out there to come off the field. That's just the way we are."
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