NFL ROUNDUP | Sunday's other games



AFC
Bengals 34, Chargers 27
SAN DIEGO -- The Bengals (6-5) stayed atop the AFC North with Baltimore. Jon Kitna matched his career high with four touchdown passes, three to Chad Johnson, and Corey Dillon ran for 108 yards on 18 carries to help the Bengals win for the fifth time in six games. San Diego (2-9) has lost 16 of its last 20 under coach Marty Schottenheimer and will miss the playoffs for the eighth straight season.
Jets 13, Jaguars 10
EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. -- Jacksonville (2-9) outplayed and outgained New York (4-7) all game. But Chad Pennington threw a 3-yard touchdown pass to Santana Moss with 26 seconds remaining, capping a 94-yard drive. Fred Taylor had 32 carries for 119 yards, his 26th career 100-yard game for the Jaguars.
Ravens 44, Seahawks 41, OT
BALTIMORE -- The Ravens (6-5) stormed back behind Anthony Wright. The former third-string quarterback had the finest performance of his career. He went 20-for-37 for 319 yards and a personal-best four touchdowns -- all to Marcus Robinson. Matt Hasselbeck threw a career-high five touchdown passes for the Seahawks, going 23-for-41 for 333 yards. Darrell Jackson had seven receptions for 146 yards and two scores, and Bobby Engram also had two touchdown catches. But the Seahawks (7-4) fell to 1-4 on the road.
Patriots 23, Texans 20, OT
HOUSTON -- Tom Brady's 4-yard touchdown pass to Daniel Graham forced overtime, but Adam Vinatieri had his 37-yard field-goal attempt blocked early in the extra session. Then, Vinatieri made the winner with 41 seconds left to extend New England's winning streak to seven games. The Patriots (9-2) were ready to end overtime quickly when Mike Vrabel picked off Tony Banks' pass on the first play. But Ramon Walker gave the Texans (4-7) a stay with the first field goal block in franchise history.
Colts 17, Bills 14
ORCHARD PARK, N.Y. -- Edgerrin James carried Indianapolis' banged-up offense, scoring twice, including the winner on a fourth-down plunge from inside the 1 with 1:38 remaining. The Colts (9-2) won with leading receiver Marvin Harrison seeing limited action because of a hamstring injury. Buffalo (4-7) got two touchdowns after going three games without one, but lost its fourth in a row.
Chiefs 27, Raiders 24
KANSAS CITY -- Morten Andersen booted a 35-yard field goal with 4 seconds left. Trent Green hit Marc Boerigter for 16 yards on fourth-and-14 to set it up for the Chiefs (10-1), who have the NFL's best record. Priest Holmes, whose 15 TDs rushing lead the NFL, had 91 yards rushing and 100 yards receiving. He went over the 1,000-yard rushing mark for the third straight year. Jerry Rice, 41, caught a milestone touchdown pass from Rick Mirer for Oakland (3-8). His 47-yard touchdown was reception No. 1,500 and TD catch No. 193, both NFL records.
Cowboys 24, Panthers 20
IRVING, Texas -- Dallas moved into a four-way tie for the NFC's best record with Carolina, St. Louis and Philadelphia, all at 8-3. Quincy Carter threw two touchdown passes for Dallas, which had only 31 points in its last four games. Stephen Davis became Carolina's single-season rushing leader (1,143) and tied the franchise TD mark (seven), but finished with just 59 yards.
NFC
Rams 30, Cardinals 27, OT
TEMPE, Ariz. -- St. Louis (8-3) took sole possession of the NFC West lead after Wilkins' second winning kick in a row -- his 31-yarder last week beat the Bears. Marc Bulger, who threw four interceptions, led the Rams on a 16-play, 82-yard drive and Wilkins' 24-yard field goal tied it at 27 as regulation ended. Jeff Blake threw two second-half touchdown passes to rookie Anquan Boldin and the Cardinals (3-8) rallied from a 14-point third-quarter deficit to take a 27-24 lead. Boldin caught six passes for 123 yards to fall a yard shy of tying the NFL record for the quickest to 1,000 yards receiving by a rookie. He has 66 catches for 999 yards.
Vikings 24, Lions 14
MINNEAPOLIS -- The Vikings (7-4) snapped a four-game losing streak and remained one game ahead of Green Bay in the NFC North. Corey Chavous and Brian Williams each returned interceptions for touchdowns late in the game. The Lions (3-8) tied Buffalo (1983-86) for the second-longest road skid in NFL history at 22 games. The Houston Oilers (1981-84) own the league record with 23 consecutive losses away from home.
Eagles 33, Saints 20
PHILADELPHIA -- Donovan McNabb completed 16 of 25 passes for 259 yards and one touchdown, leading the Eagles (8-3) to their sixth straight victory. David Akers added four field goals. Deuce McAllister had 184 yards rushing, including TD runs of 76 and 22 yards, and Aaron Brooks threw for 287 yards for the Saints (5-6).
INTERCONFERENCE
Titans 38, Falcons 31
ATLANTA -- With Steve McNair sidelined by a calf injury, Billy Volek threw his second career touchdown pass, rallying the Titans (9-2) from a 21-point deficit. Justin McCareins scored twice, on a 58-yard punt return and a 14-yard TD pass from Volek. Atlanta (2-9) got an 86-guard touchdown on a screen pass to Warrick Dunn and Doug Johnson threw for 276 yards.
Dolphins 24, Redskins 23
MIAMI -- Jay Fiedler came off the bench late in the third quarter and helped the Dolphins rally from a 13-point deficit. Fiedler led scoring drives of 71 and 69 yards, both ending with touchdowns by Ricky Williams, who ran for 107 yards. The largest fourth-quarter comeback by the Dolphins (7-4) since 1980 came in their debut in orange jerseys. Washington (4-7) lost for the sixth time in seven games. Bruce Smith tied Reggie White's NFL career sacks record by getting a half-sack.
Bears 19, Broncos 10
DENVER -- Chicago (4-7) benefited from good field position and two pass interference penalties against Lenny Walls. Kordell Stewart scored on a 1-yard run after replacing Chris Chandler, and Paul Edinger kicked four field goals. Clinton Portis finished with 165 yards on 14 carries for his second straight 1,000-yard season for Denver (6-5).
-- Associated Press