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Blue Bolt
11-20-2006, 01:06 AM
Rivers, Chargers a 'relentless' bunch
By John Clayton
ESPN.com: http://sports.espn.go.com/nfl/columns/story?columnist=clayton_john&id=2668992

DENVER -- The great quarterbacks have short memories. All the great ones made mistakes. They just didn't remember them when they were on the field.

Following Sunday night's unbelievable 17-point second-half comeback by the Chargers to beat the Broncos 35-27, Chargers coach Marty Schottenheimer used the Joe Montana comparison with Philip Rivers' short memory. A year ago, the Chargers blew a game in Denver when Drew Brees opened the second half by throwing an interception that Champ Bailey returned for a Broncos touchdown. On Sunday night, Rivers threw a third quarter pick to Broncos cornerback Darrent Williams, who returned it 31 yards for a touchdown to give the Broncos 24-7 lead.

Rivers spent about a minute questioning himself with teammates on the bench, saying, "I can't believe I threw that ball out there." Veteran receiver Keenan McCardell and others told him not to worry. Rivers didn't. He came back by completing 11 of his next 13 passes for 148 yards in three consecutive scoring drives to take a 28-27.

"We're a relentless group of guys. We feel like we're never out of a ball game no matter how much we're down. You have to keep playing against us because we feel like we can score at any time. I'm going along for the ride."
-- San Diego RB LaDainian Tomlinson

A week ago, Rivers rallied the Chargers from a 21-point deficit against the Bengals to beat them 49-41. Rivers doesn't mind going against the stream. This Rivers has ice running through his veins when the games get hot. Thanks to Rivers' ability to rebound, LaDainian Tomlinson's fresh legs and a relentless group of Chargers, San Diego leads the AFC West by a game over Denver with an 8-2 record.

"The best quality of Philip Rivers is that he never thinks about the last play," Schottenheimer said. "That was the quality in my view that made Joe Montana the great quarterback that he was. When the previous play's over, it doesn't matter to him."

Schottenheimer brought up an anecdote from the preseason that gave him a preview of coming attractions involving Rivers. The Chargers were playing the Seahawks in San Diego. Rivers botched center snaps and handed the Seahawks a 14-0 lead. Most quarterbacks would have folded. Rivers went to work, coming back with three touchdown drives to give the Chargers a 21-14 halftime lead.

Sunday night was no different. After nine weeks of playing safe, efficient zone defenses that lacked blitzes, Shanahan opened the defensive playbook and unleashed the hounds. They emptied safeties from the middle of the defense and stuck them near the line of scrimmage in "Cover 0" blitzes. To stop Tomlinson, the Broncos stacked eight and nine defenders near the line of scrimmage.

Rivers struggled. He completed only one pass in the second quarter, and he watched the Broncos build a 24-7 lead in the third quarter. The killer could have been Williams' interception for a touchdown. But after lamenting it while Jason Elam kicked the extra point, Rivers blocked it out and went back to work.

"You make a critical error like that -- an interception for a touchdown on the road -- you usually don't come away with a win," Rivers said. "Nobody panicked. I put it behind me and said, 'I just have to keep playing.' That's a credit to our team, our maturity and we're a special bunch. It was like the scoreboard wasn't even up there. We just went out there and played."

Give offensive coordinator Cam Cameron some credit, too. Trailing 24-7, and set up with good field position at the Chargers 40 because of a Michael Turner 40-yard kickoff return, Cameron opened the comeback with a screen pass to Tomlinson for 14 yards.

"It's tough," Rivers said. "An interception like that never leaves your mind, but you don't want it to affect you on the field. If you worry about the interception, you throw another one. The key thing was starting with a screen that was a completion. It's amazing. You go back in the huddle and the score is 24-7 and everybody has the same look. That's what's comforting to know -- that nobody was down."

The Chargers simply charged. After driving to the Broncos 37, Rivers got into a rhythm. He hit Eric Parker for a 15-yard gain and found Antonio Gates for 17 to move San Diego to the Broncos 3. Tomlinson sealed the deal with a 3-yard touchdown, his second of four on the night. The Chargers trailed 24-14.

It was no different than a week ago. Once the Chargers got two quick scores against the Bengals, they felt comfortable getting within seven points and made it a game. Same story, different city. The next time Rivers touched the ball in Denver, he had good field position at the Chargers 42.

On third down, he spotted the Broncos heading into another Cover 0 blitz. No safeties were in the middle of the field. That was the good news. The bad news was six or seven angry Broncos were coming toward him so he was not going to have much time to throw the ball.

"We called a protection in which everybody was out in route, so I have only the five linemen blocking for me," Rivers said. "We don't have anyone to block them. I can throw it hot to Gates on the other side. He ran the right route but it was third down [and 3] and I didn't know if he had enough to get the first down or not. Or you can run away from the pressure. I ran away from the pressure. I had just enough time to get it to LaDainian."

Tomlinson took the screen 51 yards for a touchdown. The Chargers now trailed 24-21 with 4:51 left in the third quarter. It was a ballgame. The Broncos marched 60 yards for a field goal, but the the score was 27-21. Still just a one-possession game.

The Chargers were suddenly in position to be the first team in NFL history to make 17-point comebacks in back-to-back games. Rivers marched the Chargers 55 yards on seven plays and hit Vincent Jackson in the back of the end zone with a 5-yard touchdown pass to take the lead 28-27.

"We're a relentless group of guys," Tomlinson said. "We feel like we're never out of a ball game no matter how much we're down. You have to keep playing against us because we feel like we can score at any time. I'm going along for the ride."

Even when the Chargers don't want to score, they score. Jake Plummer threw an interception to Drayton Florence with 3:03 remaining, setting up the Chargers at the Broncos 23. Tomlinson made three runs totaling 22 yards to the Broncos 1, but two minutes remained and the Broncos had no time outs. Rivers took a knee, but there was still 1:17 left. Because it was third-and-1, the Chargers called a Tomlinson run and the Broncos let him score to give the Chargers a 35-27 lead.

The things got a little crazy. Broncos defenders lost their composure. Linebacker Ian Gold was called for unnecessary roughness and Darrent Williams was flagged for jawing at an official. The 30 yards of penalties let the Chargers kick off from the 40.

"You have to keep your poise at the end of the game," Shanahan said. "I'm not exactly sure what happened, but usually they catch the second guy. You have to keep your focus at those points in the game on both sides of the ball."

The Chargers defense lost its composure briefly in the final 70 seconds. Defensive end Igor Olshansky was ejected after a personal foul call during a Plummer spike of the ball following a completion. That was a 15-yard penalty. Florence was called for delaying the game after a 14-yard completion to Rod Smith.

With 24 seconds left, the Broncos had the ball at the Chargers 32, down eight. Plummer was sacked by linebacker Shaun Phillips. The ball popped loose and the Broncos never had a chance to get off another play.

This might have been the most courageous Chargers win in a long time. They were without their two top defenders -- Luis Castillo and Shawne Merriman -- and linebackers and defensive linemen were limping to the sidelines regularly. Suddenly, defensive coordinator Wade Phillips was running out of bodies.

"I don't remember all the injuries, but I just remember them coming to me and telling me, 'We don't know if we have enough guys to go out there,'" Schottenheimer said. "It's you're worst nightmare when you're having trouble stopping the rushing game of one of the best rushing teams in the NFL. Our guys in the second half ratcheted it up. If we don't play well in the second half, we don't get back in the game."

Relentless is what Tomlinson calls his teammates. The Broncos can't argue. A year ago, the Chargers lost a similar game. Now they lead the division by a game and aren't looking back. :)

John Clayton is a senior writer at ESPN.com.

ftwbolt
11-20-2006, 06:34 AM
By Charles Robinson, Yahoo! Sports (http://sports.yahoo.com/nfl/news;_ylt=AqCJ9V5m_f2NoICtmKgePhtDubYF?slug=cr-chargerswin111906&prov=yhoo&type=lgns)November 20, 2006

DENVER – Coach Marty Schottenheimer called them "chronicles" – the clockwork November and December meltdowns that occurred within the confines of Invesco Field. More often than not, Schottenheimer and these San Diego Chargers have been little more than a footnote bludgeoned into this stadium's history.

But there is a funny thing about most chronologies. Run your finger down a timeline long enough, and every battle turns. The Greeks and the Romans. The Mongolians and the Manchurians. Now, the Chargers and the Denver Broncos. And this wasn't just a minor momentum swing. NFL geography was altered Sunday night, and it left the league's axis tilting in a new direction.

When Sunday came and went, the Colts had toppled, the Bears had struggled and the Chargers had laid claim to being the best team in the NFL. And San Diego did it in a place and a way history suggested could only be fiction: trailing 24-7 in the third quarter on the road and against the stingiest scoring defense in the league.

"Everybody talks about statement games and all that. Well, we'll just let what we've done the last two weeks be our statement," San Diego cornerback Quentin Jammer said. "We're not going away. We've had the talent, we've had the coaches and now we've got the character, too."

Despite injuries that had the Chargers scrambling to piece together defensive packages late in the game, San Diego outscored Denver 28-3 over the last 1½ quarters Sunday. It was the second straight game the Chargers dug themselves out of quicksand against an opponent. Last week, they posted an improbable 49-41 win over Cincinnati that came after San Diego trailed 24-7 at the half.

As Schottenheimer put it: "The only time the score is of any consequence is when the game is over."

And the Chargers proved that, pounding a much-hyped Denver defense into submission the second half. Running back LaDainian Tomlinson ran at will behind left tackle Marcus McNeill, taking advantage of the few risks the Broncos took in the second half. It was a game that ultimately turned on Tomlinson's 51-yard catch and run down the middle of the field with 3:51 left in the third quarter. Denver blitzed in Cover 0 (no safety help on pass-catchers), leaving Tomlinson matched up with a defensive end. Quarterback Philip Rivers rolled right to avoid the blitz and hit Tomlinson in stride, leaving him to flit down the field untouched for the third of his four touchdowns and pulling the Chargers to within 24-21.

"The comeback at that point was over," Rivers said. "It was a ballgame again."

More accurately, it was San Diego's ballgame. The Chargers held Denver to a field goal on the ensuing possession, then moved 55 yards for the go-ahead touchdown pass from Rivers to Vincent Jackson – a five-yard lob into the corner of the end zone that was the antithesis of Schottenheimer's run-centric "Martyball" that so often has bogged down San Diego in the past.

The Chargers also added a 1-yard touchdown run by Tomlinson late in the fourth quarter. In all, the four scores made Tomlinson the fastest player in NFL history to 100 touchdowns (89 career games), beating the previous record held by Jim Brown and Emmitt Smith by four games. Tomlinson now has 22 touchdowns (102 in his career) and is well ahead of pace to surpass the single-season touchdown record of 28 set by Seattle's Shaun Alexander last season.

"The best there is," Rivers said. "There aren't many people that would argue with that, at least not anymore."

Now the rest of the league is left to debate the greatness of the Chargers. Yes, there clearly are kinks to work out. Already without linebacker Shawne Merriman and defensive end Luis Castillo, key players like safeties Clinton Hart and Marlon McCree and linebackers Carlos Polk and Shaun Phillips were nicked Sunday night. At one point, the unit became so thin that Schottenheimer's assistants had to pull some plays from availability because the Chargers didn't have the personnel to run them.

"Yeah, that did happen," Jammer said. "I can't say which ones, but I'll say this: It happened at least a handful of times."

That said, San Diego still appears to be in better shape than some of the league's other top Super Bowl contenders. All year long, Indianapolis has shown an inability to consistently stop the run or establish its own running game. Both elements were a factor in the Colts' loss to Dallas on Sunday. And even though the Bears grinded out a tough road win against the Jets, Rex Grossman and the offense aren't easing concerns that they could be a liability in the playoffs.


Meanwhile, the Chargers' banged-up defense is making just enough key plays to support one of the league's most prolific offenses.

"We were having trouble finding guys to put on the field on defense," Schottenheimer said. "I'm not talking figuratively, I'm talking literally. We were having trouble finding guys that would have been able to go out there and play the position with a history of practice at the position."

Yet San Diego was able to pull itself together at opportune moments, leaving the rest of the NFL to wonder what the defense will be like when Merriman and Castillo are healthy down the road. Clearly, the health of the defense is the last question to be answered now that Rivers has maintained his high level of play and earned the trust of Schottenheimer in key moments. The coach even went as far as to compare Rivers' mental demeanor on Sunday to that of Joe Montana, an interesting development when you consider that only a few months ago, he likened the quarterback to a somewhat less accomplished Bernie Kosar.

With Rivers showing he's able to grasp whatever defense is put in front of him, and with players like Jackson developing key roles, San Diego's offense looks as dangerous as any in the NFL. And with Indianapolis proving beatable, the AFC undoubtedly is up for grabs.

"We're sitting there looking at Indy like they're unbeatable," Tomlinson said. "But then we see them go down, and now it's like anything can happen. One more loss with Indy, and hey, who knows?"

After seeing San Diego pull off the unbelievable two straight weeks, we have a pretty good idea.

ftwbolt
11-21-2006, 09:30 PM
By Charles Robinson, Yahoo! Sports (http://sports.yahoo.com/nfl/news;_ylt=AtWt.x7bX8MhiFXAvoXkCfhDubYF?slug=cr-rankings112106&prov=yhoo&type=lgns)
November 21, 2006

Finally, San Diego has found the throne. How long it sits in it is another matter.

After flirting with the No. 1 spot at various points over the past two seasons, the Chargers are finally worthy of being atop the weekly power rankings. Sunday's comeback win over division rival – and annual road foil – Denver sealed the deal. What's remarkable, San Diego found its way to the top spot without its most dynamic defender, linebacker Shawne Merriman (in the midst of a four-game suspension), and after a game where injuries ravaged the Chargers' front seven. But thanks to some deft early-season decision making by coach Marty Schottenheimer and offensive coordinator Cam Cameron (keeping running back LaDainian Tomlinson fresh by rotating in Michael Turner, for example), the offense has been able to produce some scoring bonanzas in the second half of games this season.

As for the rest of the NFL, here is a look at how the league stacks up heading into Week 12.

THE TOP 12

1. San Diego Chargers (8-2) – Those back-to-back comebacks on the road against Cincinnati and Denver are as impressive a feat as you'll see from a team this year. And although his touchdown got all the replays, wide receiver Vincent Jackson's breakup of a first-half interception showed another level of growth, too.


5. Denver Broncos (7-3) – After seeing some of the replays of center Tom Nalen's hit on San Diego defensive end Igor Olshansky, it looks like Nalen is the one who should be suspended. Those nasty knee-level hits have been drawing complaints from Broncos opponents for years.

LV_BOLT
03-20-2007, 02:47 PM
Bumping for off-season reading material.

Articles from after the comebacks in CIN and DEN.

Good stuff. http://forums.chargers.com/images/icons/icon14.gif

Dojo
03-20-2007, 11:08 PM
Bumping for off-season reading material.

Articles from after the comebacks in CIN and DEN.

Good stuff. http://forums.chargers.com/images/icons/icon14.gif
lol. i was wondering who bumped this. then i read it and got the comeback feeling all over again. always better the second time!

SJSUPhil
03-21-2007, 12:46 AM
I've always like John Clayton's insightful prose. (Not bad for a Seattle guy.)

HighBoltage
03-21-2007, 04:58 PM
This is going to be a long off-season.

mccharger
03-21-2007, 05:24 PM
It just made me sad actually.

Stan_The_Man_12
03-21-2007, 05:49 PM
I've always like John Clayton's insightful prose. (Not bad for a Seattle guy.)

He [clayton] and Frasier Crane can take a bow.

Stan :17:

Chargers503
03-22-2007, 01:18 PM
That's what I love about Rivers, his on-field confidence/cocky attitude. I remember at the end of the Cincinnati game, he was barking back at the Bengal fans on the stands to "GO HOME, GO HOME!".

That was great.

mccharger
03-22-2007, 05:41 PM
That's what I love about Rivers, his on-field confidence/cocky attitude. I remember at the end of the Cincinnati game, he was barking back at the Bengal fans on the stands to "GO HOME, GO HOME!".

That was great.That was great...I remember that very well as he was running into the tunnel.

nvcharger
03-23-2007, 08:30 AM
Man I friggin hate the offseason, I'm all pumped up to talk smack at work now, hahahha oh well lots of oppurtunities next year

Super.Chargers
04-12-2007, 09:56 PM
i thik Rivers is Ryan Leaf with a great Runningback
and a solid Oline:D

NorCalBoltBrain
04-12-2007, 11:19 PM
i thik Rivers is Ryan Leaf with a great Runningback
and a solid Oline:D

Yeah right, Beat it Troll, not funny.

OLSKOOL CHARGER
04-17-2007, 07:56 PM
i thik Rivers is Ryan Leaf with a great Runningback
and a solid Oline:D

COME ON DUDE YOU GOT TO BE JOKING :nono:

mccharger
04-17-2007, 11:23 PM
i thik Rivers is Ryan Leaf with a great Runningback
and a solid Oline:DYou forgot to add a brain on that list.

Buck Melanoma
04-18-2007, 04:20 AM
i thik Rivers is Ryan Leaf with a great Runningback
and a solid Oline:D

Whatever you're smoking, keep it to yourself!!

TCUFAN5
04-18-2007, 11:31 AM
that is so not funny.. .. what was Ryan Leafs career record.. like 3- 3000.. wow.. that's production..

Super.Chargers
04-18-2007, 10:56 PM
well if leaf had 25% of the talent we have now
Leaf would be the man

lets face it back then we did not have the solid Oline blocking scheme we have now

i mean we have the #1 Oline in the NFL
lets see oh yeah we did not have the greatest RB in NFL history
one of the greatest Fullbacks in the NFL

lets be honest Leaf became an outcast
because nobody trusted him


i mean we are not asking Rivers to win games
we are asking him not to give up games:D

gbranc21
04-19-2007, 07:43 PM
well if leaf had 25% of the talent we have now
Leaf would be the man

lets face it back then we did not have the solid Oline blocking scheme we have now

i mean we have the #1 Oline in the NFL
lets see oh yeah we did not have the greatest RB in NFL history
one of the greatest Fullbacks in the NFL

lets be honest Leaf became an outcast
because nobody trusted him


i mean we are not asking Rivers to win games
we are asking him not to give up games:D

I cannot even believe im responding to your nonsense...Leaf was a huge headcase that couldn't handle pressure. Rivers came into this season with big shoes to fill and he handled it fine. When LT started his rookie season, he didn't have an very talented o-line either, but he never gave up. Leaf couldn't even get along with his own teammates let alone the media! Come one you idiot....rewind that memory of yours and make sure you are talking about the right player because in my opinion, you have no clue about anything that goes on in the NFL...better yet, go root on the some other team (I'm sure your boy Leaf would appreciate it)

ChargersBoi
05-09-2007, 08:44 AM
Yeah the chargers are a very dominant team... Its hard to describe in words. I mean 14-2 what a record when you look at the previous years where we used to go 3-13 or 2-12 we have improved very much.