Raiders Rally Late to Beat Texans


Written by Chris Wesseling at NFL.com

Buoyed by a pair of long touchdowns in the fourth quarter, the 8-2 Oakland Raiders pulled off a 27-20 comeback victory over the 6-4 Houston Texans in Mexico City. Here’s what we learned during the Week 11 edition of Monday Night Football:

1. Bogged down by sloppy footing on the Azteca Stadium turf, a spate of wide-receiver drops and a disruptive Jadeveon Clowney, the Raiders’ offense carried a season-low 81 yards into halftime. It wasn’t until the 7,503-foot altitude (roughly 2,000 feet higher than Denver’s Sports Authority Field at Mile High) took its toll on both defenses that Oakland found success in the aerial attack. A gassed Houston defense couldn’t corral fullback Jamize Olawale and wideout Amari Cooper in the open field on 75- and 35-yard scores, respectively. Prior to Cooper’s touchdown near the five-minute mark in the fourth quarter, he and Michael Crabtree had combined for just 27 yards on six receptions and 11 targets. Of Derek Carr’s 295 passing yards, 170 came after the catch — the majority on three fourth-quarter plays.

2. The Texans will have plenty to gripe about in a hard-fought contest. The controversy started on the game’s opening possession when DeAndre Hopkins took a short pass down the sideline 60 yards to the house, only to be ruled out of bounds after 24 of those yards. The line judge blew his whistle when he thought Hopkins’ heel stepped out of bounds. Replays were inconclusive. Houston ended up settling for a field goal instead of the Hopkins touchdown.

After Olawale’s touchdown tied the score at 20 early in the fourth quarter, the Texans appeared to reach the line-to-gain on Lamar Miller’s third-and-2 run as well as Akeem Hunt’s fourth-and-1 plunge on back-to-back plays in the red zone. Officials neglected to grant the benefit of the doubt on either spot. It wasn’t until Hunt’s play that Houston coach Bill O’Brien opted to challenge the spot, only to be denied. Lost in the confusion was O’Brien’s gamble to eschew the go-ahead field goal — even more of a head-scratcher in contrast to his decision to punt the ball back to Oakland down seven points with just over three minutes remaining.

3. Whereas O’Brien died by those fourth-down calls, Jack Del Rio continues to grant his team new life with his own celebrated “onions” in close-and-late situations. Up 27-20 with just over a minute remaining, Del Rio opted to play keep-away, running Latavius Murray on fourth-and-1 from Oakland’s 39-yard line. Murray sealed yet another exhilarating Raiders victory with a 6-yard gain. One of the stories of the 2016 season has been the trend toward increased aggressiveness in fourth-and-short situations.

To continue reading this article, click here.

×

Eye Popper Digital is the premier digital advertising technology and solutions firm. We’ve developed ad units that run across both desktop and mobile driving high-impact viewability, engagement and revenue for publishers and advertisers.

Learn more about us.