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09/20/2009 6:06 PM EDT
McFadden's late TD lifts Raiders past Chiefs 13-10
OAKLAND 13, KANSAS CITY 10

By DOUG TUCKER
AP Sports Writer

KANSAS CITY, Mo.(AP) -- On one of the most miserable days of his
career, JaMarcus Russell got more than a win. He also put his
name in the Oakland Raiders history book.

Missing high, low and everywhere in-between, the overall No. 1
draft choice of 2007 completed only 7 of 24 passes for 109
yards. But Russell came into focus when he had to, engineering a
69-yard scoring march in the final 2 minutes for a wildly
improbable 13-10 victory over mistake-prone Kansas City.

The Chiefs out-gained the Raiders (1-1) 409-166, while Russell
became just the second quarterback since the start of the 1997
season to try 20 or more passes and complete less than 30
percent of them but still win.

And it's the first time in the Raiders' 50-year history they've
emerged with a victory after giving up more than 400 yards and
gaining fewer than 200 themselves.

"I felt really good. The ball was just coming out different for
me," Russell said. "Other than that, I felt good."

Russell's teammates knew it was a fight from start to finish.

"From the first quarter all the way to the fourth quarter it was
a struggle for us, until the last 2 or 3 minutes left in the
game," said Darren McFadden, whose 5-yard touchdown run around
left end with 1:07 left made the difference.

"It's probably one of the strangest wins. But a win is a win."

Cassel, making his long-awaited Kansas City debut after being
out a month with a knee injury, had given the Chiefs (0-2) the
lead with a 29-yard touchdown strike to Dwayne Bowe with 2:38 to
go. Cassel wound up throwing for 241 yards.

Oakland's victory may not have seemed so improbable to coach
Todd Haley.

"When you have nine penalties, two turnovers and a couple other
lapses, you're not going to win most of the time," he said. "We
didn't get the result we wanted. We're going to have a smart
team here. Nine penalties and a couple of those things don't
reflect a smart team. We're going to get back to work because
we're going to have a smart team here."

But Tom Cable agreed it was about as strange as they come.

"It's as poor as I think you can play offensively and still find
a way at the end there to win a football game," said the Oakland
coach.

While Cassel clearly outplayed his Oakland counterpart, he did
make one mistake that Russell did not. Russell avoided
interceptions while two of Cassel's passes wound up in the arms
of Oakland defensive back Michael Huff.

"We had things that happened throughout the day that we hurt
ourselves with, whether it was offense or defense or special
teams," Cassel said. "The Raiders did a good job and made the
plays when it counted. Therefore, they're going home with the
victory."

Russell hit Louis Murphy for 19 yards and connected with Todd
Watkins for 28 on the nine-play touchdown drive. McFadden took a
pitch and sped untouched around the right side of the Chiefs
defense.

"I knew that we left plays out there on or previous drives
before, so we had to come up with something," Russell said.

Cassel, who missed the opener with a left knee injury, hit a key
third-down pass in the nine-play, 72-yard drive that gave the
Chiefs their only lead of the second half.

The Chiefs crowded the line of scrimmage and dared Russell to
beat them with his arm, and until the final drive Russell seemed
bent on making the strategy work. At the end of the third, he
had 35 yards passing and the Raiders had only 77 yards of
offense to 313 for the Chiefs.

But a host of Chiefs mistakes, including nine penalties for 70
yards and atrocious clock management - and Sebastian
Janikowski's two field goals - provided a 6-3 Oakland lead.

Also key to Oakland's winning drive was a roughing call on
Wallace Gilberry, who fell onto Russell while he was on the
ground.

"When we had the personal foul penalty we kind of were in a
position to put them in a bit of a difficult position, and we
let them off the hook," Haley said. "They made plays at the
end."

Brandon Flowers, the Chiefs' No. 1 cornerback, returned after
being out almost a month with a shoulder injury. But he was also
guilty of one of the many mistakes by Kansas City when late in
the first half he let an interception sail right through his
hands.

With nothing but open field in front of him, Flowers would
probably have waltzed into the end zone.

"Every loss hurts. This loss kills you," he said.

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