SAN DIEGO – The San Diego Chargers’ long nightmare is coming to an end.
The Chargers – yes, the Chargers – took firm control of the AFC West by hanging on to beat the Denver Broncos 20-17 in a wild one on Sunday. LaDainian Tomlinson ran for two touchdowns and San Diego’s defense saved the day by intercepting Jake Plummer four times, including in the end zone in the closing minutes.
On a rainy, cold and windy afternoon, the Chargers proved that water and electricity do mix, although it took them until the final play to do so.
Playing their biggest game in 10 years, the Chargers (9-3) clinched their first winning season since 1995 and took a two-game lead in the division over Denver (7-5).
Now all that’s left for Tomlinson, Drew Brees, Antonio Gates and the Chargers’ rather anonymous defense to do in this surprising season is to clinch a playoff berth, which the Bolts haven’t done since 1995.
San Diego is on a six-game winning streak for the first time since going 6-0 to open the 1994 season, when they made their only Super Bowl appearance. Overall, they’ve won eight of nine.
And to think, they were an NFL-worst 4-12 last year.
Points were hard to come by in this game, but true to the teams’ AFL roots, it wasn’t boring.
The Chargers scored only three points in the second half, when they were bailed out by their defense.
The biggest play came with 3:39 left after the Broncos drove the Chargers’ 7-yard line. Safety Jerry Wilson intercepted Plummer in the end zone after cornerback Drayton Florence – who intercepted Plummer in the game’s opening minutes – tipped a pass intended for Rod Smith.
One drive earlier, the Broncos drove to the Chargers 14 but had to settle for Jason Elam’s 31-yard field goal after Jamar Fletcher and Clinton Hart batted down passes by Plummer.
The Broncos got one last chance and reached midfield. Darius Watts caught a fourth-down pass with 8 seconds left but stayed in bounds to get the first down and the clock ran out.
Tomlinson finished with 113 yards on 30 carries.
Brees, the biggest reason behind the Chargers’ turnaround, had his least-productive game of the season, completing just 14 of 27 passes for 106 yards and no touchdowns. His club-record streak of 194 passes without an interception ended in the first quarter when he overthrew Gates and was picked off by Kenoy Kennedy.
Plummer threw for 278 yards, but completed just 16 of 40 passes for no touchdowns.
A steady rain eased up in the first quarter, but the conditions helped contribute to two turnovers by each team in the first 15 minutes, plus a missed field goal attempt by Elam.
San Diego intercepted Plummer three times in the first half, leading to 10 points.
Denver had lousy field position most of the game, which helped set up the touchdown that gave San Diego a 14-7 lead in the second quarter.
Denver’s Micah Knorr had to punt from the end zone and Eric Parker returned it 19 yards to the 21. Brees hit Gates on a 10-yard pass on third down and Tomlinson scored on a 1-yard run three players later, starting left but cutting inside.
Rookie Nate Kaeding had a pair of 23-yard field goals, one at the end of the first half and the other late in the third quarter, to give the Chargers a 20-7 lead.
Denver pulled to 20-14 on Reuben Droughns’ 4-yard run early in the fourth quarter.
Tomlinson scored on a 5-yard run on the Chargers’ opening drive. Denver tied it on Tatum Bell’s 16-yard run early in the second quarter.
AP-ES-12-05-04 1949EST
Comments are no longer available on this story