Nov 24, 2024
Jahmyr Gibbs rushed for two scores and David Montgomery added a third touchdown run Sunday, leading the Detroit Lions to a 24-6 victory at the Indianapolis Colts. Gibbs finished with 21 carries for 90 yards as the Lions (10-1) extended their league-high winning streak to nine straight. The Lions have their best 11-game record since the franchise’s inaugural season in 1934. Jared Goff continued his sensational season, too, completing 26 of 36 throws for 269 yards. The Colts (5-7) lost their second straight home game and for the fourth time in their past five games. Anthony Richardson was 11 of 28 with 172 yards while rushing 10 times for 61 yards. While the Colts managed to hold the NFL’s highest-scoring offense largely in check Sunday, they were doomed by the inability to finish drives with touchdowns. That problem happened right from the start when Richardson took the Colts inside the Lions 5-yard line on the game’s first series before settling for a short field goal. Detroit answered on its second series, getting a 1-yard TD run from Gibbs to take a 7-3 lead early in the second quarter. Then, after the Colts settled for another short field goal, Montgomery spun his way across the goal line for a 6-yard scoring run and a 14-6 lead. The Lions extended the margin with Gibbs’ 5-yard TD run late in the third quarter and sealed it with a 56-yard field goal midway through the fourth. The Lions improved to 6-0 on the road as Amon-Ra St. Brown caught six passes for 62 yards. Michael Pittman Jr. had six catches for 96 yards for the Colts despite leaving briefly in the first half with an injured shoulder. Gibbs’ first score extended the Lions’ league record to 25 consecutive games with a touchdown run, including the playoffs. He’s also the third Lions player with 1,000 scrimmage yards and 10 touchdowns in each of his first two pro seasons with the team, joining Billy Sims and Barry Sanders. Gibbs and Montgomery have each scored at least one touchdown in the same game nine times. The Lions will host the Chicago Bears in their traditional Thanksgiving Day game on Thursday. — Michael Marot in Indanapolis Green Bay Packers 38, San Francisco 49ers 10 Green Bay Packers running back Josh Jacobs celebrates a touchdown during the second half of an NFL football game against the San Francisco 49ers on Sunday, Nov. 24, 2024, in Green Bay, Wis. (AP Photo/Morry Gash) The Green Bay Packers earned a measure of revenge against the team that ended their season last year. It hardly mattered to them that the San Francisco 49ers squad they beat 38-10 on Sunday bore only a passing resemblance to the group that beat the Packers in last season’s NFC divisional playoffs. Josh Jacobs rushed for 106 yards and matched a career-high with three touchdowns for the Packers. The 49ers were playing without injured quarterback Brock Purdy, three-time All-Pro left tackle Trent Williams and four-time Pro Bowl edge rusher Nick Bosa, among others. “It’s the NFL,” said Packers quarterback Jordan Love, who went 13 of 23 for 163 yards and two touchdowns. “They’ve got other good players. We’ve had injuries. Guys are banged up. You’ve got to go find a way to win, no matter who’s out there. It’s tough for them, but we’ll take the win.” The short-handed 49ers (5-6) turned the ball over three times, committed nine penalties and missed numerous tackles. “To have those three turnovers, and all three led to touchdowns with 21 points,” 49ers coach Kyle Shanahan said. “You top that with the penalties and stuff, that’s how you get embarrassed like that.” A couple of Packers who weren’t with Green Bay last season played major roles. Jacobs became the first player in the past 55 regular-season games to rush for 100 yards against the 49ers. It was the longest a team had gone without allowing a 100-yard rusher since 1955. Justin Fields rushed for 103 yards for the Chicago Bears against the 49ers on Oct. 31, 2021. Aaron Jones rushed for 108 yards in the Packers’ 24-21 NFC divisional playoff loss to the 49ers last season. All three of Jacobs’ touchdowns came from 1 yard out. “I came here because I’d seen them winning,” said Jacobs, who spent his first five seasons with the Raiders. “And I haven’t won a lot in my career, and that was a big thing for me when I’m making a decision. But not only that, man, being around these guys and seeing how hungry they are, seeing how much of pros they are on a day-to-day basis and how much it means to them, man, it makes me want to play harder, it makes me want to give everything I have.” Xavier McKinney broke up a fourth-down pass to end one 49ers scoring threat and had a 48-yard interception return to set up Jacobs’ second touchdown. The former New York Giants safety has seven picks this season, tied with Detroit’s Kerby Joseph for the NFL lead. “It’s been as advertised,” Packers coach Matt LaFleur said of the two free-agent additions. “Those guys have just been instrumental in our ability to win games.” The 49ers’ defense had only four players who participated in the playoff victory over the Packers: Fred Warner, Deommodore Lenoir, Tashaun Gipson and Robert Beal. Purdy’s shoulder injury prompted the 49ers to turn to 32-year-old Brandon Allen to make his 10th career start and first since the 2021 regular-season finale when he was with Cincinnati. Allen went 17 of 29 for 199 yards with a touchdown pass, an interception and a lost fumble. Love threw touchdown passes to Tucker Kraft and Malik Heath as the Packers (8-3) had their highest point total since beating the Chicago Bears 38-20 in their 2023 opener. The Packers scored on each of their first three series. With 6 1/2 minutes left in the second quarter, the 49ers trailed 17-0 and had run just six offensive plays. “I thought we got out of our gaps a number of times,” Shanahan said. “I thought we had way too many missed tackles. Just them being able to control that clock the first half was one of the worst ones I’ve been a part of as far as a half.” The 49ers cut the lead to 17-7 on Allen’s 3-yard touchdown pass to George Kittle with 1:02 left in the second quarter. The 49ers’ only other points came on Jake Moody’s 48-yard field goal. The 49ers wasted a couple of opportunities to creep closer. A holding penalty on Eric Saubert wiped out Deebo Samuel’s 87-yard kickoff return that would have given the 49ers first-and-goal to start the second half. That drive ended when McKinney broke up a pass intended for Christian McCaffrey on fourth-and-2 from the Packers 39. The 49ers limited McCaffrey to 31 yards on 11 carries. The 49ers got into the Packers’ territory again later in the third when Allen threw a pass that went through Samuel’s hands and got picked off by McKinney. The Packers converted the interception into a touchdown that extended its lead to 24-7. The Packers poured it on from there. “We started to build some momentum there at the end of the half,” Allen said. “The second half, had some drives going, and just penalties and turnovers really killed us.” — Steve Megargee in Green Bay, Wis.
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