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The Boston Globe from Boston, Massachusetts • 89

Publication:
The Boston Globei
Location:
Boston, Massachusetts
Issue Date:
Page:
89
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

89 THE HOSTON fiLOHE FRIDAY, JANUAKY fi, W5 AFC SEMIFINAL: DOLPHINS VS. CHARGERS Seay lost a kidney, not a career DO LPHIN SQL) A A STATS us Pel. Av. Pet. Int.

IG Alt. TD ID int. An. Com. Pet.

615 385 62 6 4453 7 24 .30 4 9 17 2 8 641 Koser .12 7 68 3 80 6 67 1 8 3 1 8 3 11 392 62 4433 7 23 31 4 9 18 2 9 641 Opponents 677 334 67.9 3954 6 85 23 4,0 23 4 0 Bit ftllini 89 2 71 88 8 76.J Rating 126 2 Avf. Pet. Pet. Alt. Com.

Pet. Yds. Alt. TO TD Int. Int.

IG ...29 22 79.9 267 8 86 2 6.9 0 0 0 26 HA ERSQUARTE A ATS; Avg 1.1, Ik Alt. Com. Pet. Yds. Alt TO TO Int.

Int. IG Rating Humphrns 463 264 58 3 3209 7 08 17 3 8 12 2 6 991 816 Gilbert 67 41 61 2 410 6 12 3 4 5 1 1 5 26 87 3 Martin 1 0 0 0 0 0 00 0 0 0 1100 0 0 0 0., Means 0 0 0 0 0 00 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 39 6, Totals 522 305 58 4 3619 6 93 20 3 8 14 2 7 991 81 3 Opponents 577 363 62.9 3911 6.78 20 3.5 17 2.9 841 82.0 DOLPHINS (U.6) CHARGERS 1 1 5 A. RUSHING Alt. Yds, Avg. LG TD Means 343 1350 39 25 12 Breniemy 73 295 4 0 36 0 1 Harmon 25 94 3 8 151 63 7 9 22 40 13 3 22 19 1 0 8 3 30 3 -3 -4 5 Culver 8 Jefferson 3 Humphries 19 Hendrrckson 1 Gilbert 8 0 0 0 0 GLOBE FILE PHOIO 45 4 Martin .......2 0 A favorite target of Stan Humphries, Mark Seay had 58 receptions and 6 touchdowns this season.

Totals 482 1852 3 8 36 13 Opponents 385 1404 3 6 24 11 RECEIVING No. Yds. Avg LG TD Seay 58 645 11 1 491 6 Harmon 58 615 106 35 1 Martin 50 885 17 7 991 7 Jefferson 43 62 7 14 6 521 3 Means 39 239 6 0 22 0 Pupunu 21 214 10.2 25 2 D. Young 17 217 128 31 1 Mitchell 11 105 9 9 36 0 Bieniemy 5 48 9 6 25 0 May 2 22 11 0 18 0 1 Barnes 1 6 60 6 0 Totals 305 3619 II 9 991 20 Opponents 363 3911 10 8 84t 20 INTERCEPTIONS No. Yds.

Avg. LG TD Richard 4 224 56 0 99t 2 0 0 BSEAY Continued from Page 81 closer. Everyone dived for cover except Tashwanda. A a toddler, she didn't know better, didn't know to flatten herself on the floor, out of harm's way. Seay saw his niece walking around and didn't hesitate.

He dived on top of her and covered her with his 6-foot, 175-pound body. An instant later, another bullet was fired. This one ripped through Seay's right kidney, bounced off his liver and stopped inches from his heart. When the shooting stopped, Tash-wanda was unhurt. Seay was not.

An ambulance rushed him to the hospital. Doctors couldn't save the kidney; it had to be removed. They couldn't remove the bullet; it was too close to his heart. But they could save Seay's life, with one provision. No more football.

That would have been pushing the outside of the envelope. Beating the odds Yesterday, as the San Diego Chargers were preparing to continue their season in Sunday's AFC playoff game against the Miami Dolphins, Mark Seay sat in front of his locker at Jack Murphy Stadium and talked about how far he had come since Oct. 30, 1988. He talked about the unmitigated joy he felt in the opening game of this season when he caught his first NFL pass, a 29-yard touchdown against the Denver Broncos, about being on the Chargers roster, about living his dream. "Looking back," said Seay, "I sometimes ask myself, 'How did I get through all of I say to myself, 'I know there is a Without Him, none of this would be possible." Before he caught the bullet, he was a fairly normal Southern California teen-ager who loved to play football and baseball.

"Football was my real love, but I went into my senior year of high school and decided to give baseball a try," he "And I wound up getting drafted." The baseball scouts saw the same thing the football recruiters who hound- ed Seay coming out of high school saw: an athlete who can run. By June 1985, he had signed with the Texas Rangers and was playing in a rookie league in Florida in an outfield that included Juan Gonzalez and Sammy Sosa. "They wanted me to lead off and just get on base," said Seay. "I liked it, but I couldn't see spending most of my life playing baseball in the minor leagues without having anything to show for it. I knew I could go back to school and play 32 80 23 51 17 0 32 28 93 15 56 28 0 90t 11 110 11 Gordon 4 Carnngton 3 Harper 3 Vanhone 2 Griggs 1 Totals 17 402 23 6 991 Opponents 14 233 16.6 901 SACHS O'Neal 12,9 Mims 110 Lm 6.5 Seau 5.5 While 20 Johnson 15 Parrella 1 0 L.Young 10 R.

Davis 0.5 L. Miller 0.9 Totals 43.0 Opponents 29.0 PUNTING In No. Yds. Avg. 20 LG Kidd 7 246 35 1 1 53 Wagner 65 2705 41 6 20 59 Totals 72 2951 41 0 21 59 ceptions, six for touchdowns.

Worth the risk Seay wonders about the course he has followed. Although he concedes he is taking a chance playing football with only one kidney, he says there was no other choice. "Seay can be pretty physical," said Ross. "He's a pretty physical guy." Some of that comes from the anger and frustration Seay has felt. As well as the determination.

"I said, 'I'm going to be all he recalled. "I've just got one less organ. That does not have anything to do with my ability. "Once I got back, I felt I was back where I had left off. I said, 'I'm going to stick to my I've got to make myself happy because if I didn't, I would be old and gray and regretting things for the rest of my life.

Getting shot didn't hurt me as much as taking football away from me." Seay says he is no hero. He did what he did because he had to do it, instinctively. Calling him a hero makes him uncomfortable. Seay realizes how fragile life can be. "Things can be going smoothly," he said.

"In a split second, your whole life can change and youll find yourself digging and scratching and trying to get back on your feet. It's made me a stronger person." Seay paused. It was almost time toi go to practice, to think again about football and enjoy the good times. He was asked what he has learned since the shooting. "It taught me what Mark Seay is all about," he said softly.

"Mark Seay is about not giving up, about fighting to the end." luctant to allow a student with only one kidney to play foothall, refused to clear him. Enter former Rams and Redskins coach George Allen, beginning a second career as coach at Long Beach State. "He stood up for me," said Seay. "I couldn't believe it He cut through all the red tape." Allen told Seay that if Long Beach wouldn't oblige, he would use his NFL connections and get Seay a tryout, "I was all alone, except for him," said Seay. Seay, who was preparing to take the school to court, had won one battle, but now he had to prove himself as a football player once again.

Although he came back to lead Long Beach in receiving yards and receptions, the reception from the NFL was lukewarm. The 49ers took a look at him, signed him as a free agent, kept him on the practice squad all season and then released him. The Chargers picked him up on waivers in August 1993, kept him on the 53-man roster all year and used him in only one game. Finally, after a rigorous offseason conditioning program and the defection of wide receiver Anthony Miller to Denver, Seay got his chance this season. Coach Bobby Ross announced he would be the starter in the opener against the Broncos Sept.

4. "It was the greatest feeling," said Seay. "I remember during the national anthem my heart started to get heavy. I said to myself, Tou've got a game to' After dropping his first two passes, Seay caught a 29-yard touchdown from Stan Humphries, and he has never looked back. He had a team-high 58 re football.

I wasn't willing to pay the price. I just didn't want to take up space from someone who really wanted it, so I went to a sport I loved a little more." In high school in San Bernardino, Seay was good enough to attract attention from dozens of schools, including Purdue, Utah, UCLA and UNLV. The recruiters dogged him so much he decided to switch to baseball. "I didn't get much guidance or protection from them," said Seay. "They just sent them down the hall when I was in class.

I was pretty much on my own." When Seay came back to football a couple of years later, the recruiters were gone, but he was still on his own. He called around and decided to play at Long Beach, a struggling Division 1-A school close enough to home for his family and friends to see him. "I said if they could offer me a free ride, I was there," said Seay. "At first, they said no, then they came back a day later and said they could." Seay did well as a freshman and was looking forward to his sophomore season and a possible NFL career. Then he was shot.

Nothing was the same. The road back He spent 2V6 weeks in the hospital and another two months in bed. The doctors told him to forget football. Not surprisingly, Seay became depressed. "I almost gave in," he said.

"Especially when those doctors in their white coats were telling you, 'It's all over. You'll probably never play When Seay was fully recovered, he went back to Long Beach and found a new obstacle. Long Beach officials, re Opponents 76 3290 43 3 19 62 PUNT RETURNS No. FC Yds. Avg.

LG TD Gordon 36 19 475 13.2 90t 2 Totals 36 19 475 13 2 901 2 Opponents ....38 14 348 9 2 44 0 KtCKOFT RETURNS No. Yds. Avg. LG TD Coleman 49 1293 26 4 901 2 Harmon 9 157 17 4 25 0 Martin 8 167 20 9 29 0 Mitchell 1 18 18.0 18 0 Parker 1 1 1.0 1 0 Totals 68 1636 24.1 90t 2 Opponents 79 1740 22 0 931 1 SCORE BY PERIODS 1 2 3 4 OT Tot. Chargers 52 134 95 100 0 381 Opponents 51 104 46 105 0 306 SCORING TD TD TD TO Tot.

Rs. Re. Rt. PAT FG TP Carney 0 0 0 0 33 34 135 Means 12 12 0 0 0 7 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Martin 7 Seay 6 Harmon 2 Jefferson 3 Coleman. 2 Gordon 2 Pupunu 2 Richard 2 Vanhorse .....1 D.

Young 1 0 0 36 34 381 Totals 40 13 20 Opponents. 34 11 20 33 22 306 PUSHING Alt. Yds. Avrg. LG TO ParmalM 216 868 4 0 41 6 SpiUl 70 312 4 5 40 2 Kirby 60 233 3 9 30 2 Hugs 19 68 3 6 21 0 Byars 19 64 3 4 12 2 Craver 6 43 7 2 19 0 McDuffie 5 32 64 12 0 Tolali 434 1668 3 8 47t 13 Opponents 394 1430 3 6 45 14 Playoffs Alt.

Yds. Avg. LG TO ParmalM 18 57 3 2 16 1 Spikes 9 49 5 4 23 0 RECEIVING No Yds Avg LG TO Fryar 73 1270 17 4 541 7 Jackson 59 6 73 11 4 35 7 Byars 49 418 8 5 34 5 Ingram 44 506 11.5 64t 6 McDuflie 37 488 13.2 30 3 ParmalM 34 249 73 22 1 Saon 27 151 5 6 25 0 Cram 24 237 9 9 28 0 Wiiamt 15 221 14 7 29 0 Kirby 14 1 54 11 0 26 0 Total 392 4533 11 6 641 31 Opponents 334 3954 11 8 831 23 Playoffs No. Vdl. Avg.

LG TD Fryar 6 71 118 18 1 Craver 4 35 8 8 15 0 ParmalM 2 34 17 0 26 0 Jackson 2 29 14 5 20 0 Williams 2 28 14 0 19 0 McDurl 2 25 12 5 17 0 Saion 7 24 12 0 9 0 INTERCEPTIONS No. Yds. Avg. LG TD Vincent 5 113 22.6 58t 1 Brown 3 82 27.3 38 0 Atkins 3 24 8 0 18 0 Stewart 3 11 3 7 11 0 Braton 2 3 1 5 3 0 Beavers 2 0 00 0 0 Hollier 1 36 36 0 36 0 Veasey 1 7 70 7 0 Cross 1 0 0.0 0 0 Malone 1 0 0.0 0 0 Oliver 1 0 0.0 0 0 Totals 23 276 12.0 76t 1 Opponents IB 190 10.6 28t 1 Playoffs No. Yds.

Avg. LG TO Brown 1 24 24.0 24 0 SACKS Cross 9 5 Coleman 6.0 Bowens 3.0 Cos 3 0 Veasey ...2.5 Singleton 2 0 Totals 29 0 Opponents 17.0 PUNTING In No. Yds. Avg. 20 LG Arnold 46 1810 39.3 14 53 Kidd 14 602 43.0 2 58 Totals 60 2412 40.2 16 58 Opponents 68 2834 41.7 18 64 Playoffs In No.

Yds. Avg. 20 LG Kidd 3 130 43 3 48 PUNT RETURNS No. FC Yds. Avg.

LG TD McDuffie 32 15 228 7.1 26 0 Totals 33 17 241 7.3 26 0 Opponents ....32 6 324 10.1 751 1 Playoffs No. FC Yds. Avg. LG TD McDuffie 0 2 0 00 0 0 NCKOFF RETURNS No. Yds.

Avg. LG TD McDuffie 36 767 21 3 46 0 Spikes 19 434 22.8 34 0 2 0 0.0 0 0 Totals 66 1294 19.6 46 0 Opponents 74 1549 20.9 93t 2 No. Yds. Aug. LG TD McDuffie 2 57 28 5 32 0 Spikes 1 38 38 0 38 0 SCORE BY PERIODS 1 2 3 4 OT Tot.

Dolphins 22 135 105 124 3 389 Opponents. .85 52 87 100 3 327 SCORING TD TD TD TD Tot. Rs. Re. Rt.

PAT FG TP Sloyanovich 0 0 0 0 35 24 107 Fryar 7 0 7 0 2 0 46 K. 7 0 7 0 1 0 44 Parmalee 7 6 1 0 1 0 44 Byars 7 2 5 0 0 0 42 Ingram 6 0 6 0 0 0 36 McDuffie 3 0 3 0 0 0 18 Kirby 2 2 0 0 1 0 14 Spikes 2 2 0 0 0 0 12 Baly 1 0 1 0 0 0 6 Marino 1 1 0 0 0 0 6 Miller 1 0 1 0 0 0 6 Vincent 1 0 0 1 0 0 6 Craver 0 0 0 0 1 0 2 Totals 45 13 31 1 41 24 389 Opponents .42 14 23 5 41 11 327 Playoffs TD TD TO TD Tot. Rs. Re. Rt.

PAT FG TP Stoyanouicn .0 0 0 0 3 2 9 Fryar 1 0 1 0 0 0 6 Parmalee 1 1 0 0 0 0 6 R. Williams .1 0 1 0 0 0 6 Totals 3 1 2 0 3 2 27 FIELD GOAL SUCCESS 1-19 20-29 30-39 40-49 50 Stoyanovich 11 88 610 810 12 Opponents ....33 11 34 48 02 Playoffs 1-19 20 29 30-39 40-49 50 Sloyanovich 00 00 00 22 00 ROSTER Pro Bowl selections in bold caps. No. Pot. Ht, WL 10 Pete Sloyanovich 5-11 195 13 DAN MARINO QB 64 224 14 Doug Pederson QB 6-3 212 17 John Kidd 6-3 213 19 Bernie Kosar QB 6-5 215 20 Muhammad Oliver CB 5-11 185 21 Mark Higgs RB 5-7 199 22 James Saxon FB 5-11 239 23 Troy Vincent CB 6-0 197 28 Gene Atkins 5-11 200 29 Frankie Smith CB 5-9 191 30 Bernie Parmalee RB 5-11 205 31 Sean Hill CB 5-10 176 32 Cleveland Gary RB 6-0 226 34 Tyrone Braxton DB 5-10 185 35 Michael Stewart 5-11 203 37 B.Brown C8 6-0 193 40 Erving Spikes RB 5-8 215 42 Chris Green 5-11 198 43 Terry Kirby RB 6-1 215 44 Aaron Craver RB 6-0 220 49 Robert Wilson FB 6-0 258 50 Dwight Hollier LB 6-2 257 51 BRYAN COX LB 6-4 249 52 Brant Boyer LB 6-0 237 53 Aubrey Beavers LB 6-3 233 57 Dion Foxx LB 6-3 254 58 Jesse Soloman LB 6-0 235 60 Bert Weidner 6-2 298 61 Tim Ruddy 6-3 286 62 Chris Gray OL 6-4 294 65 Jeff Oelienbach 6-6 300 67 Jeff Novak OL 6-5 295 69 KEITH SIMS 6-3 303 73 Ron Hellef 6-6 293 76 Tim Irwin 6-7 300 77 Kevin Brothen GC 6-1 284 78 RICHMOND WEBB 6-6 302 79 Larry Webster DL 6-5 296 80 IRVING FRYAR WR 641 200 81 O.J.

McDuffie WR 5-10 191 82 Mark Ingram WR 5-11 194 83 Scott Miller WR 5-11 194 84 Greg Baty TE 6-6 240 85 Ronnie Williams TE 6-3 266 87 Mike Williams WR 5-11 190 88 Keith Jackson TE 6-2 258 90 Marco Coleman DE 6-3 267 91 Jeff Cross OE 6-4 281 92 Willie Boughton DT 6-4 284 93 William Gaines DT 6-5 306 94 Craig Veasey NT 6-2 285 95 Tim Bowens OT 6-4 317 97 Tyoka Jackson DE 6-1 266 98 Mark Caesar NT 6-2 307 99 Chuck Klingbeil NT 6-1 301 Inlwd mcfw 41 Keith Byars FB 6-1 256 Heat's on Humphries to match with Marino Miami and San Diego did not meet this season, but when you mention those teams as playoff opponents, it stirs memories of the 1981 slugfest. The Chargers won that game in overtime, 41-38, and it will forever be known as the ASSOCIATED PRESS game (San Diego had 564 total yards, 415 passing for Dan Fouts; Miami had 472 total yards, 403 passing for Don Strock). Many Dolphins fans probably turned the TV off early as the Chargers built a 24-0 first-quarter lead. But Miami stormed back to take a 38-31 lead before Fouts hit James Brooks for the tying touchdown with just under a minute to go. Kicker Uwe von Schamann twice was blocked trying to win it for Miami first on the last play of regulation, then 11:27 into overtime.

The game of the 1980s (as voted by the Pro Football Hall of Fame) ended with Rolf Benirschke's field goal at 13:52 (he had missed one in OT, too). Miami gained some measure of revenge a year later with a 34-13 win in the playoffs. Overall, San Diego leads the regular-season series, 10-5, but Miami has won two of three in the playoffs. Recent games of note: DEC. 27, 1993, AT SAN DIEGO: CHARGERS 45, DOLPHINS 20 This was the fourth of five straight losses to end the season as Miami after getting to 9-2 failed to make the playoffs.

In this game, Natrone Means rushed for 118 yards and three touchdowns, and Anthony Miller caught a pair of touchdowns. With Dan Marino sidelined by a torn Achilles', Scott Mitchell hit on 24 of 40 passes for 260 yards, but three interceptions hurt. The Dolphins rushed for just 61 yards on 25 attempts (2.4 average), and a loss in overtime the next week at New England knocked them from playoff consideration. JAN. 10, 1993, AT MIAMI: DOLPHINS 31, CHARGERS 0 San Diego, under first-year head coach Bobby Ross, came into the playoffs the surprise team in the AFC.

But there would be no surprises in this game, especially the effort by Marino. He threw for just 167 yards but completed 17 of 29 passes, three of them for touchdowns. The Dolphin defense stifled Marion Butts (25 yards on seven carries) thanks in large part to a pair of interceptions by Troy Vincent. JOHN CARNEY Perfect from 30-39 yards FIELD GOAL SUCCESS 1-19 20-29 30-39 40-4950 Carney 00 1212 1515 59 22 Totals 00 1212 1515 59 22 Opponents 11 1010 78 36 12 ROSTER Pro Bowl selections in bold caps. No! Pm! Ht.

wt. Humphries vs. Marino won't generate nearly the hype that Marino vs. Montana did last week. Dolphins-Chargers d88" scouting report chances against the Miami Dolphins could ride on Stan Humphries' right arm.

And the Chargers quarterback is on one of his good streaks going into Sunday's game at San Diego. "It's a good time now to start getting hot," Humphries said. "I feel the last two or three weeks or so like I've kind of gone back to like it was the first six weeks of the season." Humphries was a big reason that the Chargers started 6-0. Likewise, he wasn't immune from a midseason funk that contributed to five losses in eight games. But QB QB QB RB CB FS CB CB CB RB RB he came around in time to lead San Diego to the AFC West title.

In the last three games, Humphries completed 65 of 104 passes (62.5 percent) for 866 yards and five touchdowns with two interceptions. He finished the season with 3,209 yards, 17 TDs and 12 interceptions. Dan Marino is hot, too. Last Saturday, he outdueled Joe Montana in a 27-17 first-round win over the Kansas'City Chiefs. Although Marino is 0-3 at San Diego, he's never had a bad day statistically there.

When the Chargers have the ball: Humphries is fifth-rated passer in AFC (81.6). RB Natrone Means was No. 2 AFC rusher (1,350 yards, 12 TDs) but, running behind a banged-up offensive line, has not hit 100-yard mark in last seven games. WR Mark Seay and RB Ronnie Harmon led team with 58 catches each. San Diego is ranked 11th overall (326.3 yards per game), seventh rushing (115.8) and tied for 12th passing (210.5).

When the Dolphins are on defense: Though they allowed 414 yards to the Chiefs, they forced two key fourth-quarter turnovers to preserve last week's win. Miami led the AFC with 23 interceptions and is ranked 19th overall (326.5), sixth vs. the rush (89.4) and 19th vs. the pass (237.1). When the Dolphins have the ball: Marino was 22 of 29 for 257 yards and 2 TDs vs.

Chiefs. As usual, the line protected Marino well, allowing just one sack. Marino, though gimpy following Achilles' surgery, led the AFC with 30 TDs. WR Irving Fryar had 73 catches for 1,270 yards and seven TDs. RB Bernie Parmalee ran for 57 yards and RB Irving Spikes had 49 on just nine carries vs.

Chiefs for an offense ranked first overall (379.9), 13th on the ground (103.6) and second in the air (276.3). Marino has thrown for 24 TDs in 11 playoff games. When the Chargers are on defense: MLB Junior Seau led the team with 172 tackles and had 5V sacks. Their 43 sacks ranked second in the AFC, though San Diego rates 22d against the pass (228.6). DE Leslie O'Neal led team with 12M sacks.

LB RB CB FS TE 5-11 170 6-2 200 6-1 200 6-2 223 6-3 209 S-10 24S 5-11 182 6-2 201 5-10 180 5-11 175 6-2 200 5-10 186 5- 7 205 5- 11 207 6- 0 250 5- 9 224 6- 0 201 6-1 195 6-3 212 6-3 240 6- 114 281 6-3 245 6-3 250 6-2 240 6 2 245 6-3 285 6-1 285 6-6 295 6-4 300 6-3 296 6-5 300 6-5 295 6-3 320 6-5 310 6-3 270 5-11 180 6-0 181 The schedules and results for San Diego and Miami, with foes in bold caps: 3 JOHN CARNEY 9 Bryan Wagner 11 JeffBrohm 12 Stan Humphries 13 Gale Gilbert 20 NATRONE MEANS 2 1 Darnen Gordon 24 Stanley Richard 25 Sean Vanhorse 28 Dwayne Harper 29 Darren Cunningham 31 Willie Clark 32 Eric Bieniemy 33 Ronnie Harmon 34 Steve Hendrickson 35 Rodney Culver 37 Rodney Harrison 43 Lonnie Young 44 Eric Castle 50 David Binn 53 Courtney Hall 54 Doug Miller 55 IUNI0R SEAU 57 Dennis Gibson 58 Lewis Rush 60 Greg Engel 64 Curtis Whitley 67 Stan Brock 68 Joe Cocozzo 70 Vaughn Parker 71 Joe Milinichik 72 Harry Swayne 73 Isaac Davis 74 Eric Jonassen 79 Cornell Thomas 80 Shawn Jefferson 81 Tony Martin 82 Mark Seay 83 Andre Coleman 84 Aaron Laing 85 Johnnie Barnes 86 Alfred Pupunu 87 Duane Young 89 Shannon Mitchell 90 Reggie White 91 LESLIE O'NEAL 92 pavid Griggs 93 Reuben Davis 94 Chris Mims 95 Les Miller 97 John Parrella 98 Shawn Lee 99 Raylee Johnson )) V. LB IB LB LB C-G a DE WR WR WR SAN DIEGO 111-5) MIAMI (11-6) 37 at Denver 34 39 NEW ENGLAND 35 27 CINCINNATI 10 24vs. Green Bay at Milw.14 24 at Seattle 10 28 NY JETS 14 26 at LA RAIDERS 24 35 at Minnesota 38 20 KANSAS CITY 6 23 at CINCINNATI 7 36 at New Orleans 22 11 at Buffalo 21 15 Denver 20 20 LA RAIDERS 17 (OT) 35 Seattle 15 23 at NEW ENGLAND 3 9 at Atlanta 10 22 Indianapolis 21 14 at KANSAS CITY 13 14 Chicago 17 17 at NEW ENGLAND 23 .13 at PITTSBURGH 16 (OT) 31 LA Rams 17 28 at NY JETS 24 17 LA RAIDERS It 31 Buffalo 42 15 San 38 45 KANSAS CITY 28 21 at NY JETS 6 6 at Indianapolis 10 37 PITTSBURGH 34 27 Detroit 20 AFC Wltj. D-CARD 17 Kansas City 27 6-0 175 5- 9 165 6- 3 264 6-1 180 6-2 265 6-1 270 6-2 245 6-4 300 6-4 265 6-3 250 6-5 320 6-5 290 6-7 285 6-3 290 6-2 300 6-3 265 6-4 258 6-5 294 6-2 306 6-4 23. 6-4 29TJ KR TE WR TE TE TE DT DE LB DT DE DT DT DT DE raswnt L8 TE DT jf L.r 56 Darren Krein 66 Earnest Greene 77 Eric Moten 88 Deemjh May 96 BlaiuWinte, GLOBE RLE PHOTO Charger QB StaA Humphries had 17 touchdown passes in an injury-plagued season..

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