Healthy Cutler leads Broncos past Raiders
41-14
OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) -Jay Cutler heard all
the doubts about the Denver Broncos.
He had to show that he had his strength
and rocket arm back now that his diabetes is under control, the
offense needed to succeed without big-play receiver Brandon Marshall
and the defense had to stand its ground against physical running
teams.
A dominating opening-night performance
provided a good early answer.
Cutler threw for 299 yards with long
touchdown passes to rookie Eddie Royal and Darrell Jackson that
helped the Broncos beat up on their AFC West rivals in a 41-14
victory over the Oakland Raiders on Monday night.
''There were a lot of questions about us,
but we felt good about what we have,'' Cutler said. ''You have that
little bit of doubt about what's going to happen with the young guys
when the lights come on, but they came through time and time
again.''
Cutler showed why the Broncos made him a
first-round draft pick in 2006, completing 16 of 24 passes and
confidently picking apart Oakland's rebuilt defense despite missing
its best offensive playmaker to a one-game suspension.
It was a pleasant sight for the Broncos
after an up-and-down performance last season when Cutler lost 35
pounds and the zip on his throws while struggling with diabetes that
was not diagnosed until March. Now he's back to his healthy self and
the Broncos couldn't be happier.
''Jay made some great throws and did what
you need to do for a quarterback to win,'' coach Mike Shanahan said.
''We talked about stepping up and handling more of the offense, and
he's doing it.''
For the Raiders, the season couldn't have
gotten off to much worse of a start. They lost their sixth straight
season opener and only avoided their third straight shutout on
Monday Night Football when JaMarcus Russell threw two meaningless
fourth-quarter touchdown passes.
Oakland committed five personal fouls,
botched a reverse for a 15-yard loss and was dominated on both sides
of the ball in a performance that drew plenty of boos from a
frustrated crowd that has grown all too used to this type of game.
The Raiders have an NFL worst 19-62 record since 2004, and even the
first game with Russell and Darren McFadden together couldn't change
that.
''It's extremely disappointing,'' coach
Lane Kiffin said. ''Since I've been here we've played well at home.
Even when we lose, we're in almost every game in the fourth quarter.
I was shocked with the results today.''
Royal helped make sure of that in an NFL
debut that made sure the Broncos did not miss Marshall, catching
nine passes for 146 yards.
Royal, a second-round draft pick out of
Virginia Tech, was featured in the offense from the start, running
the ball twice and catching a pass in the first four plays from
scrimmage. He capped the opening drive by getting behind cornerback
DeAngelo Hall and safety Gibril Wilson and catching a 26-yard pass
from Cutler on a third-down rollout.
''You dream about it and you hope you can
come out and play this well, but the main thing is we won,'' Royal
said. ''It was a great feeling, especially in the stadium against
our rivals. Our game plan was to attack. We knew we had a lot of
weapons and Coach drew up a great game plan. We just wanted to keep
the pressure on them.''
Royal caught three passes on the Broncos'
third scoring drive, drawing two personal fouls from Hall along the
way to set up the first of two touchdown runs by Michael Pittman to
make it 17-0.
Cutler put the game away with a 48-yard TD
pass to Jackson in the third quarter and Selvin Young added a 5-yard
touchdown run in the fourth.
''Nobody has been giving us a chance since
before the season started,'' cornerback Dre' Bly said. ''They keep
picking the Chargers and the Colts and the Pats, and that's what we
want. We want to shock the world.''
The Raiders went on an offseason spending
spree to try to reverse five straight seasons of double-digit
losses. The early payoff was not good.
Receiver Javon Walker, who got $16 million
in guaranteed money, missed the game with an injured hamstring.
Hall, who got $24 million guaranteed, was frequently beat by Royal
in coverage and committed the two personal fouls. Defensive tackle
Tommy Kelly, who got $18 million in guarantees, was part of a line
that failed to get pressure on Cutler all night.
''They just outschemed us and outplayed
us. We didn't show up at all,'' Hall said. ''They came out and
dominated us from start to finish.''
Russell was frequently under pressure in
his second career start, going 17-of-26 for 180 yards and two TDs
and a fumble to end Oakland's best drive of the first half.
McFadden had 57 yards from scrimmage,
lining up in the backfield at receiver and even at quarterback
during the game before leaving with a stinger in his shoulder.
Notes: The Broncos had lost seven straight
road games on Monday nights, last winning in Kansas City in 1998.
... The Raiders have lost six straight Monday nighters, being
outscored 173-41. |