ST. LOUIS — A stunning gamble by the Seattle Seahawks to start overtime failed and led to a St. Louis Rams win on the opening Sunday of the NFL season.
Placekicker Greg Zuerlein’s 37-yard field goal with 12:06 on the clock gave St. Louis a 34-31 verdict over the two-time NFC champions at the Edward Jones Dome.
The kick came six plays after Seattle tried an onside kick that was recovered by rookie Bradley Marquez at the Seahawks’ 49. Jeff Triplette’s officiating crew initially nullified the recovery, saying that Marquez gave an invalid fair catch signal, but the ball never hit the ground and Triplette reversed his original call.
Seattle’s overtime possession ended when Marshawn Lynch was stopped for a 2-yard loss on fourth-and-1 at the Rams’ 41 by defensive end Chris Long.
St. Louis tied the game with 53 seconds remaining when Nick Foles found Lance Kendricks down the left side for a 37-yard touchdown pass. Strong safety Dion Bailey slipped and fell in coverage, leaving Kendricks uncovered.
Jets 31, Browns 10
EAST RUTHERFORD, New Jersey — Ryan Fitzpatrick threw two touchdowns and Chris Ivory rushed for two more scores as the New York Jets beat Cleveland in an injury-marred season opener for both teams.
The Browns lost linebacker Scott Solomon (ankle) on their first defensive series and quarterback Josh McCown (concussion) on their first offensive series. The Jets lost cornerback Antonio Cromartie to a non-contact left knee injury in the second quarter. In the fourth quarter, rookie linebacker Lorenzo Mauldin was strapped on to a cart and driven off the field with head and neck injuries after he was fallen on during a scramble for a loose ball.
Fitzpatrick, starting for his sixth NFL team, finished 15 of 24 for 179 yards. He threw touchdowns to wide receivers Brandon Marshall (six catches for 62 yards) and Eric Decker. Ivory rushed 20 times for 91 yards.
Browns quarterback Johnny Manziel was 13 of 24 for 182 yards and a 54-yard touchdown pass to Travis Benjamin (three catches for 89 yards). Manziel also threw an interception and lost two fumbles.
Bills 27, Colts 14
ORCHARD PARK, N.Y. — Coach Rex Ryan and quarterback Tyrod Taylor won their debut games in Buffalo, defeating Indianapolis in the rain at Ralph Wilson Stadium.
Taylor, the former Baltimore Ravens backup, was 14 of 19 passing for 195 yards and a touchdown in his first career start. He also rushed for 41 yards.
Running backs Karlos Williams and Boobie Dixon each had rushing touchdowns for the Bills and Dan Carpenter made two field goals. Percy Harvin caught five passes for 79 yards and a touchdown in his first game with the Bills.
Ryan’s blitzing defense harassed Indianapolis quarterback Andrew Luck into a poor first half that he and the Colts could not recover from. Luck finished 26 of 49 passing for 243 yards, two touchdowns and two interceptions, but much of his production came after the Bills had built a big lead. Luck’s first-half passer rating was 46.3.
Packers 31, Bears 23
CHICAGO — Aaron Rodgers threw three touchdown passes, two to the recently re-signed receiver James Jones, and brought Green Bay from behind to beat Chicago.
The Bears, blown out twice by the Packers a year ago and rebuilding a defense that ranked 30th in the NFL the last two years, knew the key to the game would be limiting Green Bay’s possessions by controlling the ball on offense, and they did an outstanding job of that.
Dolphins 17, Redskins 10
LANDOVER, Md. — Jarvis Landry’s 69-yard punt return propelled Miami over Washington.
The Redskins responded by driving to the Miami 29, but Dolphins cornerback Brice McCain intercepted a Kirk Cousins pass intended for wide receiver Pierre Garcon at the 2-yard line. The Redskins’ final series came up short at the Miami 20 with 2:17 left.
Chiefs 27, Texans 20
HOUSTON — Alex Smith passed for 243 yards and three touchdowns as Kansas City took advantage of two critical turnovers in its victory over Houston.
The Chiefs converted two turnovers inside the Houston 15-yard line into touchdowns, including an interception by rookie cornerback Marcus Peters on the Texans’ first offensive snap. With 5:01 remaining in the first half, Chiefs linebacker Justin Houston forced a fumble with his sack of Texans quarterback Brian Hoyer that defensive end Allen Bailey recovered. Kansas City scored on the next snap for a 27-6 lead.
Smith followed both turnovers with scoring strikes, finding Travis Kelce with a 10-yard pass after Peters’ interception for a 7-0 lead with 10:22 left in the first quarter. Smith hit running back Jamaal Charles for a 7-yard touchdown pass after the Bailey fumble recovery.
Broncos 19, Ravens 13
DENVER — Cornerback Aqib Talib returned an interception 51 yards for a go-ahead touchdown, helping overcome a sluggish performance by Denver’s Peyton Manning-led offense as the Broncos beat the Baltimore Ravens 19-13 Sunday.
The victory was Denver’s fourth straight opening week win and made first-year Broncos coach Gary Kubiak a winner in his debut as the team’s head coach.
In a rare occurrence, Manning was held without a touchdown pass and sacked four times, while Brandon McManus kicked four field goals, including a 33-yarder with 3:00 remaining to give Denver a six-point edge.
Manning was 24-for-40 passing for 175 yards with an interception.
Cardinals 30, Saints 19
GLENDALE, Ariz. — Sean Payton had no choice but to punt on fourth down with his New Orleans Saints backed up at their own 7-yard line and two timeouts left to call.
There were just under two minutes remaining Sunday at University of Phoenix Stadium and if the Saints’ defense could just make a couple quick stops, use their final timeouts wisely, and give Drew Brees one last crack at the Arizona Cardinals, anything was possible.
Brees, after all, had been shredding the Cardinals’ defense throughout the afternoon. He’s engineered 24 fourth-quarter comebacks in his Saints’ career. What’s one more?
But he never got the chance. One play after the Saints decided to punt from deep in their own territory, Carson Palmer threw a little hitch pass to rookie running back David Johnson and Johnson took off for a wild, 55-yard touchdown romp to seal a 30-19 victory for the Cardinals.


