Lowery Gives Chiefs a Lift as Bengals Get Kick in Teeth, 31-28
- Share via
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — You couldn’t blame Frank Gansz for getting a little carried away.
His Kansas City Chiefs had only one victory and the worst record in the National Football League until Nick Lowery’s fifth field goal of the game, a 31-yarder with 2 seconds left Sunday beat the Cincinnati Bengals, 31-28.
“We played probably one of the best football teams . . . in the history of the game,” Gansz said after Kansas City rallied with a safety, a touchdown and a field goal in the final 6 minutes.
“I’m not exaggerating,” added Gansz, whose job reportedly is in jeopardy.
Cincinnati (8-3) had a 28-19 lead when when Kansas City’s Albert Lewis blocked a punt through the end zone for a safety with 6:06 left.
Following a pass interference penalty on David Fulcher at the goal line, Christian Okoye’s touchdown brought the Chiefs (2-8-1) into a 28-28 tie with 1:11 left.
The Bengals’ Marc Logan fumbled the kickoff and Lewis recovered on the 28, setting up Lowery’s game-winner.
“We feel sick in there,” Cincinnati Coach Sam Wyche said, waving toward the Bengals’ locker room. “That was a game we wanted to win and should have won. You can’t let the officials get in a close game at the end. The close calls gave Kansas City a chance to win and they executed well.”
Lewis said the ball, knocked loose from Logan by James Saxon, “looked like a Christmas present lying there.
“I could almost see the red ribbons and the gift wrapping,” Lewis said.
The Chiefs pulled to within 21-16 in the third period, only to have the Bengals retaliate with Stanford Jennings’ team-record 98-yard kickoff return, breaking the mark of 97 yards by Willie Shelby against Cleveland in 1976.
Lowery, meanwhile, kept the Chiefs in the game. His 37-yard field goal in the first period gave Kansas City a 3-0 lead, which Cincinnati’s Ickey Woods wiped out with a 4-yard touchdown run with 6:25 left in the first quarter.
Lowery added field goals of 35 and 23 yards in the first half and his 47-yarder in the fourth period made it 28-19.
Cincinnati went ahead, 14-9, on Stanley Wilson’s 5-yard run with 14 seconds left in the first half, and stayed ahead until the finish. Quarterback Boomer Esiason made it 21-9 in the third period with a twisting, tackle-slipping run from 5 yards out when his pass protection broke down.
The Chiefs also scored on Steve DeBerg’s 17-yard pass to Stephone Paige to make it 21-16, 3 plays after a 48-yard run by Okoye.
DeBerg completed 22 of 37 passes for 285 yards, while Okoye gained 102 yards in 16 carries.
More to Read
Go beyond the scoreboard
Get the latest on L.A.'s teams in the daily Sports Report newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.