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Peyton Manning scores 7
TDS ties
NFL record with seven touchdown passes in
Ravens vs. Broncos game | Peyton Manning scores 7 TDS ties NFL record with seven touchdown passes in Ravens vs. Broncos game
DENVER — Both the NFL opener and Peyton Manning were a little tardy.
It was well worth the wait.
Manning and the
Denver Broncos waited eight long months, then another
33 minutes to get the season started because of a lightning storm.
After three punts to start things off, Manning threw a record-tying seven touchdown passes, something no one had done in 44 years, in directing
Denver to a 49-27 victory over
Super Bowl champion Baltimore on Thursday night in a much-anticipated rematch against the team that ended the Broncos' playoff run in January.
Manning connected with his most prized addition,
Wes Welker, and former college basketball player
Julius Thomas and
Demaryius Thomas for two TDs each in piling up the most points scored on the Ravens in their 18-year history.
"I don't like excuses but I do think that lightning delay did slow us down," Manning said. "You guys have seen teams break it down: you come up for the team prayer, you put your hands in and you say, `Broncos on 3,' and you go out to the field.
"We did it three times tonight," Manning said. "We did it, went back and sat down for 10 minutes and came back up again. `Broncos on 3,' now sit down for another 10 minutes. I know they had to deal with it, too, but it took us a while to get started."
Wearing an orange-and-gray glove like the one he wore on that icy January night the last time these teams met, Manning took a while to get warmed up against a defense that had to replace seven
Super Bowl starters.
He ditched the glove when the rain stopped -- and then was unstoppable.
"Peyton had an amazing night," Broncos coach
John Fox said. "Peyton's had a lot of amazing nights."
Not like this, though.
Manning is the sixth QB in
NFL history to throw seven TD passes in a game and the first since
Joe Kapp for
Minnesota against Baltimore on Sept. 28,
1969.
The others read like a
Who's Who of passers who defied the 3-yards-and-a-cloud-of-dust days long before the NFL became so pass-happy:
Sid Luckman,
Adrian Burk,
George Blanda and
Y.A. Tittle.
Tom Brady never did it. Nor
Brett Favre,
Dan Marino,
Joe Montana,
Steve Young or
Terry Bradshaw. Or, for that matter,
No. 7 himself,
John Elway, who had his binoculars trained on the action from his perch in the luxury seats.
"I felt like we had to keep scoring because Baltimore can score at any time," said Manning, who was 27 of 42 for 462 yards with no interceptions for an off-the-charts quarterback rating of 141.1.
"He's phenomenal. To continue to come out every year and put that kind of performance on for us, it's amazing," Julius Thomas said.
All part of a thorough thrashing of the team that put a harsh end to what had looked like a
Super Bowl-bound
2012 in Denver. The rematch came nearly eight months after Baltimore beat Denver 38-35 in double overtime on an icy January night in the same stadium.
The hero on that night was
Jacoby Jones, who caught a 70-yard TD pass over
Rahim Moore with 31 seconds left to tie it in regulation. This time, his night was cut short when he went back to field a punt in the first half and teammate
Brynden Trawick plowed into him, sending him to the sideline with a sprained right knee.
"That's an experience problem, he's an inexperienced guy," Ravens coach
John Harbaugh said.
When the teams finally took the field after the long delay, it was clear how much had changed.
Pass rusher Elvis Dumervil moved from Denver to Baltimore as part of a bizarre, fax-infused contract squabble.
Receiver Brandon Stokley also switched sides.
The Broncos lost their best defender,
Von Miller, to a drug suspension while Baltimore had to rebuild its "D" after losing emotional leaders
Ed Reed and
Ray Lewis.
The Ravens suffered another loss of sorts when they were forced to play the season's traditional opener on the road because of a conflict with the Orioles in Baltimore.
The NFL hung a Flacco banner above Denver's stadium, but he hardly felt at home.
Armed with a new six-year, $
120.6 million contract, he matched the Broncos score for score in the first half and went into the locker room up 17-14 but had to play catch-up after falling behind 35-17 early in the third quarter. His final numbers: 34 of 62 for 362 yards with two TDs and two interceptions
- published: 06 Sep 2013
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