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Chargers return to scene of Las Vegas crime against Raiders

Chargers quarterback Justin Herbert rushes during the second half against the Las Vegas Raiders last season.
Chargers quarterback Justin Herbert rushes during the second half against the Las Vegas Raiders on Jan. 9 in Las Vegas.
(Jeff Bottari / Associated Press)
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Their playoff hopes still alive, the Chargers now return to where everything died for them last season.

Busted, just off the Strip.

Nearly 11 months ago, the Chargers visited Allegiant Stadium and fell in overtime 35-32 to Las Vegas in the NFL’s regular-season finale.

It wasn’t a must-win, but it was a must-not-lose. A victory or tie would have advanced the Chargers into the postseason.

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Instead, they were kicked aside by a 47-yard Raiders field goal as time — so fittingly — expired.

Now, they’re back.

The Chargers will once again lean heavily on Justin Herbert, but will their defense be able to hold back Josh Jacobs and the Las Vegas Raiders?

“That seems like so long ago,” linebacker Drue Tranquill said. “We’ve played like 20 games since then, haven’t we? But there will be some nostalgia for sure. We’ll feel it.”

The Chargers enter Sunday eighth in the AFC at 6-5. They trail Cincinnati and the New York Jets — the teams that hold the conference’s final two playoff spots — by one game.

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Among those three contenders, the Chargers have the easiest remaining schedule. Their opponents are 29-37-1, compared with 40-28 for the Bengals and 40-27 for the Jets.

The Raiders are 4-7 and can hope for nothing more significant than plundering a rival’s season, small consolation even for a franchise whose logo features a man wearing an eye patch.

“Urgency,” Chargers wide receiver Keenan Allen said. “Definitely playing with urgency. We gotta fight back to where we want to be.”

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Allen and his teammates need a win over Las Vegas for an abundance of reasons, not the least of which is what awaits them on the other side.

After this game, the Chargers play their next two at home against Miami and Tennessee, a pair of first-place teams. Even with a victory Sunday, the Chargers could be 7-7 with three games remaining.

Keenan Allen finally appears healthy. With the Raiders in his sites in Week 13, the wider receiver likes his chance for a big game against a suspect secondary.

They finish with Indianapolis, the Rams and Denver, all teams that won’t qualify for the 2022 playoffs. Would winning those three be enough?

“The AFC is just so tight,” Tranquill said. “You might have to have 11 wins to get in. I’m not sure a 10-7 team is getting in this year.”

Though their wins haven’t exactly been artwork, the Chargers have seized upon some prime opportunities. They are 6-1 against teams with losing records and 0-4 against those with winning records.

The teams they’ve beaten are a combined 21-46-1, a winning percentage of .316. They’ve lost to opponents that are 35-20 (.636). The Dolphins and Titans enter Sunday at 15-7.

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“Every one from here on out is going to mean a lot, especially to us,” safety Derwin James Jr. said. “We gotta play ’em all hard.”

The Chargers and Raiders left everything on the Allegiant Stadium field last Jan. 9, playing in prime time and with both teams still in postseason contention.

Trailing by 15 in the final five minutes of regulation, quarterback Justin Herbert led the Chargers to consecutive scoring drives and a two-point conversion to force overtime.

The second series lasted 19 plays and covered 83 yards over more than two minutes, Herbert hitting Mike Williams in the end zone with 0:00 on the scoreboard clock.

“We were crazy tired,” wide receiver Joshua Palmer recalled. “There were no subs. That whole drive was insane.”

Justin Herbert had been the NFL’s least-sacked quarterback, but the Chargers allowed nine sacks the last two weeks and now face the Raiders’ vaunted rush in key AFC West game.

Along the way, the Chargers converted two fourth-and-10 plays and a third and 10. They had another fourth-and-10 situation converted when Las Vegas was called for holding.

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Twice the drive was paused for replay reviews, the officials reversing both calls — turning one Herbert pass into an incompletion and the other into a completion.

When Williams finally scored, Palmer remembers running to celebrate in the end zone just as a water bottle came twirling at them from the stands.

“Wild, that’s what I think of,” Chargers linebacker Kenneth Murray Jr. said. “Just a wild game.”

Could something similar be coming Sunday? Though only 4-7, the Raiders have won two straight, both on the road and in overtime. Eight of their games this season have been decided by one score.

Six of the last seven meetings between these teams have ended with a margin of seven points or fewer. The Chargers have visited Allegiant Stadium twice and both games went to overtime.

“It don’t matter if we’re playing them in the parking lot,” James said. “Chargers-Raiders, you know what type of game it’s going to be. We gotta go play.”

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Gotta play and, most likely, gotta win, something the city of Las Vegas typically allows quite begrudgingly.

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