NFL Week 4 two-minute drill
at Chicago 34, Carolina 29: Devin Hester’s day: two key returns, one score, three end-zone flips, one unsportsmanlike penalty.
at Cincinnati 23, Buffalo 20: With 10 losses in a row to Bills, faithful Bengals fans show confidence with smallest crowd in stadium history.
Tennessee 31, at Cleveland 13: Chris Johnson ran for more yards (101) than in previous three games combined. Nice going, Browns defense.
Detroit 34, at Dallas 30: Big day for Cowboys quarterback Tony Romo, who threw five touchdown passes — two of them to the Lions.
at Houston 17, Pittsburgh 10: What’s wrong with the Steelers? Bad offensive line? Age? How about they’re minus-10 on turnovers.
New Orleans 23, at Jacksonville 10: Saints became first NFC South team to win in Jacksonville. Division had been a combined 0-8.
at Kansas City 22, Minnesota 17: How can any team with Adrian Peterson on its side be worse than the injury-depleted Chiefs?
San Francisco 24, at Philadelphia 23: Finish line — the Eagles have been outscored 36-0 in fourth quarter of last three games, all losses.
Washington 17, at St. Louis 10: Slow-starting Rams have been outscored 41-0 in the first half of the last two games and 79-16 for the season.
N.Y. Giants 31, at Arizona 27: Controversial “non-fumble” saves Giants’ comeback. Blown Cardinals lead is not reviewable either.
Atlanta 30, at Seattle 28: The Seahawks, 1-2 at the famous “Home of the 12th Man,” have only one more home game before Nov. 13.
at Green Bay 49, Denver 23: Seemed very much like one of those defeats that even Tim Tebow could have led.
New England 31, at Oakland 19: Telling stat: Patriots scored 30 or more in 12th straight. Raiders had 19 points on six trips inside 30.
at San Diego 26, Miami 16: Chargers are 3-1 for first time in five seasons under Norv Turner. Do they know how to proceed minus panic?
at Baltimore 34, N.Y. Jets 17: Is there any way the Jets can persuade Matt Barkley to leave USC early? You know, like Mark Sanchez did.
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.