NFL Week 3 two-minute drill
at Buffalo 34, New England 31: Bills had lost 15 in a row to Patriots, dating to 2003, when Drew Bledsoe beat his former team.
at Carolina 16, Jacksonville 10: Congratulations, Jaguars defense, for being the first to hold Cam Newton under 400 yards passing.
San Francisco 13, at Cincinnati 8: Incentive to return? Smallest crowd for home opener in 30 years (43,363 fans at 65,500-seat stadium).
at Cleveland 17, Miami 16: The Browns are 2-1 for the first time since 2002. No, silly, they haven’t been 3-0, either.
Detroit 26, at Minnesota 23 (OT): So far, improving Vikings have blown 17-7, 17-0 and 20-0 halftime leads. Now that’s progress.
at New Orleans 40, Houston 33: Did anyone really believe the Texans would improve to 3-0 for the first time in franchise history?
N.Y. Giants 29, at Philadelphia 16: Giants follow Falcons’ lead — the best way to beat the Eagles is to knock Michael Vick out of game.
at Tennessee 17, Denver 14: For a present on his 36th birthday, Titans quarterback Matt Hasselbeck was given the Broncos.
at Oakland 34, N.Y. Jets 24: In attempt to literally save face, bloodied Jets quarterback Mark Sanchez was forced to adorn a visor.
Baltimore 37, at St. Louis 7: Remember when experts were saying the improving Rams could contend in the NFC West? Forget it.
at San Diego 20, Kansas City 17: Norv Turner’s Chargers have a knack for playing down to competition, but not as lowly as Chiefs.
Green Bay 27, at Chicago 17: The Bears said they’d get back at the Packers for last season’s NFC title game loss. Didn’t say when.
at Seattle 13, Arizona 10: The Seahawks had not even held a lead in a game until this one, not encouraging news for the Cardinals.
at Tampa Bay 16, Atlanta 13: The Falcons get taste of own medicine, having beaten Bucs five in a row, and four by six points or fewer.
Pittsburgh 23, at Indianapolis 20: Third hint that the Colts might not be very good without Peyton Manning.
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.