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The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Tuesday, October 10, 2006

Broncos knock off Ravens, 13-3

By Arnie Stapleton
Associated Press

Former University of Hawai'i kicker Jason Elam connected on 43- and 44-yard field goals for Denver.

JACK DEMPSEY | Associated Press

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DENVER — If being disrespected means Champ Bailey gets more lob passes thrown his way in the end zone, then the Denver Broncos won't complain anymore about their dominant defense being dissed.

The Broncos (3-1) intercepted three of Steve McNair's passes — including a leaping end-zone pick by Bailey just before halftime — to hand the Ravens (4-1) their first loss with a 13-3 win yesterday.

Bailey was as surprised as anyone that McNair went after him with a lob pass to wide receiver Clarence Moore.

"A little," Bailey said with a smile. "And they paid for it."

All Baltimore coach Brian Billick had to say about the ill-advised call that loomed so large on a cold and rainy night was: "That play was one of the options we had and it didn't turn out for us."

Denver defensive coordinator Larry Coyer was glad to see somebody finally challenge his perennial Pro Bowl cornerback: "I was glad to see them throw one at him. That'll work for me, yeah."

A cold rain and two stingy defenses turned the Baltimore-Denver showdown into a kicking competition for much of the night, and former University of Hawai'i star Jason Elam bested Matt Stover with two long field goals.

But with a 6-3 lead and 1:55 left in the game, Denver put the kick-fest to rest. Deep in Ravens territory, Denver took a chance at the end zone, icing the game on Jake Plummer's 4-yard touchdown pass to Rod Smith. It was Smith's first touchdown this season and also the first TD the Ravens have surrendered in a second half this year.

"We stuck together tonight," Plummer said. "It was ugly, ugly for a while, but in the end we came and put together some drives when it counted."

The touchdown was set up by Darrent Williams' interception at midfield with 6:47 left and Tatum Bell's 12-yard gain on third-and-10 from the 17 in which he carried linebacker Ray Lewis for the final five yards.

"It wasn't a big deal," Bell said, "but it was a big deal because it was Ray."

Elam connected from 43 and 44 yards, the second one breaking a 3-3 tie with eight minutes remaining and capping a drive that was set up by Sam Koch's 10-yard punt.

Ravens defensive end Trevor Pryce, who was quiet all week about his return to Denver — which dumped him and his $10 million salary in the offseason — was even quieter yesterday, assisting on just one tackle.

"The loss hurts, but I don't really care who it is against," Pryce said. "They are just another football team. The thing is, they are a great football team. They always have been, they were before I got there and they are now that I'm gone."

The teams were tied 3-3 at halftime, and the rain only got heavier during a scoreless third quarter in which the Ravens avoided a big momentum-shifter when center Mike Flynn smothered McNair's fumble at the Baltimore 12.

Flynn saved the touchdown after McNair's third interception, by Domonique Foxworth in the final minute while safety John Lynch (neck) was on the sideline.

The Ravens and the rain combined to limit Denver to 9 yards of offense in the first quarter, tying a franchise low since Mike Shanahan became the Broncos coach in 1995.

The Broncos turned the ball over on their first two possessions.

Denver's first turnover resulted in a 24-yard field goal by Stover that gave Baltimore a 3-0 lead.