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  Sunday, Sep. 19 1:00pm ET
Chargers capitalize on five Bengal turnovers
 
  RECAP | BOX SCORE

CINCINNATI (AP) -- Mike Riley's coaching debut was as good as it gets.

Jim Harbaugh threw a pair of touchdown passes and Junior Seau led a punishing defense that helped the Chargers pull away to a 34-7 victory over the bumbling Cincinnati Bengals on Sunday.
San Diego Chargers
Chargers running back Natrone Means wards off Bengals safety Greg Myers with a stiff arm.

Once it finally ended -- and there was no doubt about the outcome after halftime -- the Chargers headed for the locker room to cheer their first-year head coach, present him with a game ball for his first win and then think about what they'd accomplished.

"This feels really good for them," Riley said, after leading his players in cheers so loud they could be heard in an adjacent interview room. "I heard some comments like, 'I haven't felt this in a while.' "

Optimism mingled with relief in the Chargers' locker room. They went 0-5 in the preseason, reinforcing the notion that one of the NFL's last-place finishers in 1998 had changed coaches and quarterbacks but little else.

The Chargers destroyed the notion while destroying the Bengals (0-2), who lost quarterback Jeff Blake to a sprained shoulder and got jeered off the field.

"I'm happy for coach Riley," Seau said. "We put him through hell in the preseason by going 0-5. We had to prove ourselves."

Seau led a defense that allowed only 172 yards and produced a touchdown -- he forced Blake to fumble, and linebacker Gerald Dixon returned the ball 27 yards for a touchdown that essentially put it out of reach late in the first half.

It was San Diego's most one-sided opening victory since a 42-13 win in Minnesota in 1984 under coach Don Coryell.

"Aw, it feels great," Riley said. "I thought the fourth quarter wouldn't end."

The Bengals are once again wondering when their decade-long run of losing will end. They fell to 0-2 for the fifth time in the decade and remained winless in 1999 -- like San Diego, they failed to get a victory in the preseason.

Only 47,660 fans saw the most lopsided home opening loss in Bengals history, surpassing a 30-7 drubbing by Houston in 1991. The few that stuck around cheered sarcastically when the Bengals managed a first down in the fourth quarter and jeered the players as they left the field.

The Bengals tied their team record with seven fumbles, losing four of them. Akili Smith also was intercepted.

GAME NOTES
The Chargers had not won a road opener since a 37-34 victory in Denver in 1994.
The 28 first-half points marked the Chargers' best half in eight years.
The NFL's top run defense of 1998 started strong, holding Cincinnati to 47 net yards rushing on 17 plays -- an average of 2.8 yards per play.
Bengals fullback Brian Milne was inactive with a sore knee.
The Bengals aren't sure how long Jeff Blake will be sidelined. Coach Bruce Coslet said it could be anywhere from a week to a month.

"It hurts and I'm sick of it," Blake said. "Every Sunday I come out focused and I play my heart out. On our first drive, I thought we'd found some answers. We go down and -- bing, boom -- we score, but you can't win with turnovers like that."

The Chargers were the only NFL team to sit out last week with a bye, and looked rusty when at the outset. Seau jumped offsides and drew a personal foul for a late hit on Blake on the game's opening series, setting up Blake's 12-yard touchdown pass to Tony McGee.

That was it for the Bengals, who failed to get a first down on their next six possessions and lost Blake on the seventh when he was hit by Seau on a passing play. He completed 7 of 16 passes for 68 yards.

Smith took over for Blake and was 10-of-17 for 100 yards with one interception and two sacks.

"What can I say? We just looked horrible," said Corey Dillon, who fumbled twice and was held to 37 yards by the NFL's top-ranked run defense of 1998. "It just wasn't happening. I take responsibility. The turnovers just hurt us."

Jim Harbaugh had an erratic debut, but it was an improvement over last season, when the Chargers offense went nowhere behind Ryan Leaf. Harbaugh was 15-of-26 for 164 yards and two touchdowns.

The Chargers' offense was out of sync initially -- Freddie Jones dropped Harbaugh's first pass and the quarterback nearly was intercepted on his next throw.

San Diego had to settle for the first of John Carney's four field goals after a first-and-goal from the 3-yard line following Dillon's fumble.

But the Bengals gave the Chargers plenty of chances to work off the rust, fumbling three times in the first half.

"You've got to give all the credit to the defense," Harbaugh said. "They shut them down after that first drive. They got no more points and, really, first downs were tough for them to come by."

Harbaugh put the Chargers in control by threading a pass to Jeff Graham in the end zone between safety Greg Myers and cornerback Rodney Heath for a 20-7 lead with 2:08 left in the half.

 


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