Raiders, Jaguars discuss Jacksonville’s come-from-behind win

JACKSONVILLE, Fla. — The Raiders fell to 2-6 after a 27-20 loss to the Jaguars on Sunday at TIAA Bank Field. Here’s what was heard from both locker rooms afterward:

Q: We are about halfway through the season. Do you feel like you’re closer to putting a full game together now than at the beginning of the season?

Raiders coach Josh McDaniels: “Certainly, it doesn’t feel like that. Like I said, I think you earn the right to do that. We have to do it. It doesn’t matter what I stand up here and talk about or what somebody else talks about, it’s just about actions. The National Football League is unforgiving when you let up and don’t finish games. The other team plays as hard as they possibly can, too … and they earned the right to win, and we didn’t.”

Q: Second half, what was the difference? What happened with the offense relative to Davante Adams?

Raiders quarterback Derek Carr: We were calling certain things for him, and they doubled him on some plays, too, and so we thought we saw what they were doing the first half, saw what they were doing the second half. We felt comfortable in playing, and it was just a couple times where he would have had big plays. I had to run out of the pocket and try to throw it to him, and we didn’t hit him.”

Q: What made you think when you were down 17-0 that you were going to win because that doesn’t happen often?

Jaguars quarterback Trevor Lawrence: The whole energy this past week, we kind of knew we had to go get this one. You don’t try to put more pressure on yourselves than you need to, but everybody knows where we’re at in our season. We felt that and just had a lot of confidence in our prep. We didn’t score the first three possessions, but it wasn’t anything they did that stopped us. We just kind of shot ourselves in the foot. We knew offensively once we could eliminate some of those errors early and keep a drive going, we were going to be fine.”

Q: How impressed were you in how your defense shut down Raiders wide receiver Davante Adams in the second half — one catch for zero yards — after he caught nine passes for 146 yards in the first half?

Jaguars coach Doug Pederson: “We just regrouped at halftime. I don’t think there were a ton of changes. The guys were in position in the second half … they got a great pass rush. We had our chances at some interceptions … just a really good defensive performance in the second half.”

Contact Vincent Bonsignore at [email protected]. Follow @VinnyBonsignore on Twitter.


Georgia’s win, cover against Tennessee attracts huge betting action

They say college football “just means more” in the South, and Saturday was a good example of why.

Two decisions from the Southeastern Conference also meant a lot to bettors and Las Vegas sportsbooks, with Georgia covering as a favorite against Tennessee and Louisiana State earning the outright upset over Alabama.

“We lost a little on the Tennessee-Georgia game, but not much. A lot of money on both sides,” South Point sportsbook director Chris Andrews said via text message. “Bama-LSU was good. But another game with good two-way action. Overall a pretty good day so far.”

The Tennessee-Georgia showdown was one of the most popular games of the season for bettors, and Red Rock Resort sportsbook director Chuck Esposito said the public was on the Volunteers, who were 10-point underdogs at most books at kickoff despite being ranked No. 1 in the first set of College Football Playoff rankings.

At Caesars Sportsbook, the public also backed Tennessee with 84 percent of the spread bets and 77 percent of the handle going the Volunteers’ way.

Joey Feazel, lead college football trader at Caesars Sportsbook, said the handle was one of the biggest-bet games of the year and rivaled some NFL games.

Bulldogs quarterback Stetson Bennett IV accounted for three touchdowns in the 27-13 win, and Georgia’s defense made a statement holding the high-powered Volunteers 36 points under their season average.

Tennessee quarterback Hendon Hooker saw his Heisman Trophy hopes take a hit after he recently was made the favorite by several sportsbooks for the award.

Also, Alabama saw its hopes of reaching the College Football Playoff dashed with a 32-31 overtime loss at LSU. The Crimson Tide were 13-point chalk at most shops but never were in position to cover.

“It was a good day for sure,” Westgate SuperBook sportsbook director John Murray said via text message. “We did great on the Georgia game, won on the Bama game.”

LSU, which converted a two-point conversion in overtime to score the upset, had 76 percent of the spread tickets and 75 percent of the spread handle at Caesars.

That outcome also benefited over bettors, who appeared doomed after the third quarter with the total closing anywhere from 56 to 56½. The Tigers led 14-9 entering the fourth quarter, and the teams combined for 40 points in the fourth quarter and overtime.

Sportsbooks also were on the right side of Notre Dame’s 35-14 thumping of No. 4 Clemson. The Tigers were favored by 3½ to 4 points.

“The worst game was probably (Texas Christian) covering late,” Esposito said via text message. “Overall a really good day with those college games. Plus, Ohio State didn’t cover, North Carolina didn’t cover and Illinois lost. Can’t wait to see the latest college football poll.”

Take one for the team

Kentucky punter Colin Goodfellow had to be taken off the field on a cart at the end of the Wildcats’ 21-17 victory over Missouri.

But his act of heroism will not go unnoticed by Big Blue fans or bettors.

Goodfellow lined up to punt with 2:25 remaining in the fourth quarter when the snap sailed over his head. The fifth-year senior tracked down the loose ball at his own 5-yard line and was able to get off a kick that went out of bounds and would have given Missouri the ball in Wildcats’ territory at the 41.

However, Missouri’s Will Norris blasted Goodfellow as he booted the ball down field and was penalized for roughing the kicker. Goodfellow was injured on the play and was in “severe pain” after the game, according to Kentucky coach Mark Stoops.

Kentucky, which closed as a 1-point underdog, retained possession thanks to the penalty and was able to run all but 38 seconds off the clock before punting. The Tigers took over at their own 13-yard line but were unable to get a drive going and the clock ran out.

With Missouri’s chance for a late score wiped out by the roughing the kicker flag, the game also stayed under the total of 40.

Big winner

A bettor at Caesars Sportsbook in Nevada placed $560,000 in wagers on college football and cleaned up, going 4-0-1.

The four $110,000 bets that cashed were Navy +19½, Baylor +3½, Baylor-Oklahoma over 61 and Duke-Boston College over 47.

A $120,000 wager on New Mexico +17 (-120) pushed, as the Lobos lost 27-10 at Utah State.

Contact David Schoen at [email protected] or 702-387-5203. Follow @DavidSchoenLVRJ on Twitter.