Sunday, October 15
Gannon smokes Chiefs in K.C. masterpiece




KANSAS CITY, Mo. -- Everyone loves the underdog. In 31 NFL cities, fans sit in stands grumbling about the starting quarterback, thinking "Give the backup a chance. He'll do better." Kansas City is no exception.

Elvis Grbac and Rich Gannon were debated for two years at Arrowhead Stadium. Grbac, signed off the San Francisco roster in 1997, was brought in as the franchise quarterback at the tender age of 27. Then coach Marty Schottenheimer dubbed him the quarterback of the future, but he failed to completely grasp the present. Schottenheimer eventually called on Gannon.

Rich Gannon
Rich Gannon made plays all day against the Chiefs like this 8-yard scramble.
A grumbling crowd of 79,025 left Arrowhead on Sunday realizing their one-time backup is now the difference in a series once dominated by the Chiefs. It was Gannon who rallied the Raiders from a 17-point deficit last January to beat the Chiefs in overtime. It was Gannon who led the Raiders to a 20-17 come-from-behind victory Sunday that put the AFC West under their control.

"Rich Gannon is a great quarterback," said former Chief and current Raider Andre Rison. "He doesn't get enough credit for being the athlete that he is. He creates opportunities to make plays. I knew that when we were 13-3 in Kansas City in 1997 and they pulled him from the starting ranks."

How Chiefs fans remember. Gannon took over as the Chiefs' starter and posted five consecutive victories to end the regular season. Schottenheimer opted to use Grbac in the playoffs, and though his numbers were good (24 of 27 completions), the Chiefs were upset at home by Denver, 14-10.

That's the difference. Grbac looks pretty in the pocket. He's tall at 6-foot-5 and 240 pounds. His feet move quickly on play-action passes, and he throws a nice spiral. Gannon isn't conventional. He lacks arm strength, but he makes up for it with tenacity and leadership.

Two years after his departure, Gannon has transformed the Raiders from a bunch of underachieving superstars who found ways to lose into the best team in the AFC West. With Grbac, the Chiefs can't break out of the rut of being a franchise trapped between 7-9 and 9-7.

"We've been perceived as a team that will find a way to fold at the end," Raiders coach Jon Gruden said. "Those days are done. I think we proved that last year when we have 13 games decided by a touchdown or less. We've come from behind in five games this season."

Chiefs fans paid the ultimate respect to Gannon by cheering him during pregame introductions. That's unusual because Chiefs fans hate the Raiders as much as the players. In the back of their minds, they wonder if the Chiefs would have lost to the Broncos had Gannon started that '97 playoff game.

"I love it here," Gannon said. "I always have. I wanted to stay. I've always had very fond memories of this place. But I was getting a lot of stuff along the sidelines."

He probably deserved it because he ripped the heart out of the Chiefs and their homefield advantage. Statistically, he was 28-for-33 for 244 yards and two touchdowns, but for leadership, he pitched the perfect game.

"This is the best game that he has played since I have been with him," Gruden said. "His improvisation, his ability to see blitzes was something. He made three great audibles."

He made more unbelievable scrambles. After falling behind 17-7 at the half, Gannon executed three scoring drives totalling 31 plays in which only two was longer than 12 yards.

If that wasn't enough, he did it with a slight concussion. During the third quarter, he was hit in the head and needed a play to regroup himself.

"My mindset going against Rich is it's going to be a dogfight to the last second," Grbac said. "We're pretty much similar kinds of guys. He runs around and makes plays. I'm the kind of guy who will sit in the pocket forever and try to throw it down the field. He knows how to bring his team back and I know I can."

This is the best game that (Gannon) has played since I have been with him. His improvisation, his ability to see blitzes was something.
Jon Gruden, Raiders head coach

Grbac is the pocket passer, while Gannon pulled magic from his pocket. Take, for example, his game-tying touchdown drive. The Raiders had a third-and-17 at the Oakland 39, trailing 17-10. Gannon scrambled an eternity waiting for someone to get open.

Along the right sideline, he saw fullback Jon Ritchie. With a sidearm toss, Gannon hit Ritchie, who angled himself between a defender and the sidelines to make the first down.

"That was shock when he threw it sidearm," Ritchie said. "Before he threw it, he wasn't even looking at me. He's always pulling plays like that out of his magical hat. He's scrambling, gaining unconventional yards. It's fun for us."

When pass plays break down, Gannon will run. He had eight rushes for 38 yards. His best play of the game was a fourth-and-1 on that same drive from the Chiefs' 35-yard line.

The play call was a quick 17-yard pass to Tim Brown, but Gannon was pressured so he scrambled. He bought enough time to see that Ritchie was an option for a short completion, but Gannon wanted to go long. Brown kept running and was down at the Chiefs' 2.

Gannon found him for the completion, and two plays later, scrambled around long enough to hit Tyrone Wheatley for a 2-yard touchdown pass to tie the score at 17.

"I wasn't supposed to be 30 yards downfield, but that's the way it worked out," Brown said. "I knew what kind of guy he was when we signed him. I compared him to Jeff Hostetler. I thought, 'Okay, I have a scrambling guy who will push the pocket up a little more. Maybe I'll get some balls late as opposed to on time.' "

Gannon outdid himself driving the team from the Raiders' 14 to the Chiefs' 25 with a little over two minutes remaining in the game. He called an audible or two, and even stunned Rison, the former Chief.

"He audibled to a slant to get us in field-goal range, and I kept saying, `Are you serious about this one," said Rison, who caught a 7-yarder to the Chiefs 25 with 30 seconds left. "A lot of quarterbacks couldn't do what he did on that drive. A couple of times, he looked at me and gave me old Chiefs signals. He's a football player."

A football player who is a winner. The Chiefs face an interesting decision at the end of the season. They have a $20 million cap number on Grbac next year and they will likely renegotiate hi s contract and keep him as their starter. After all, he's 30 and has a career record of 28-19.

But it's Gannon who is on the path with the Raiders to advance into the playoffs and maybe beyond. Grbac needs to learn Gannon's instincts.

"It's all instinctive," Gannon said. "I would be lying to you if I say that I drop back and just look around. I'm 35."

Like fine wine, Gannon's matured into a classic.

John Clayton is a senior NFL writer for ESPN.com.







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