RolandDeschain":zihw5alf said:
Munn, the loss of offensive possession by Percy's fumble is kind of washed out by the extra possession the Chargers had where they only had time to kneel before the half. Go look at the drive chart and count how many times each offense actually received the ball to start a fresh set of downs with.
If you ignore that possession it makes sense to ignore the final possession where we got the ball with 13 seconds to go when 9 points down.
In which case there were 9 SD possessions and 8 Seattle possessions.
SD - FG, TD, FG, TD (Harvin fumble), Punt, TD, Punt, Punt, FG
SEA - Punt, TD, Punt, TD, Punt, TD, Punt, Turnover on Downs
If SD don't get the possession we gifted them with the fumble, we punt on that final drive and SD have to drive up the field for a FG to win.
Even if we score our second TD in a minute again (of course, we would have attempted to eat clock instead of score on a 1 minute drill), at the very least we kick off to them and they have to drive the length of the field instead of start on our 32.
If Irvin doesn't push Rivers out of bounds that TD becomes a FG.
We spotted them 11 points with a special teams gaffe and a defensive gaffe. When starting drives in their own half the Chargers scored 20 points (and one of those drives started at their own 45 yard line after Ryan's dreadful punt). When starting drives in their own half the Seahawks scored 21 points.
It's easy for me to say that the Chargers offense played better than ours because they scored points AND controlled the clock. But I can't pin any blame on the offense for the way they played, because the defense and special teams mishaps were what put them in that position.