McCown, Rackers lead Cards past 49ers in Mexico
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| Team Stat Comparison |
| |  |  |
| 1st Downs | 8 | 24 |
3rd down efficiency | 4-12 | 8-19 |
4th down efficiency | 0-1 | 0-0 |
| Total Yards | 168 | 463 |
| Passing | 117 | 366 |
Comp-Att | 17-31 | 32-46 |
Yards per pass | 3.8 | 8.0 |
| Rushing | 51 | 97 |
Rushing Attempts | 14 | 34 |
Yards per rush | 3.6 | 2.9 |
| Penalties | 8-52 | 4-37 |
| Turnovers | 4 | 3 |
Fumbles lost | 3 | 3 |
Interceptions thrown | 1 | 0 |
| Possession | 22:12 | 37:48 |
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| San Francisco Passing | | | C/ATT | YDS | TD | INT | | Rattay | 11/21 | 126 | 0 | 1 | | Smith | 6/10 | 34 | 0 | 0 |
| | Arizona Passing | | | C/ATT | YDS | TD | INT | | McCown | 32/46 | 385 | 2 | 0 |
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| San Francisco Rushing | | | CAR | YDS | TD | LG | | Barlow | 10 | 45 | 0 | 11 | | Gore | 2 | 4 | 0 | 4 |
| |
| San Francisco Receiving | | | REC | YDS | TD | LG | | Lloyd | 7 | 102 | 0 | 28 | | Morton | 3 | 46 | 0 | 19 |
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| San Francisco Fumbles | | | FUM | LOST | REC | | Gore | 1 | 1 | 0 | | Lloyd | 1 | 1 | 0 |
| |
| Scoring Summary |
| FIRST QUARTER | SFO | ARI |
 | TD | 0:09 | Derek Smith Recovered Fumble In End Zone (Joe Nedney Kick) | 7 | 0 |
 | TD | 7:03 | Derrick Johnson 78 Yd Fumble Return (Joe Nedney Kick) | 14 | 0 |
| SECOND QUARTER | SFO | ARI |
 | FG | 6:14 | Neil Rackers 40 Yd Drive: 12 plays, 66 yds, 4:56 | 14 | 3 |
 | FG | 12:16 | Neil Rackers 45 Yd Drive: 8 plays, 50 yds, 3:55 | 14 | 6 |
 | TD | 14:55 | Larry Fitzgerald 17 Yd Pass From Josh Mccown (Two-Point Pass Conversion Failed) Drive: 7 plays, 69 yds, 1:03 | 14 | 12 |
| THIRD QUARTER | SFO | ARI |
 | FG | 6:03 | Neil Rackers 48 Yd Drive: 6 plays, 47 yds, 3:13 | 14 | 15 |
 | FG | 12:19 | Neil Rackers 23 Yd Drive: 8 plays, 44 yds, 4:01 | 14 | 18 |
| FOURTH QUARTER | SFO | ARI |
 | FG | 1:46 | Neil Rackers 43 Yd Drive: 7 plays, 26 yds, 2:54 | 14 | 21 |
 | TD | 6:31 | Anquan Boldin 27 Yd Pass From Josh Mccown (Neil Rackers Kick) Drive: 5 plays, 35 yds, 2:47 | 14 | 28 |
 | FG | 9:00 | Neil Rackers 24 Yd Drive: 4 plays, 7 yds, 1:08 | 14 | 31 |
MEXICO CITY (AP) -- Robert Griffith sprinted out of the giant
inflatable helmet, charging through the smoke and the corridor of
cheerleaders. The Cardinals safety was screaming -- and wildly
waving a Mexican flag.
Needless to say, the biggest regular-season crowd in NFL history
went loco.
Judging from the vibrant colors in the stands and the beautiful
halftime show, the NFL's first regular-season game outside the
United States was a phenomenal fiesta for the 103,467 fans -- even
if the
Arizona Cardinals' 31-14 victory over the San Francisco
49ers wasn't exactly the most savory version of "futbol
americano."
Josh McCown passed for a career-high 385 yards and two
touchdowns against the Niners' pathetic pass defense, and Neil
Rackers kicked a career-best six field goals through the 7,700-foot
air while Arizona's defense shut out San Francisco's offense.
But the sloppy play and one-sided result in a game between two
of the NFL's worst teams seemed secondary to the goodwill and
international exposure of a foreign venture the league hopes to
turn into an annual affair.
"The experience in Mexico City has been wonderful, and this
capped it off," said Rackers, who fell one short of the NFL record
for field goals in a game. "It was wonderful. They're great fans,
really into the game, more knowledgeable than I thought they would
be. It was probably the best crowd I've been around."
The cavernous arena was packed to the rafters with a crowd that
exceeded the league's most optimistic projections two days ago,
proving the sport's avid following in Mexico is second to none
outside the United States.
The Cardinals (1-3) agreed to give up a home game to make
history, and the NFC West rivals played in front of 68,398 more
fans than they drew for last season's meeting at Sun Devil Stadium.
The crowd topped the previous NFL record for a regular-season game,
when 102,368 fans saw the Los Angeles Rams play the 49ers at the
L.A. Coliseum on Nov. 10, 1957.
Just 65,000 seats had been sold earlier in the weekend.
"I think people wanted to be a part of the action, and as long
as they kept coming, the stadium had a seat for them," Arizona
coach Dennis Green said.
Derek Smith and rookie
Derrick Johnson scored on fumble
recoveries for San Francisco (1-3) in the first quarter, with Smith
scoring on the game's first play and Johnson returning his 78
yards. But Arizona scored the rest of the night's points, with
Larry Fitzgerald and
Anquan Boldin making tough catches for scores
as the Cardinals avenged two overtime losses to the NFL's worst
team last year.
"You kind of get a feel for the altitude," said McCown, who
was 32-of-46. "Some of the balls in the first quarter, you want
them to come down, and just because of the air, they just sailed.
It's kind of tough to judge."
Rackers loved the mountain air in a city 2,000 feet higher than
Denver, connecting from 40, 45, 48, 23, 43 and 24 yards -- but the
Cards decided not to kick one last, late field goal to tie the
league record held by four players.
"I'd rather be a gentleman and not kick a field goal against a
team we've got to play again this season," Rackers said.
Mexico's biggest city was a natural choice for this trailblazing
game. The NFL is widely popular south of the border, with nearly
one in five Mexicans claiming an interest in the league. The NFL
opened an office in Mexico in 1998, with an eight-person staff
overseeing its growing profile.
The league's popularity was evident to visitors arriving at
Azteca, where the number of fans wearing replica jerseys -- more
Dallas Cowboys than Niners or Cardinals -- nearly outnumbered the
hundreds of police and security officials ringing the stadium.
Only a few empty seats were visible in the upper deck of the
famed soccer venue. Mexican fans showed they know football,
cheering for surging ball-carriers and whistling at San Francisco's
poor offensive execution.
And when the game got a bit dull early in the second quarter,
they did "La Ola" -- the wave. When McCown made a spinning move to
dodge a tackler in the fourth quarter, the fans shouted "Ole!"
"Fans around the world can take notice of the way these people
are, their passion about the game," 49ers coach Mike Nolan said.
"It was exciting to play the game for both teams today, and they
certainly latched on to the team that was ahead at the end, because
early on, we had them on our side."
After
Joe Nedney's opening kickoff sailed far out of the end
zone,
Bryant Young broke through the Arizona line and forced
McCown's fumble.
Brandon Moore picked it up and rambled to the end
zone, where he fumbled, as well -- but Smith emerged from an
end-zone scrum with the ball held aloft.
The Cardinals drove 70 yards to the San Francisco 13 later in
the quarter, but
Marcel Shipp fumbled. Johnson, a rookie in the
starting lineup after
Mike Rumph's season-ending foot injury
Wednesday, picked it up on the bounce and ran for the score.
The Cardinals didn't get into the end zone until a 69-yard drive
in just 63 seconds, finishing with Fitzgerald's acrobatic 17-yard
catch in the corner of the end zone 6 seconds before halftime.
Game notes
San Francisco QB Tim Rattay was pulled in the fourth
quarter, and No. 1 pick Alex Smith went 6-for-10 -- his first NFL
completions -- for 34 yards. "Obviously, I wasn't happy about it,"
Rattay said. "You don't ever want to come out of a game, and I
thought we still had a chance to win it." ... Two-time MVP Kurt
Warner was on the cover of the game programs, but Arizona's veteran
quarterback missed the game with a groin injury.