Sunday, Sep. 17 4:00pm ET
Grbac, Morris rip winless Chargers
 
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KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) -- The last Kansas City quarterback to throw five touchdown passes in one game went to the Hall of Fame.

Elvis Grbac
Kansas City quarterback Elvis Grbac threw a team-record five TD passes, three of them to Sylvester Morris, in Sunday's rout of San Diego.

Elvis Grbac was happy just to get out of the doghouse.

"If anybody in Kansas City deserves to be the man around here it's Elvis Grbac," center Tim Grunhard said after Grbac's five TD passes led the Chiefs to a 42-10 victory over winless San Diego.

"He's taken more than anybody has ever taken in the history of this organization. Five touchdowns? Are you kidding me? I'm proud to snap the ball to him."

After having a first-quarter interception returned for a touchdown and falling behind 10-0, the oft-maligned Grbac was showered with boos for the second straight home game.

Then he turned all the boos to cheers by coolly throwing five TD passes, including three to rookie Sylvester Morris. It was the first time a Chiefs quarterback threw five TD passes since Len Dawson in 1967.

The unflappable Grbac merely praised his offensive line.

"It was execution. That's what it was," he said. "When a quarterback throws for five touchdowns, you've got a lot of fine offensive line play. They gave me the opportunity."

The 6-foot-3 Morris, taken in the first round out of Jackson State, had six catches for 112 yards.

"It was a great day," he said. "We just wanted to take advantage of what San Diego gave us. We got down 10-0 earlier, but Elvis got us in the huddle and he composed us."

TOM DONAHOE'S BREAKDOWN
After leading 10-0 in the first quarter, the Chargers would not score again -- and the Chiefs would score 42 straight points.

This was a huge game for quarterback Elvis Grbac. He threw six touchdown passes -- five to his team and one to the Chargers. Grbac's performance is what Kansas City needed. The Chiefs had been in an offensive funk before this week.

The Chiefs were also able to get their running game going a bit, rushing for 117 yards -- which is a marked improvement from what they did the last two weeks.

Last year the Chiefs had one of the most dangerous running games in the league, averaging over 130 yards per game. But their production was way off this year. To a degree, they got back on track today.

For the Chargers, it was not a good offensive performance. They switched quarterbacks in an effort to spark their offense, but Moses Moreno was under a heavy siege all day and was sacked five times.

The Chargers have also not been able to run the football effectively this year. Moreno was their leading rusher this week with 20 yards.

Riddling a Chargers secondary weakened by injuries to cornerback DeRon Jenkins and safety Jason Perry, Grbac was 20-of-33 for 235 yards.

Moses Moreno, making his first start for San Diego, was 11-of-22 for 107 yards before leaving the game late in the third quarter with a shoulder injury.

"I had the ball in my right hand," Moreno said. "I went down face first. The guys came out at me and I heard a pop. Then the pain started."

The Chiefs (1-2) had six sacks, five on Moreno and one on Ryan Leaf, who replaced Moreno late in the third period and fared no better than on his last visit to Arrowhead Stadium.

Leaf, who was 1-for-15 for 4 yards as a rookie in Kansas City in 1998, completed his first two passes but his third went straight to linebacker Lew Bush. The former Chargers player returned it 33 yards to the Kansas City 43. A moment later, Morris made a leaping catch in the corner of the end zone to put the Chiefs on top 35-10.

"We're playing without two guys who were projected as our starters," San Diego coach Mike Riley said. "When the defense is on the field so much, all the parts that have to help the corners get tired."

After spotting the Chargers 10 points in a mistake-filled first period, the Chiefs quickly took complete control. Counting an 0-4 preseason, Kansas City had lost eight in a row, going without a win since last Dec. 18.

The game was less than five minutes old when Mike Dumas stepped in front of Kevin Lockett to intercept Grbac's pass and return it 56 yards for the score, triggering a shower of boos.

Then John Carney's 54-yard field goal gave San Diego a 10-0 lead with 1:19 left in the first period.

Morris scored his first NFL touchdown on a 36-yard pass five minutes into the second quarter. His 23-yard reception and a pass interference penalty on Scott Turner led to Tony Richardson's 1-yard scoring catch at the end of the half.

Morris beat Darryl Lewis in the end zone on a 9-yard pass midway through the third period, and Grbac found a wide-open Troy Drayton for a 2-yard scoring pass that made it 28-10 in the third.

Rookie Frank Moreau scored on a 1-yard run with 1:57 left for the final score in the game that left the Chargers 0-3 for the first time since 1992.

"Elvis is good," San Diego safety Rodney Harrison said. "But I didn't see our secondary getting burned like that today. That rookie is good. But I'm surprised they were able to move it like that."

Game notes
The first quarter lasted 48 minutes, including a combined six penalties and two timeouts. ... Grbac completed his first pass of the second quarter, the 1,500th attempt of his career. ... Kansas City RB Tony Richardson broke an 18-yard run for his longest run of the season, and his second-quarter touchdown reception was his second of the season and sixth of his career.
 


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