Neither of which anyone on the Right Coast has a clue about —and couldn't tell a Janikowski from a Richter Scale.
The quake only added more freakishness to the latest starting game in NFL history.
The 3.1 earthquake had an epicenter about 17 miles from O.co Coliseum in Oakland, according to the United State Geological Survey. The game didn't stop because of the earthquake, but it was felt at the stadium, as you can see in this tweet from the San Francisco Chronicle's Ann Killion.
We had an earthquake about 10 minutes ago. After spending time in Seattle and Denver, I thot it was just fans making the pressbox shake.
— Ann Killion (@annkillion) October 7, 2013
Oakland had a 14-0 lead when the earthquake hit and stretched that to 17-0 before halftime.
Terrelle Pryor seems to be empowered by earthquakes — or late kickoff times — because he's had his best first half of the year. Through the first two quarters, Pryor was 13 of 18 for 141 yards and two touchdowns.
Pryor then set up a late field goal by turning a potential sack into a third-and-long conversion that gave the Raiders a 27-17 victory.
Pryor then set up a late field goal by turning a potential sack into a third-and-long conversion that gave the Raiders a 27-17 victory.
San Diego didn't seem to be enjoying the late kickoff and the earthquakes as much as the Raiders. For the first time this season, the Chargers failed to score a point in the first half.
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