KANSAS CITY, MO. – Philip Rivers called it the kind of game that could save the Chargers' season. Seyi Ajirotutu called its defining play the greatest catch of his career.
The once-embattled quarterback stoically marched San Diego downfield against Kansas City on Sunday, and then found his unheralded wide receiver with a 26-yard scoring strike with 24 seconds remaining that gave San Diego a 41-38 victory and ended its three-game losing streak.
"It's one of those you'll never forget, that's for sure," said Rivers, who threw for 392 yards and three touchdowns against a Kansas City defense that had been among the NFL's best.
"It's kind of what our season's been about," Rivers said. "Can you drive and score at the end?"
The touchdown pass to Ajirotutu answered one that Alex Smith had thrown to Dwayne Bowe with 1:22 left in the game -- one that had seemingly given the Chiefs (9-2) the victory.
It turned out there'd be more lead change in a game that had eight of them.
"Philip said, 'Fly on the boundary,"' Ajirotutu said, "so I knew that's a little code word that he usually says that the ball's coming to you."
Smith wound up throwing for 292 yards and three touchdowns for the Chiefs, who lost their second straight after a 9-0 start. They also lost top pass rushers Tamba Hali and Justin Houston to injuries, and now face the prospect of playing the Broncos next week without them.