Nov 8, 4:19 PM EST

Turner gets last laugh on Hall, Falcons win 31-17


AP Photo
AP Photo/John Amis
Special Section
Complete NFL Coverage
Multimedia
2009 NFL Season Tracker
Michael Vick Timeline
NFL Draft 2009
Top AP Sports Photos for the Week
Documents
Michael Vick financial disclosure statement (PDF)
Vince Young police report (PDF)
Matt Jones Arrest Report (PDF)
Pacman Jones Extortion Document (PDF)
Sean Taylor Autopsy Report (PDF)
Letters from Michael Vick and his supporters to judge (PDF)
State charges against Vick (PDF)
Michael Vick plea agreement (PDF)
Summary of facts in Michael Vick case (PDF)
Court document outlining alleged dogfighting operation at Vick's property
NFL News
Packers Havner fined $5K for late hit vs. Cowboys

Giants LB Pierce out indefinitely with neck injury

NFL union pans reporting on teammates' concussions

Ravens' Edwards plans appeal of fine for roughness

Bush questionable for Tampa Bay

Buy AP Photo Reprints

Your Questions Answered
Ask AP: Shuttle complexity, credit union agency

ATLANTA (AP) -- Michael Turner is looking a lot more like he did a year ago. DeAngelo Hall might want to keep his mouth shut the next time he faces his former team.

Turner ran for a season-high 166 yards, breaking away from Hall on a 58-yard touchdown that finished off Washington early in the fourth quarter, and the Atlanta Falcons snapped a two-game losing streak by beating the Redskins 31-17 on Sunday.

Hall, who made two Pro Bowls playing for the Falcons from 2004-07, yapped away all week about how Atlanta treated him unfairly before a trade to Oakland. He didn't even make it through one season with the Raiders and landed in Washington.

Turner and the Falcons (5-3) got the last laugh. The burly running back broke off two long touchdown runs, also scoring from 30 yards out as the Falcons built a 24-3 halftime lead.

Washington (2-6) looked down and out, losing running back Clinton Portis to an apparent concussion, and Hall lost his cool after LaRon Landry delivered a late hit to Matt Ryan along the Falcons sideline. As flags flew, the outspoken cornerback jumped into the middle of things, surrounded by Atlanta players and coach Mike Smith.

Hall was yanked away before any punches were thrown, and the Redskins came to life after halftime. Jason Campbell directed two 13-play scoring drives to close the gap to 24-17.

But Turner wasn't done. Taking the handoff on what looked to be a routine play between the tackles, he found an opening, leaped over a diving Landry trying to take him down at the ankles, shook off Hall's attempted tackle with ease and rumbled the rest of the way for the clinching score.

The speedy Hall didn't even attempt to chase Turner down, realizing he was gone. So had any chance of getting revenge against the Falcons.

Turner finished second in the league a year ago with 1,699 yards rushing, trailing only Minnesota's Adrian Peterson, but defenses had hemmed him in much of this season. He eclipsed 100 yards only once through the first six games.

Looking to get back on track, Turner took home some DVDs showing the way he ran last year. He saw a back playing with more abandon and vowed to get back to that style.

That he has. Turner was coming off his best game of the season, a 20-carry, 151-yard effort against New Orleans, and he was even better against the Redskins, who had one of the league's top-rated defenses.

Campbell took quite a beating in the first half behind a makeshift line, playing without two key players lost to season-ending injuries. The Falcons matched a franchise record by sacking Campbell five times before halftime, knocking him out of the game for one play late in the second quarter.

Campbell went out again after taking another shot in the fourth but returned to finish the game. He was 15 of 22 for 196 yards, including a 3-yard touchdown pass to Todd Yoder that gave the Redskins a chance. But Campbell also threw a pass that was intercepted by Tye Hill and returned 62 yards for a touchdown, part of Atlanta's early barrage.

© 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. Learn more about our Privacy Policy.

[Get Copyright Permissions]Click here for copyright permissions!
Copyright 2008 Associated Press

Subscribe to the Times
Click here for daily delivery
of the St. Petersburg Times.

Email Newsletters

ADVERTISEMENT