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Raiders defeat the Colts, 33-25, but Derek Carr breaks a leg

Raiders quarterback Derek Carr sustains a broken leg as he's sacked by Colts outside linebacker Trent Cole (58) during the fourth quarter Saturday.
(Marcio Jose Sanchez / Associated Press)
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The Oakland Raiders suffered their most significant loss of the season.

Quarterback Derek Carr broke a bone in his right leg in the fourth quarter of the Raiders’ 33-25 victory over the Indianapolis Colts on Saturday, immediately throwing a dark cloud over a resurgent season in Oakland.

“It’s obviously a blow,” Coach Jack Del Rio said. “That’s what teams do. Teams have to find a way to pick up and move on, rally around the next guy the best we can. That’s what we do.”

Carr got hurt with Oakland leading 33-14 early in the fourth quarter when he was sacked by Trent Cole. Carr stayed on the ground for several minutes in pain as trainers came out to treat him.

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With the crowd chanting “M-V-P! M-V-P!” Carr limped off the field without putting any pressure on his right leg. He was then taken away on a cart for X-rays which showed the break. Carr will have surgery on Sunday.

“As soon as I got out there, he said, `I think it’s broken,“’ Del Rio said. “Most athletes have a pretty good idea something has gone on with their body.”

The injury changed the mood at the Coliseum from celebratory to depressed as thoughts turned from the Raiders (12-3) possibly clinching the division with one more win or a Kansas City loss to wondering if an opportunity for a possible Super Bowl run was now lost.

“I’m sad,” left tackle Donald Penn said. “It’s very sad. I’m very disappointed in myself because it was my guy who got him.”

Carr had led a revival in Oakland since arriving as a second-round pick in 2014. After losing his first 10 games as a rookie, Carr has been a big part of the turnaround that has the Raiders in the playoffs for the first time since 2002.

He threw three TD passes on Sunday to give him 28 on the season and his seven fourth-quarter comebacks are the biggest reason behind Oakland’s success.

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Now the team must prepare for a playoff run with Matt McGloin at quarterback. McGloin has not started a game since the end of the 2013 season with Carr starting all 47 games since he arrived.

“It’s more involved when it’s your quarterback,” Del Rio said. “But just like you do with any position, you carry on as a football team and put the next guy in.”

Carr’s injury made it a down day all the way around. Andrew Luck threw two interceptions, Frank Gore lost a fumble and Indianapolis (7-8) allowed TDs on five straight drives to be eliminated from the playoffs for the second straight year.

Luck rallied the Colts from 26 points down to just eight with 2:33 left, but McGloin completed a 19-yard pass to Amari Cooper on third-and-8 on the next drive and the Raiders ran out the clock.

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