ROUNDUP; Catching All the Breaks, the Saints Improve to 12-0

The New Orleans Saints needed the Washington Redskins’ kicker to miss a 23-yard field-goal attempt just to stay alive, and a freeze-frame replay reversal to get the ball in overtime.

But the Saints are living a charmed life these days, and the Redskins are as unlucky as can be. New Orleans trailed by 10 in the fourth quarter Sunday on the road and played more than four quarters without holding a lead — until Garrett Hartley kicked an 18-yard field goal 6 minutes 29 seconds into overtime for a 33-30 win.

”I believe in karma,” said Drew Brees, who led a no-timeout, 80-yard drive in just 33 seconds to tie the game late in regulation. ”And what goes around comes around. We’ve been on the other side of this deal probably too many times, and maybe it’s our time, that we start catching some of the breaks.”

The Saints are now 12-0 with the National Football Conference South title in hand.

New Orleans won a sub-40-degree game for the first time since 1995. Washington is 3-9.

Raiders Shock Steelers

Louis Murphy caught an 11-yard touchdown pass from Bruce Gradkowski with nine seconds remaining, his second score in the final five and a half minutes, and the visiting Raiders scored three late touchdowns to stun the Steelers, 27-24, and deal Pittsburgh its fourth consecutive loss.

The Steelers (6-6) went ahead by 24-20 on Ben Roethlisberger’s 11-yard touchdown pass to Hines Ward with 1:56 remaining, only to have Oakland (4-8) rally.

Cedric Benson returned from a two-game layoff because of an injured hip and tied a team record with his fifth 100-yard rushing game of the season, setting up the Bengals’ 23-13 victory over the visiting Lions. Cincinnati (9-3) assured itself of a winning record for only the second time in 19 years. Detroit is 2-10.

Patriots Fall Again on Road

Chad Henne threw for a career-high 335 yards and directed a 51-yard drive for the winning field goal with 1:02 left, and the host Dolphins rallied past the Patriots, 22-21. Miami (6-6) kept its playoff prospects alive, and the American Football Conference East leader, New England (7-5), remained winless in five games in opponents’ stadiums this season.

Vick Returns to Atlanta

Making quite a return to the Georgia Dome for the first time since he went to prison for a dogfighting conviction, Michael Vick accounted for two touchdowns — one running, one passing — and basked in the cheers of his former home as THE EAGLES DOMINATED THE SHORT-HANDED FALCONS, 34-7.

Philadelphia (8-4) pulled two games ahead of reeling Atlanta (6-6) in the N.F.C. wild-card standings.

A.F.C. West Still in Play

Kyle Orton threw two touchdown passes and Knowshon Moreno ran for two scores as the Broncos handled the host Chiefs, 44-13. Denver (8-4) had 245 yards rushing, including 113 by Correll Buckhalter, as it pulled away from Kansas City (3-9) to stay in reach of San Diego in the A.F.C. West.

Antonio Gates set a career high with 167 receiving yards as the Chargers beat the host Browns, 30-23. San Diego (9-3) led only by 13-7 at halftime but won its seventh straight and 15th in a row in December. Cleveland (1-11) has lost seven in a row.

Small Crowd, Big Win

David Garrard threw two touchdown passes, Josh Scobee kicked three field goals and the Jaguars beat the injury-depleted Texans, 23-18, to stay in the A.F.C. wild-card hunt. Jacksonville (7-5) won for the fifth straight time at home, in front of an announced crowd of 42,079, the smallest in franchise history. Houston (5-7) has lost four in a row.

Warner Outplays Favre

Kurt Warner, back after missing a game with a concussion, threw for 285 yards and 3 touchdowns and the Cardinals’ defense stifled the visiting Vikings in a 30-17 victory. Brett Favre set an N.F.L. record for consecutive appearances, playing in game No. 283. But Favre, with three interceptions in his first 11 games, was picked off twice. Arizona (8-4) held Adrian Peterson to a season-low 19 yards on 13 carries. Minnesota is 10-2.

Jonathan Stewart rushed for 120 yards and the game’s only touchdown, and the Panthers (5-7) intercepted rookie Josh Freeman five times in Carolina’s 16-6 victory over the visiting Buccaneers. Tampa Bay (1-11) had a stretch of four trips inside the 20 with no points.

Jay Cutler threw for a meager 143 yards and a touchdown without an interception, and the Bears beat the visiting Rams, 17-9, after dropping four games in a row and six of seven. Chicago (5-7) gave up 112 yards rushing to Steven Jackson but kept St. Louis (1-11) out of the end zone for the fourth time this season.

Olindo Mare kicked a 30-yard field goal as time expired to send the host Seahawks to a 20-17 victory over the 49ers. The Seahawks (5-7) kept alive hopes for a winning season but severely damaged the postseason hopes of the 49ers (5-7).

Injury Report

Minnesota linebacker E. J. Henderson was taken off the field on a motorized cart after his left leg twisted violently when he attempted a tackle late in the game. The exact nature of his injury was not immediately known. … The Detroit rookie quarterback Matthew Stafford hurt his nonthrowing shoulder with 3:37 to play and did not return.

PHOTOS: Brian Orakpo of the Redskins tackling Saints running back Pierre Thomas. New Orleans trailed by 10 in the fourth but won in overtime. (PHOTOGRAPH BY LUKE SHARRETT/THE NEW YORK TIMES); Chad Henne threw for a career-high 335 yards as the Dolphins rallied to beat the Patriots. (PHOTOGRAPH BY DOUG BENC/GETTY IMAGES)

N.F.L. ROUNDUP; Pushing Their Luck, Saints and Colts Stay Unbeaten

Drew Brees threw for 296 yards and 3 touchdowns, Jonathan Vilma came up with two big defensive plays, and the Saints stayed unbeaten by pulling out another tight win, 26-23 over the Falcons in Atlanta.

A week ago, New Orleans (13-0) appeared on the brink of its first loss until Washington missed a chip-shot field-goal attempt. The Saints rallied for a 33-30 overtime win.

This time, they struggled to hold off Atlanta (6-7), which was missing the injured stars Matt Ryan and Michael Turner. The result was in doubt until Vilma, who had stopped an earlier drive with an interception, made a crushing fourth-down hit on Jason Snelling, stopping him a yard short of a first down with a little more than a minute remaining.

The Saints’ last two games have been their closest in a season dominated by double-digit wins. A cause for concern?

”Why would we be concerned?” Vilma said. ”We’re 13-0.”

While lacking in style points, New Orleans set a franchise record for wins in a season, clinched a first-round bye in the postseason and moved a step closer to home-field advantage throughout the National Football Conference playoffs.

Peyton Manning threw three early touchdown passes, then three inexplicable interceptions, but led the Colts on a late drive to beat the visiting Broncos, 28-16. The Colts broke records for most consecutive regular-season wins (22) and most wins in a decade (114), and also wrapped up home-field advantage throughout the American Football Conference playoffs. Denver (8-5) also had a record day, as receiver Brandon Marshall broke the league’s single-game record with 21 receptions. But Manning answered a fourth-quarter score by Marshall by hooking up with Dallas Clark on a 1-yard scoring pass to cap his up-and-down day. Manning led Indianapolis to touchdowns on three of its first four drives, then lost his touch. After completing 10 of 16 throws in the first quarter, Manning connected on only 6 of his next 22, at one point missing 9 of 10 passes while throwing all three interceptions.

Chargers Win in Dallas

Philip Rivers bailed out San Diego with several third-down throws and hit Antonio Gates for a go-ahead touchdown in the fourth quarter, lifting the visiting Chargers to a 20-17 victory over the Cowboys. San Diego (10-3) won its eighth in a row and its 16th straight in December — the last 11 under Norv Turner, whom the Cowboys decided not to hire the last time their head coaching job was open. Dallas hired Wade Phillips, who dropped to 3-8 in December with this loss, the second straight for the Cowboys (8-5).

Ryan Grant scored on a 62-yard run on Green Bay’s first play and added the go-ahead touchdown in the fourth quarter after Nick Collins intercepted Jay Cutler, giving the visiting Packers a 21-14 win over the Bears. The Packers (9-4) have won five straight. The Bears (5-8) were eliminated from playoff contention.

The Vikings (11-2) beat the Bengals, 30-10, to clinch a playoff spot and put themselves a win — or a Green Bay loss — from a second straight N.F.C. North title. Cincinnati (9-4) committed 11 penalties for 85 yards and failed to clinch the A.F.C. North when Baltimore won.

Patriots End Skid

Wes Welker caught five passes on the drive that led to New England’s tie-breaking touchdown, and the Patriots ended their worst slide in seven seasons with a 20-10 win over the Panthers. Welker finished with 10 catches for 105 yards, his fifth 100-yard game this year. He leads the league with 105 receptions and joined Marvin Harrison, Jerry Rice and Herman Moore as the only receivers with at least three consecutive 100-catch seasons. The Patriots (8-5) had lost three of four.

Chad Henne completed a team-record 17 consecutive passes, Ricky Williams ran for 108 yards and a score and the Dolphins beat the Jaguars, 14-10, by turning in one of their best defensive efforts of the season. Visiting Miami (7-6) moved above .500 for the first time and maintained its position in the middle of the crowded A.F.C. playoff race. The Dolphins stopped David Garrard on fourth-and-3 with 1 minutes 20 seconds left, then sacked Garrard on the final play.

THURSDAY’S MATCHUP

Colts (13-0)

at Jaguars (7-6)

8:20 p.m., NFL Network

Line: Colts by 6

”A Very Sorgi Christmas” will not be seen this holiday season. The heartwarming story of a backup quarterback who learns the true meaning of resting the starters has been a holiday tradition for nearly a decade, but it has been canceled. It is not that Jim Sorgi is injured — local affiliates tentatively scheduled ”The Little Painter Boy” as a replacement.

The Colts are shooting for an undefeated season, and they learned the true meaning of resting the starters in 2005: they were 13-0, lost two straight games in December, then lost in the second round of the playoffs. Experts in the art of the December clinch, the Colts have learned how to balance rest with rust, so ”The Peyton Manning Show” isn’t going into hiatus just yet.

The Jaguars are much healthier this week than last. Defensive tackle John Henderson practiced on Tuesday after missing the loss to the Dolphins, and receiver Mike Sims-Walker is back at full speed after being limited last week. Maurice Jones-Drew appeared on the injury report, but he said he was fine. He made it clear that he wants to face the Colts’ starters, despite the fact that a Curtis Painter appearance would help the Jaguars’ playoff chances.

Jones-Drew may be like the little boy who claims to wish for peace on earth while secretly crossing his fingers for a dirt bike, but so be it: the Colts’ starters he gets, though with 29 players on the Colts’ injured list, it is hard to say he will be facing them at full strength. MIKE TANIER

DRAWING