Monday, Aug. 30 8:00pm ET
San Francisco
 
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OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) _ It was taken as seriously as an exhibition game can be, at least by the Oakland Raiders and their fans.

Given a chance to show their stuff against San Francisco, their more glamorous and successful cross-bay rival, the Raiders couldn't prevent second-half scoring passes by Jim Druckenmiller and Jeff Garcia in a 16-8 loss to the 49ers on Monday night.

Billed as the Battle of the Bay, the game produced the Raiders' first sellout in two years, allowing a home game to be shown on television locally for the first time since the 1997 regular-season opener against Kansas City.

It was the first meeting between the teams since the Raiders returned to Oakland in 1995, ending a 13-year stay in Los Angeles, and marked San Francisco's first appearance in Oakland since 1981.

But the game went beyond hype for the players, seeking to make one more impression in a bid for jobs before Tuesday's league-wide cutdown to 65 players.

And a first-quarter ruling also raised questions about the NFL's latest incarnation of instant replay, which failed to overturn a very questionable on-field call.

The Raiders defense was all over Steve Young, who played the first quarter. He was sacked three times, threw an interception to defensive end James Harris and was pressured by defensive tackle Darrell Russell into an intentional grounding call in the end zone that resulted in a safety.

The replay question came up on Rich Gannon's 10-yard completion to James Jett, who was hit by R.W. McQuarters and Zack Bronson and lost the ball. The officials ruled the ground caused the fumble, despite at least one replay showing the ball coming loose before Jett hit the ground.

San Francisco coach Steve Mariucci, 0-2 in replay challenges during the preseason, walked down the sidelines with a disbelieving smile when officials upheld their initial ruling.

The 49ers played without Terrell Owens (shoulder bruise) and Jerry Rice, who won't play in the final two exhibitions to ensure he's ready for the regular-season opener.

San Francisco got a more extended look at Lawrence Phillips, who had a nifty 12-yard run off a draw to help set up Wade Richey's 48-yard field goal with 1:41 remaining in the second. But Phillips, who had six yards on three carries in his 49ers debut two weeks ago, finished with just 23 yards on 10 carries.

The Raiders, seeking a reliable backup to Gannon, wasted no time in playing Bobby Hoying, obtained in a trade last week with Philadelphia.

Hoying, who played for Raiders head coach Jon Gruden while the two were with the Eagles, led a drive ending in Michael Husted's second field goal, a 32-yarder that pulled Oakland to 9-8 with 21 seconds left in the third period. But Hoying also was intercepted twice, the last time by Pierson Prioleau in the final minutes.

Druckenmiller, in a three-way battle with Garcia and Steve Stenstrom for the No. 2 job behind Young, was in the midst of another tough outing when he hooked up with rookie Damon Griffin for a 55-yard touchdown pass.

The scoring reception, which gave San Francisco a 9-3 lead with 5:01 remaining in the third quarter, came one play after Raiders defensive back Donnel Day dropped a sure interception.

Garcia extended San Francisco's advantage to 16-8 when he threw a 15-yard TD pass to Na'il Benjamin with 2:36 left.

 


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