In a story Nov. 8 about NFL coaches whose jobs are at risk, The Associated Press erroneously reported the Los Angeles Rams record and the number of times Mike McCoy led the San Diego Chargers to the playoffs in his first two seasons. The Rams are 3-5, not 3-6. McCoy led the Chargers to the playoffs once, not twice.A corrected version of the story is below:NFL Halfway: Jags Gus Bradley could be first coach to goThe Gus Bus might be first to hit the roadBy ROB MAADDIAP Pro Football WriterThe Gus Bus might be first to hit the road.This was supposed to be the year Gus Bradley turned the Jacksonville Jaguars into a contender. After going 12-36 in his first three seasons, Bradley got a one-year contract extension through 2017. That came with heightened expectations.After all, the Jaguars spent more than $350 million (nearly $150 million guaranteed) in free agency the last two years to sign 10 starters. They assembled a roster of talented young players.All signs pointed toward a major step forward. Instead, the Jaguars are 2-6 and headed nowhere in the weak AFC South.There have been at least six coaching changes in the NFL in each of the past six offseasons. Bradley could be the first to go this season, and theres no guarantee he makes it through the second half.Here are other coaches on the hot seat:REX RYAN: The Bills havent made the playoffs since 1999, the longest drought in the NFL. Ryan vowed to end that streak when he took over last season. He failed in his first try, going 8-8. Ryan fired offensive coordinator Greg Roman after a 0-2 start this season, but he could be in trouble if Buffalo (4-5) has a losing season.CHIP KELLY: The 49ers have lost seven in a row since opening the season with a shutout win over the Rams. Kelly has three years left on his contract and the 49ers fired Jim Tomsula one season into a four-year deal after 2015, so its unlikely they would do it again. But if Kelly wants to return to college football, hell get a comfortable push out the door.JEFF FISHER: The Rams had four straight losing seasons under Fisher in St. Louis and theyre headed toward another one in their first season back in Los Angeles. If the Rams (3-5) dont turn things around in the second half, Fisher may not stick around to see the Jared Goff era.MIKE MCCARTHY: The Packers have reached the playoffs eight times in McCarthys 10 seasons and seven years in a row. But theyve had disappointing playoff losses since winning the 2011 Super Bowl and are 4-4 this season. Unless Aaron Rodgers gets them back on track, McCarthys time in Green Bay could be up.CHUCK PAGANO: The Colts (4-5) beat the Packers on the road to get back in the race in the AFC South. Pagano led the Colts to three straight 11-win seasons, but he was in trouble last year after going 8-8 with Andrew Luck missing a chunk of games. He signed a four-year contract extension in January, so that gives him some security. But Pagano may have to win a playoff game to stick around in Indianapolis.MARVIN LEWIS: The Bengals have reached the playoffs seven times in 13 seasons under Lewis, including the last five years. Theyre 0-7 in those games. At 3-4-1, Cincinnatis postseason run is in jeopardy. That could lead to the first coaching change since 2003.JOHN FOX: The Bears are 2-6 after going 6-10 in Foxs first season. Fox led the Panthers and Broncos to big jumps in his second year, but thats not happening in Chicago. He might not get a third season.JIM CALDWELL: The Lions are 5-4 after rallying for an impressive win at Minnesota. They won 11 games and reached the playoffs in Caldwells first season, but they started 1-7 in 2015 and needed a 6-2 finish to preserve his job. A collapse down the stretch could lead to Caldwells departure.TODD BOWLES: The Jets are 3-6 and reeling, a season after going 10-6 and narrowly missing the playoffs. Bowles could be gone if they continue to spiral downward.MIKE MCCOY: The Chargers tumbled to 4-12 last year after going to the playoffs in 2013 and finishing 9-7 in 2014, McCoys first two seasons. Now theyre 4-5 and another losing season could cost McCoy his job.---For more NFL coverage: http://www.pro32.ap.org and http://www.twitter.com/AP-NFL---Follow Rob Maaddi on Twitter: https://twitter.com/AP-RobMaaddiRaul Ibanez Jersey . Los Angeles star goalie survived those perilous gymnastics with no problem, and he eventually backstopped the Kings to a skid-snapping win. Quick stopped 27 shots in his return from a 24-game injury absence, Jeff Carter scored the tiebreaking goal with 7:55 to play, and the Kings snapped their five-game losing streak with a 3-1 victory over the Vancouver Canucks on Saturday night. 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Freddie Patek Jersey .ca NBA Power Rankings, ahead of the Miami Heat and San Antonio Spurs.SEATTLE -- The NFL will review the performance of referee Walt Anderson and his officiating crew after a bizarre first-half sequence from the?Seattle Seahawks 31-25 win Monday night against the?Buffalo Bills?that led to hand-wringing and finger-pointing from all sides.The controversy, which initially began over whether Seahawks cornerback Richard Sherman should have been penalized for unnecessary roughness against Bills kicker Dan Carpenter, led to several minutes of confusion and eventually a missed 54-yard field goal by Carpenter at the end of the first half.NFL senior vice president of officiating Dean Blandino, who confirmed that Sherman should have been penalized for unnecessary roughness for his hit on Carpenter, will look into the matter, per normal protocol. A league source told ESPN NFL Insider Ed Werder that discipline for egregious mistakes by Anderson and his crew is a possibility.The sequence also upset coach Rex Ryan and Bills players after the game.Ridiculous, Ryan said after the game. Absolutely ridiculous. [Officials explanation] doesnt matter [because] it was wrong. Its clear what happened: The guy roughed our kicker. Jumps offside and roughs our kicker.Carpenter, initially attempting a 53-yard field goal with 3 seconds remaining in the half, appeared to be injured when Sherman went offside and fell into Carpenters legs. The play was blown dead because of Shermans penalty. Sherman also appeared to get away with an unnecessary roughness penalty that wasnt called by Andersons officiating crew.Anderson defended his decision after the game.I didnt feel like the actions and the contact, because we were shutting the play down, warranted a foul, he told a pool reporter after the game, adding that the stadium was loud and that Sherman might not have known officials had blown the play dead.One of the things were just looking for is, does the player have a chance to realize that were shutting the play down from that standpoint, Anderson said, and whether or not he has an opportunity to avoid any type of contact once he realizes that were getting the play shut down.Bills trainers ran onto the field to tend to Carpenter, who remained on the ground after being hit by Sherman. Because trainers entered the field of play, Carpenter was required to exit the game, leaving the Bills without a kicker for the end-of-half attempt.Sherman said he completely disagreed with Blandinos assessment that Andersons crew did not make the correct call, saying I didnt go for the kicker, I went straight for the ball.[Carpenter] should have not kicked it, you know? he told ESPNs Lisa Salters after the game. Maybe he wanted to; I went for the ball. So when the ball gets tipped on a play, the rule is, there is no flag.Sherman disputed that the play was dirty, telling reporters after the game, Im a pro. Ive been in this league long enough. I know how hard it is to play. When you go for a block, thats what you do. You go for a block. Even if I was offsides, you still stop the play. Youre not going to let him just kick the ball freely and let him have a free play. He could have made the decision nnot to kick the ball.dddddddddddd He saw the flag before I did. He has a better vantage point than any of us.During the confusion over the penalty and ruling about Carpenter, players on both benches began to run toward the locker room for halftime. As that happened, Ryan and his brother, Bills assistant head coach/defense Rob Ryan, appeared to exchange words with Sherman.Hes mean mugging like hes doing and whatever, Rex Ryan said of Sherman after the game. The guys a great player. I guess it wasnt as bad as I thought. I thought he roughed our kicker. It was a ridiculous play, no question. Then hes over on the sideline, taunting us. So I had some words. I think I said, Youre too good of a player to act like an ass. I think thats what I said.Asked after the game about the exchange with the Ryan brothers, Sherman said the stadium was too loud to hear what Rex was saying and that Rob was talking to himself.Added Sherman about Rex: I didnt say anything. I just looked at him. Hes one of those coaches that likes to talk. Its fun to see what he has to say.Officials then had to clear the field before the Bills, with rookie running back Jonathan Williams under center, had to spike the ball to stop the clock.With one second remaining on the clock, the Bills lined up for a 49-yard attempt but were called for delay of game after the play clock expired. On their ensuing 54-yard attempt, Carpenter missed wide right.Officials were standing over the ball on the second attempt with 4 seconds remaining on the play clock, which led to the delay of game.I usually try to give [the officials] the benefit of the doubt, but they lost control of that play, Bills long-snapper Garrison Sanborn said after the game. They didnt know what was going on, and they let the crazy situation affect it, in my opinion. They needed to pump it up [reset the play clock]. Its a very standard, simple thing they do all the time, and they never pumped up the clock back to restart it once we got the right [kicking] ball. So that was all on them.Added Rex Ryan: From an officiating standpoint, I think you can do a little better than that.Anderson acknowledged the error after the game, If there was that little time left, then thats probably a mistake on my part in not pumping the play clock back up. But I was not aware that it was that far into the play clock.Blandino later said on NFL Network that Anderson should have reset the game clock prior to the delay of game.We are absolutely going to address it, Blandino said of the entire sequence. Anytime you have a sequence like that at any point during the game we want to see what happened and just walk through the steps of where the breakdown was. Regardless of the outcome of the game, we are going to address the situation with our crew.Though he wasnt involved in the game, Baltimore Ravens kicker Justin Tucker was also quick to voice his displeasure for the no-call on roughing the Bills kicker:Kevin Seifert and Mike Reiss contributed to this report. ' ' '