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Miami linebacker Matt Roth wraps up San Diego quarterback Philip Rivers in the fourth quarter Sunday. Rivers completed 13-of-28 passes against the Dolphins for 159 yards and one touchdown.
Miami linebacker Matt Roth wraps up San Diego quarterback Philip Rivers in the fourth quarter Sunday. Rivers completed 13-of-28 passes against the Dolphins for 159 yards and one touchdown.
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Getting your player ready...

MIAMI — With the Miami Dolphins threatening to score, running back Ronnie Brown waited in the single wing for a direct snap, his grin visible through his face mask.

Brown was still grinning moments later when he reached the end zone. And he wore a smile in the locker room after Miami pulled off its second successive upset by beating San Diego 17-10.

“We can compete, and we’re starting to realize that,” Brown said.

The Dolphins won Sunday with ball control, a smothering defense and a few offensive frills. Brown scored the decisive touchdown from the single-wing formation the Dolphins revived two weeks ago, and a goal-line stand in the fourth quarter preserved a seven-point lead.

With back-to-back wins for the first time since November 2006, the Dolphins are 2-2 in the Bill Parcells era. That’s double their victory total for all of last season, when they went 1-15.

“We’re proud of what we did, but it’s just another step,” defensive end Vonnie Holliday said. “Hopefully, we’re going to raise some brows. Hopefully, people will start to pay some attention.”

Defending AFC West champion San Diego fell to 2-3 for the second year in a row. The Chargers remained winless in six visits to Miami since a memorable overtime playoff victory in January 1982.

The single wing was less explosive than in the Dolphins’ win at New England, but running back Brown took a direct snap 11 times on running plays that netted 49 yards and Miami’s second touchdown.

Miami’s defense allowed only three third-down conversions and held LaDainian Tomlinson to 35 yards on 12 carries.

The Chargers came into the game leading the NFL with a scoring average of 34.5, but they had a hard time getting the ball away from the Dolphins, who kept it nearly 37 minutes.

“We’ve been down this road and found a way to win these games in the second half,” San Diego coach Norv Turner said. “They did a great job on third down keeping us off the field.”

“We want respect,” Miami safety Yeremiah Bell said. “How you get it is you go out and you take it, and I think we took a step in that direction today.”

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