JACKSONVILLE, Fla. -- As his 54-yard field goal split the uprights, Justin Tucker raised both arms in celebration and turned toward Baltimores bench.He probably should have taken a bow.Tucker kicked four field goals, including the long-distance winner with 1:02 remaining, and the Ravens remained unbeaten with a 19-17 victory over the Jacksonville Jaguars on Sunday.The fourth quarter featured four interceptions, a muffed punt, a blocked field goal and a huge fourth-down conversation. The fourth-down play -- Joe Flaccos short pass to Steve Smith -- helped set up Tuckers kick.It was controlled chaos. Thats all it is, Smith said. In the fourth quarter, there are either blowouts or there are nail-biters, and that definitely was a nail-biter. We make it interesting, and I think we make it more interesting than we really like.The Ravens improved to 3-0 for the third time in franchise history and first time since 2009.The Jaguars are 0-3 for the third time in the last four years and surely will hear more talk about coach Gus Bradleys job security. Bradley is now 12-39 in four seasons, the second-worst winning percentage of any NFL coach with at least 50 games.The blame for this one fell on Blake Bortles and an offense that had plenty of chances down the stretch. The Ravens turned the ball over on three consecutive possessions in the fourth -- Devin Hester muffed a punt, and Flacco threw back-to-back interceptions -- and gave Jacksonville the ball in field-goal range all three times.The Jaguars came away with three points, thanks to Blake Bortles second of three interceptions and Jason Myers blocked field goal.We have to stop giving games away, Jaguars veteran tight end Marcedes Lewis said. Execution down the stretch could have been better. The turnovers, the penalties, you do that in this league, the parity is so good in this league, the margin for error is so small, you cant be out there playing like on some plays like weve never practiced it.Weve got to go out there and execute. I feel sick right now.FRANCHISE RECORD: Flacco completed 29 of 40 passes for 214 yards. It doesnt seem like a record-setting outing, but it was. He broke his own franchise record for consecutive completions by connecting on 21 straight. Flacco misfired on four of his first five throws, but then reeled off 21 in a row. The streak ended on Mike Wallaces drop in the end zone early in the third quarter. Flaccos previous record was 14 straight set in 2009.BRIGHT SPOT: Allen Robinson was Jacksonvilles lone bright spot on offense. He finished with seven catches for 57 yards and two touchdowns. He had a 3-yard score in the first quarter and an 11-yarder in the third. After his first TD of the season, Robinson chucked the ball into the stands in a release of frustration.In these first couple of games, I may have left some plays out there or I may not have impacted the game how I know I can, Robinson said. Im trying to lead this team each and every week.PENALTY BOOST: Tuckers 42-yard field goal at the end of the first half was huge, and it was helped by two Jacksonville penalties. The Jaguars looked like they had forced a three-and-out, but Malik Jackson was flagged for roughing the passer when he touched Flaccos facemask. Tucker was short on a 57-yarder a few plays later, but Dante Fowler Jr. was called for unsportsmanlike conduct for leveraging during the kick. The 15-yard penalty gave Tucker another shot from 42 yards, and he drilled it.WOE LINE: Injuries forced the Jaguars to shuffle their offensive line for the first time this season. Left tackle Kelvin Beachum (concussion) and center Brandon Linder (knee) were inactive, leaving center Tyler Shatley and guard Chris Reed to make their first career starts. The injuries also forced guard Luke Joeckel to slide back to left tackle. All the movement was evident as Bortles was sacked four times and Jacksonville averaged 2.3 yards a carry.SLOW START: Bortles now has thrown first-quarter interceptions in every game this season, leading to 17 points for opponents. Ravens linebacker C.J. Mosley had the latest, making a leaping, one-handed catch in front of Allen Robinson down the field. The Ravens turned it into a field goal and a 10-0 lead.IVORY RETURNS: Running back Chris Ivory made his Jaguars debut but was mostly ineffective. Ivory missed the first two games because of a general medical issue that required an overnight hospital stay. Ivory was a 1,000-yard rusher with the New York Jets last season. He finished with 14 yards on 12 carries, hobbling to the sideline several times with an apparent knee injury.ANTHEM PROTEST: Four Jaguars -- Fowler Jr., linebacker Telvin Smith, defensive end Jared Odrick and linebacker Hayes Pullard III -- raised their right fists during the national anthem.---AP NFL website: www.pro32.ap.org and AP NFL Twitter feed: http://twitter.com/AP-NFLDarren Woodson Jersey . Marincin has played in two NHL games so far this season with two penalty minutes. The 21-year-old has three goals, four assists and a plus-5 rating in 24 games with the American Hockey Leagues Oklahoma City Barons this season. Jay Novacek Youth Jersey . The Dane followed up his first European Tour title last weekend with eight birdies and just a single dropped shot on Thursday for a one-stroke advantage over South Africas Allan Versfeld and Portugals Ricardo Santos. http://www.cowboysrookieproshop.com/Cowboys-Tony-Dorsett-Jersey/ . LOUIS -- Roman Polak was celebrating even before Alexander Steen scored the winning goal in Saturdays 4-2 win over the Carolina Hurricanes. Chuck Howley Jersey .Y. -- Canadas Kaillie Humphries and Heather Moyse have another World Cup gold medal after winning the two-women bobsled race on Saturday in Lake Placid, N. Larry Allen Youth Jersey . -- The Bishops Gaiters are showing they belong among the countrys top varsity football teams. What does it mean to truly believe in something? To know that no matter what your eyes see, your ears hear, your instincts insist, you implore yourself to never, ever give in. Even when that belief has led to disappointment and heartache time and time and time again. When do you quit? When do you cave? When do you decide youve finally had enough?These are the questions that have faced fans of the Chicago Cubs for more than a century. Indeed, when do you decide youve finally had enough? Eight years ago, on the 100th anniversary of the Cubs last World Series championship, ESPN profiled 11 such fans -- one from every decade going back to 1908 -- to reveal both the optimism and torture these die-hards have endured. At the same time, theyve tried to understand why they keep coming back for more. And when -- if ever -- the hope ends.With the Cubs playing in their first World Series since 1945, were revisiting our cast to see how their love for the Cubs has evolved and what the ride has been like with this 2016 team.Sadly, three members -- Richard Savage, Helen Keiling and Betty Maute -- have since died. Savage made it to 105 but died in 2013. Keiling was 95 when she passed in 2010. And Maute was 90 when she died in 2014. But their love for the Cubs is still alive in the form of their families. As each member of our cast said in 2008: Well wait. Well wait for our parents, their parents and anyone else who has ever cheered for the Cubbies. And when our time here runs out, our kids will wait for us.Here are the stories of these 11 Cubs fans. Some who swear they never lost hope, others who have had their hearts trampled enough that they refuse to believe even this team will be the one to win the World Series.Wrigley Fields2008: Age 7 | Ross Dettman for ESPN2016: Age 15 | Alyssa Schukar for ESPNAs Cubs catcher Miguel Montero rounded the bases after his pinch-hit grand slam in Game 1 of the NLCS, Wrigley Fields sat in his bedroom and played video games, somewhat annoyed at all the noise his parents were making in the living room as they watched the game. The boy was named after one of the most iconic stadiums in the world, but hes not that big of a baseball fan.Its just kind of slow and boring. I cant sit still that long, said Fields, a freshman at Lockport High School in Chicagos southwest suburbs. I keep up with the team. I know if theyve won or lost. With my name, I have no choice. But its not like Im some rabid fan who lives on every pitch. Thats my dad. For me, school, diving and video games. Thats my life.Still, Fields loves his name. He chuckles when a substitute teacher stumbles during roll call or when his name is announced at a diving meet and parents look around in disbelief. Sure, kids might tease him occasionally, but with his laid-back personality, he couldnt care less.Ive never had a day where I havent liked it, he said. People learning my name for the first time is honestly the best part of my day. Its the best ice breaker. And then people try to talk to me about the game, and I just play it off like I know what theyre talking about.Wrigleys mom, Kathy, who agreed to let her husband, Jerry, name their first boy after the stadium, has similarly grown to love it.Hes just Wrigley, she said. I dont even think of him associated with the stadium most of the time. Its a name that is as unique as he is.As for the World Series, Wrigley says hell be watching. Sort of. He did manage to come out of his room when the Cubs were two outs away from winning the pennant.I know how big of a deal this would be, he says. I hope they do it.Anna Patras2008: Age 16 | Ross Dettman for ESPN2016: Age 24 | Alyssa Schukar for ESPNTo say that Anna Patras is still as passionate about the Cubs as she was in high school would be an understatement. During the 2015 playoffs she nearly lost her administrative assistant job as she traveled back and forth from Minneapolis for as many games as she could, often taking 6 a.m., morning-after-the-game flights to be at her desk by 8. Looking back on it now, probably not the wisest of decisions, she said. But I can get blinded sometimes by all things Cubs.The 2016 run has been far better for her career, considering she received a promotion and transferred this past summer to her companys Chicago office. Still, she has friends who dont always get it when she drops everything - and, if needed, anyone -- to be in Wrigley or at a Wrigley pub to watch the playoffs. To me, its about the game, and that doesnt always sit well with everyone, she says. And if I have a ticket -- even a single -- well, Im going to go.Patras has also used her Cubs passion to raise more than $6,000 for esophageal cancer research at the Mayo Clinic. The disease took both her uncle and the father of her best friend. During last years playoffs, she ran a half-marathon in a goat costume to raise donations, and this year, when she won the Cubs lottery for playoff tickets, she auctioned off a ticket to NLDS Game 2 with proceeds going to the Mayo Clinic. She plans to watch every game of the World Series in Wrigleyville, except one, which she will watch on the couch next to her grandmother, who is 81.Her and I are long overdue to watch the World Series together, she said. I cant wait.Kurt Evans2008: Age 29 | Ross Dettman for ESPN2016: Age 36 | Finn OHara for ESPNEight years ago, as the founder and writer for Cubs blog Goat Riders of the Apocalypse, Kurt Evans knew without question that the greatest moment of his life would come when the Cubs eventually won the World Series. But then in 2010 he left his high-pressure sales job to become a teacher. His creative energy for the blog dwindled as he focused on the classroom. Four years later, he and his wife welcomed their first son into the world. And now everything has changed.I was totally wrong, Evans said. Becoming a dad will be the greatest thing that ever happened to me.Evans still follows the team closely, especially since Tom Ricketts bought the team and in 2011 brought in Theo Epstein to run the baseball operations department.If you think about it, the real, true curse -- if there ever was a curse -- is the curse of bad ownership, Evans said. Its pretty obvious thats what held this team back for so long.The morning after the Cubs won the NLCS, the Toronto resident connected with old Cubs friends and devoured as many Cubs stories as he could find. And he thought about his son, who wont have much of a choice in choosing a favorite baseball team.Hes going to have a completely different Cubs experience than the one I had, Evans said. Hes going to grow up with a Cubs team that is likely to be competitive and interesting every year. And could maybe even win multiple World Series. Its strange just to say that. But it couldnt make me any happier.I was totally wrong. Becoming a dad will be the greatest thing that ever happened to me.Kurtis EvansDavid Diaz2008: Age 32 | Ross Dettman for ESPN2016: Age 40 | Alyssa Schukar for ESPNIn the top of the ninth inning in Game 1 of the NLCS, former WBC world champion David Diaz crossed his arms and legs in his bed and refused to move, hoping to spark some sort of rally in a game in which the Cubs and Dodgers were tied 3-3. And when three Cubs reached base and Miguel Montero hit a grand slam, Diaz didnt budge until the game was over.My wife tried to take my hand, and Im like, Leave me alone! Diaz said. I didnt move or say anything else until the game was over. And then when the Cubs won I finally told her, I thought it was me. I was the one making all this happen.Its crazy, I know. But thats me and the Cubs -- anything I feel I can do to help.Diaz retired from boxing in 2011 and now works as a real estate agent in Chicago and trains youth fighters. Hes as passionate -- and superstitious -- about the Cubs as ever. Just as he was in 2008 when he was asked to enter a prefight press conference with Manny Pacquiao alongside a goat. I was like, no way, Diaz said. I cant be associated with some goat.Diaz, whose Realty of Chicago office is on the citys South Side, doesnt mince words about his goal for the 2016 Cubs team: I want the World Series. We want that belt. Im happy the Cubs are doing great, but the ultimate prize is to finish No. 1. And then when itt is over, go out and do it again next year.dddddddddddd Now that would be something to shut everybody up from the South Side.Billy Corgan2008: Age 41 | Ross Dettman for ESPN2016: Age 49Smashing Pumpkins frontman Billy Corgan politely declined a request to talk about his Cubs fandom, suggesting he did not want to grant any Cubs-related interviews until after the World Series. But Corgan has been seen during the playoffs at Harry Carays restaurant and at Wrigley Field.Dr. Jordan Grafman2016: Age 65 | Alyssa Schukar for ESPNIts been almost a decade since Dr. Jordan Grafman penned a chapter in the book Your Brain on Cubs, and yet, despite his renowned work as the director of brain injury research at the Rehabilitation Institute of Chicago, his lifelong love for the Cubs is still one of the things that brings him nationwide notoriety. Hes quoted regularly by George Will, and this October, the interest has come in the form of interview requests. Reporters from all over the country are eager to listen to Grafman explain how the brain of the Cubs fan is intellectually superior to that of any other team because of the mental gymnastics it takes to support a perennial loser.Its not like this is going to help my career or anything, but to be a fan about something since you were young and have all these people ask your advice is kind of fun, Grafman said.Although Grafmans love for the Cubs hasnt waned, hes learned to no longer be driven by bottom-line results. He says he doesnt care if the team wins the World Series. And he isnt kidding.I know people are going to look twice at that, but this team is so much fun to watch. I take so much joy in watching Javy [Baez] and [Jorge] Soler and the younger guys. I just want to see them play longer and longer. Of course, if they play longer than anyone else, theres a good chance that means they will win it all. But to me that isnt everything.Ronnie Woo-Woo Wickers2008: Age 67 | Ross Dettman for ESPN2016: Age 75 | Alyssa Schukar for ESPNThere was a time when Ronnie Woo-Woo couldnt sit still at Wrigley Field. When the most polarizing Cubs fan would spend games scampering up and down the cement bleachers, wooing all along the way. But those days are long gone. Wickers fell at Wrigley on July 19, tearing the patellar tendon off of his kneecap, prompting surgery and a lengthy rehab that caused him to miss all but the last two games of the regular season. And even then, on subsequent trips to Wrigley, hes worn a bulky knee brace and needed a walker to get around.It was the first time Ive ever seen him at Wrigley Field where you could see that sort of sadness on his face a bit, said his longtime friend Janet Tabit. He used to be the one running up and down those stairs cheering all the time. And that day we had to move to a different part of the ballpark where he could be more comfortable. And you could tell it bothered him.Just as frustrating in recent years has been the fading of Wickers voice. Doctors have looked at his throat and vocal chords and determined nothing is wrong. But the wear and tear of a half-century of wooing for the Cubs has prompted his voice to come and go.I try to get past it, Wickers said. People ask me to cheer, I give them a woo. Sometimes its still there. But I promise if they win the World Series, it will come back again. This team is in it to win it. And when they do, thats all the medicine I will need.Bruce Ladd2008: Age 72 | Phil Ellsworth for ESPN2016: Age 80 | Justin Cook for ESPNWhen told this October that he is the oldest living cast member from ESPNs original No Love Lost feature in 2008, Bruce Ladd responded with his typical honest, frank tone. Hot damn, Ladd joked. My mother always told me I should accomplish something respectable in my life.The former Washington, D.C., lobbyist confessed earlier this year that his motivation in starting a Beltway-centric Cubs fan club, called the Emil Verban Society, was based not on his love for the team but rather his desire to grow his Rolodex and open some doors in Washington. It did wonders for me, he said. By the time he stopped sending club newsletters and put the operation on a permanent hiatus in 2010, Hillary Clinton, Barack Obama, Dick Cheney and Antonin Scalia were all members.Ladd, now 80 and retired in North Carolina, has battled 30 years of heart disease and multiple melanomas. Now he says his kidneys are giving him trouble. And hes learned over the years not to expect too much from his favorite baseball team. Not even this year.I know the answer should be, Oh yes, we are going to win the World Series. But honestly, my expectations were lowered a long time ago, he said. Im not looking to win the World Series this year. Why would I possibly think that? There is 108 years of history saying that isnt going to happen.The number of times we have been in the playoffs the last 20 years? If you look at it, honestly, its just more false hope. The Cubs love it. The fans love it. Its good for the bottom line. But honestly I dont have any expectations.Im not looking to win the World Series this year. Why would I possibly think that? There is 108 years of history saying that isnt going to happen.Bruce LaddBetty Maute2008: Age 84 | Ross Dettman for ESPN2016: Family of Betty Maute | Alyssa Schukar for ESPNOn the night the Cubs won the National League pennant, all three of Betty Mautes children, six of her seven grandchildren and all six of her great-grandchildren gathered together to watch the game. Just the way she would have wanted it. Grandson Brian Maute, who attended a Cubs game with his grandma every summer from the time he was 4 years old until she died, wore the Betty #7 jersey she used to wear all the time. And when the Cubs turned the final 6-4-3 double play to beat the Dodgers, it was understandably emotional.There were a few tears in the room, of course, Brian said. The Cubs were such a big part of her life. Shes the matriarch of why we all became big Cubs fans. And we just couldnt help but think how she would have been so super-excited. On absolute cloud nine.Before Betty died in 2014, her grandson says she was excited about the hiring of Theo Epstein and the direction the club was headed.Of course, wed love it for her to be here to see this - she would have adored this team and the way they play and carry themselves, Brian said. But she had 90 years of Cubs fandom in her life. It was a great life. So its hard to be too upset. We will just have to celebrate for her.Helen Keiling2008: Age 93 | Ross Dettman for ESPNWith each Cubs victory during the playoffs, Leslie Keiling hasnt found herself smiling. Her mother, Helen, died in 2010, but she was such a fanatical Cubs fan that when she was alive, Leslie would read her the Cubs articles in the newspaper each morning.Weve said it so many times this year, Leslie said. When they nailed the division, when they beat the Giants and then the Dodgers. If only Mom was here. If only Dad was here. Were far from the only ones. Thats what this is about for so many people. We have a grandma or someone wishing they could see this team.The 2016 Cubs, Leslie says, would have been one of her mothers favorites. She hated all the showboaters like Sammy Sosa, Leslie said. But this team, they are such gentlemen. Everyone who knows my mom always says that -- she would have loved these guys. Like the way [Anthony] Rizzo apologized to the umpire in Los Angeles? She would have been so giddy about what theyve done and the gentlemen they are.Richard Savage2008: Age 100 | Ross Dettman for ESPNRichard Savage photographed in 2008 in Chicago, Ill. He died in 2013 at age 105.Andrew HancockAfter 107 seasons and more than 15,000 games there is no fan base that has ever been more tortured. The question is whether or not this is the year it finally comes to an end. Far less for the hyper teenagers or always believing die-hards in their 20s and 30s and more so for their parents, grandparents and great parents. For loving the Cubs is something that is passed down from one generation to the next, with the promise to never give up. Because someday, it will happen. ' ' '