section_id
string | query_id
string | passage
string | question
string | answers_spans
sequence |
---|---|---|---|---|
history_1915 | eecbfde1-b1fd-4037-a8b4-676bcf575b86 | As of the census of 2010, there were 516,564 people, 140,602 households, and 114,350 families residing in the county. The population density was 259 people per square mile (100/km²). There were 148,350 housing units, at an average density of 74 per square mile (29/km²). The countys racial makeup was 89.4% Race (United States Census), 0.5% Black or African American, 0.6% American Indian or Alaska Native, 1.4% Asian, 0.8% Native Hawaiian or other Pacific Islander, 4.6% some other race, and 2.7% from two or more races. 10.8% of the population were Hispanic or Latino of any race. | How many percent of people were either Black/African American, American Indian/Alaska Native, or Asian? | {
"spans": [
"2.5"
],
"types": [
"number"
]
} |
history_1915 | 1dd606a9-d345-4b19-b285-5682a7cac878 | As of the census of 2010, there were 516,564 people, 140,602 households, and 114,350 families residing in the county. The population density was 259 people per square mile (100/km²). There were 148,350 housing units, at an average density of 74 per square mile (29/km²). The countys racial makeup was 89.4% Race (United States Census), 0.5% Black or African American, 0.6% American Indian or Alaska Native, 1.4% Asian, 0.8% Native Hawaiian or other Pacific Islander, 4.6% some other race, and 2.7% from two or more races. 10.8% of the population were Hispanic or Latino of any race. | How many percent of people were either Black/African American, American Indian/Alaska Native, or Native Hawaiian/other Pacific Islander? | {
"spans": [
"1.9"
],
"types": [
"number"
]
} |
history_1915 | 95a9ba07-ad69-4d0f-b3ad-31d740aa8278 | As of the census of 2010, there were 516,564 people, 140,602 households, and 114,350 families residing in the county. The population density was 259 people per square mile (100/km²). There were 148,350 housing units, at an average density of 74 per square mile (29/km²). The countys racial makeup was 89.4% Race (United States Census), 0.5% Black or African American, 0.6% American Indian or Alaska Native, 1.4% Asian, 0.8% Native Hawaiian or other Pacific Islander, 4.6% some other race, and 2.7% from two or more races. 10.8% of the population were Hispanic or Latino of any race. | How many percent of people were either Black/African American, American Indian/Alaska Native, or from "some other race"? | {
"spans": [
"5.7"
],
"types": [
"number"
]
} |
history_1915 | a5cd6e16-8f2f-4b05-a1f6-3daa0013bf7a | As of the census of 2010, there were 516,564 people, 140,602 households, and 114,350 families residing in the county. The population density was 259 people per square mile (100/km²). There were 148,350 housing units, at an average density of 74 per square mile (29/km²). The countys racial makeup was 89.4% Race (United States Census), 0.5% Black or African American, 0.6% American Indian or Alaska Native, 1.4% Asian, 0.8% Native Hawaiian or other Pacific Islander, 4.6% some other race, and 2.7% from two or more races. 10.8% of the population were Hispanic or Latino of any race. | How many percent of people were either Black/African American, American Indian/Alaska Native, or from two or more races? | {
"spans": [
"3.8"
],
"types": [
"number"
]
} |
history_1915 | 6dd5e180-2fba-4f36-9a62-0fcd3bcee0ea | As of the census of 2010, there were 516,564 people, 140,602 households, and 114,350 families residing in the county. The population density was 259 people per square mile (100/km²). There were 148,350 housing units, at an average density of 74 per square mile (29/km²). The countys racial makeup was 89.4% Race (United States Census), 0.5% Black or African American, 0.6% American Indian or Alaska Native, 1.4% Asian, 0.8% Native Hawaiian or other Pacific Islander, 4.6% some other race, and 2.7% from two or more races. 10.8% of the population were Hispanic or Latino of any race. | How many households, families, and housing units were there? | {
"spans": [
"403302"
],
"types": [
"number"
]
} |
history_1915 | 1c849a9f-b505-48bc-82d2-f8d9e118a816 | As of the census of 2010, there were 516,564 people, 140,602 households, and 114,350 families residing in the county. The population density was 259 people per square mile (100/km²). There were 148,350 housing units, at an average density of 74 per square mile (29/km²). The countys racial makeup was 89.4% Race (United States Census), 0.5% Black or African American, 0.6% American Indian or Alaska Native, 1.4% Asian, 0.8% Native Hawaiian or other Pacific Islander, 4.6% some other race, and 2.7% from two or more races. 10.8% of the population were Hispanic or Latino of any race. | Which racial groups made up less than 0.7% of the population? | {
"spans": [
"Black or African American",
"American Indian or Alaska Native"
],
"types": [
"span",
"span"
]
} |
history_1915 | a3128591-b210-41bc-b4ab-fcbce447555c | As of the census of 2010, there were 516,564 people, 140,602 households, and 114,350 families residing in the county. The population density was 259 people per square mile (100/km²). There were 148,350 housing units, at an average density of 74 per square mile (29/km²). The countys racial makeup was 89.4% Race (United States Census), 0.5% Black or African American, 0.6% American Indian or Alaska Native, 1.4% Asian, 0.8% Native Hawaiian or other Pacific Islander, 4.6% some other race, and 2.7% from two or more races. 10.8% of the population were Hispanic or Latino of any race. | Which racial group made up between 1 and 2% of the population? | {
"spans": [
"Asian"
],
"types": [
"span"
]
} |
history_1915 | 188e10a5-81da-4e70-ae39-e1f0f7458ad0 | As of the census of 2010, there were 516,564 people, 140,602 households, and 114,350 families residing in the county. The population density was 259 people per square mile (100/km²). There were 148,350 housing units, at an average density of 74 per square mile (29/km²). The countys racial makeup was 89.4% Race (United States Census), 0.5% Black or African American, 0.6% American Indian or Alaska Native, 1.4% Asian, 0.8% Native Hawaiian or other Pacific Islander, 4.6% some other race, and 2.7% from two or more races. 10.8% of the population were Hispanic or Latino of any race. | Which racial groups are smaller than 2%? | {
"spans": [
"African American",
"American Indian or Alaska Native",
"Asian",
"Pacific Islander"
],
"types": [
"span",
"span",
"span",
"span"
]
} |
history_1915 | c530d27c-c7a8-47e4-8b44-b7ed0160c587 | As of the census of 2010, there were 516,564 people, 140,602 households, and 114,350 families residing in the county. The population density was 259 people per square mile (100/km²). There were 148,350 housing units, at an average density of 74 per square mile (29/km²). The countys racial makeup was 89.4% Race (United States Census), 0.5% Black or African American, 0.6% American Indian or Alaska Native, 1.4% Asian, 0.8% Native Hawaiian or other Pacific Islander, 4.6% some other race, and 2.7% from two or more races. 10.8% of the population were Hispanic or Latino of any race. | How many in percent from the census weren't African American? | {
"spans": [
"99.5"
],
"types": [
"number"
]
} |
history_1915 | 8cd443a1-29c0-4ea7-ae3e-da9f6f0f796e | As of the census of 2010, there were 516,564 people, 140,602 households, and 114,350 families residing in the county. The population density was 259 people per square mile (100/km²). There were 148,350 housing units, at an average density of 74 per square mile (29/km²). The countys racial makeup was 89.4% Race (United States Census), 0.5% Black or African American, 0.6% American Indian or Alaska Native, 1.4% Asian, 0.8% Native Hawaiian or other Pacific Islander, 4.6% some other race, and 2.7% from two or more races. 10.8% of the population were Hispanic or Latino of any race. | How many in percent from the census weren't Asian? | {
"spans": [
"98.6"
],
"types": [
"number"
]
} |
history_1915 | 6dcab182-248b-4013-b277-bb15e7d138b3 | As of the census of 2010, there were 516,564 people, 140,602 households, and 114,350 families residing in the county. The population density was 259 people per square mile (100/km²). There were 148,350 housing units, at an average density of 74 per square mile (29/km²). The countys racial makeup was 89.4% Race (United States Census), 0.5% Black or African American, 0.6% American Indian or Alaska Native, 1.4% Asian, 0.8% Native Hawaiian or other Pacific Islander, 4.6% some other race, and 2.7% from two or more races. 10.8% of the population were Hispanic or Latino of any race. | How many in percent from the census weren't Pacific islander? | {
"spans": [
"99.2"
],
"types": [
"number"
]
} |
history_1915 | 44bcd9dd-12e9-4142-a6ee-2a6dda2300f7 | As of the census of 2010, there were 516,564 people, 140,602 households, and 114,350 families residing in the county. The population density was 259 people per square mile (100/km²). There were 148,350 housing units, at an average density of 74 per square mile (29/km²). The countys racial makeup was 89.4% Race (United States Census), 0.5% Black or African American, 0.6% American Indian or Alaska Native, 1.4% Asian, 0.8% Native Hawaiian or other Pacific Islander, 4.6% some other race, and 2.7% from two or more races. 10.8% of the population were Hispanic or Latino of any race. | How many in percent from the census weren't from two or more races? | {
"spans": [
"97.3"
],
"types": [
"number"
]
} |
history_1915 | 6dc0962e-c382-407c-8ed8-e3aa20654dd4 | As of the census of 2010, there were 516,564 people, 140,602 households, and 114,350 families residing in the county. The population density was 259 people per square mile (100/km²). There were 148,350 housing units, at an average density of 74 per square mile (29/km²). The countys racial makeup was 89.4% Race (United States Census), 0.5% Black or African American, 0.6% American Indian or Alaska Native, 1.4% Asian, 0.8% Native Hawaiian or other Pacific Islander, 4.6% some other race, and 2.7% from two or more races. 10.8% of the population were Hispanic or Latino of any race. | How many in percent from the census weren't Hispanic or Latino? | {
"spans": [
"89.2"
],
"types": [
"number"
]
} |
history_1915 | 73244335-1d09-476f-a04a-badb1be35300 | As of the census of 2010, there were 516,564 people, 140,602 households, and 114,350 families residing in the county. The population density was 259 people per square mile (100/km²). There were 148,350 housing units, at an average density of 74 per square mile (29/km²). The countys racial makeup was 89.4% Race (United States Census), 0.5% Black or African American, 0.6% American Indian or Alaska Native, 1.4% Asian, 0.8% Native Hawaiian or other Pacific Islander, 4.6% some other race, and 2.7% from two or more races. 10.8% of the population were Hispanic or Latino of any race. | Which group from the census is larger: Asian or two or more races? | {
"spans": [
"two or more races"
],
"types": [
"span"
]
} |
history_1915 | 2fcc9bb9-f109-45c0-92b1-515524f71eb7 | As of the census of 2010, there were 516,564 people, 140,602 households, and 114,350 families residing in the county. The population density was 259 people per square mile (100/km²). There were 148,350 housing units, at an average density of 74 per square mile (29/km²). The countys racial makeup was 89.4% Race (United States Census), 0.5% Black or African American, 0.6% American Indian or Alaska Native, 1.4% Asian, 0.8% Native Hawaiian or other Pacific Islander, 4.6% some other race, and 2.7% from two or more races. 10.8% of the population were Hispanic or Latino of any race. | Which group from the census is smaller: Asian or two or more races? | {
"spans": [
"Asian"
],
"types": [
"span"
]
} |
history_1915 | d98239ac-3a27-4e8f-ab1b-4e20636951a9 | As of the census of 2010, there were 516,564 people, 140,602 households, and 114,350 families residing in the county. The population density was 259 people per square mile (100/km²). There were 148,350 housing units, at an average density of 74 per square mile (29/km²). The countys racial makeup was 89.4% Race (United States Census), 0.5% Black or African American, 0.6% American Indian or Alaska Native, 1.4% Asian, 0.8% Native Hawaiian or other Pacific Islander, 4.6% some other race, and 2.7% from two or more races. 10.8% of the population were Hispanic or Latino of any race. | Which group from the census is larger: Asian or African American? | {
"spans": [
"Asian"
],
"types": [
"span"
]
} |
history_1915 | 793b1820-21ca-4d4f-9348-6e74a77db61b | As of the census of 2010, there were 516,564 people, 140,602 households, and 114,350 families residing in the county. The population density was 259 people per square mile (100/km²). There were 148,350 housing units, at an average density of 74 per square mile (29/km²). The countys racial makeup was 89.4% Race (United States Census), 0.5% Black or African American, 0.6% American Indian or Alaska Native, 1.4% Asian, 0.8% Native Hawaiian or other Pacific Islander, 4.6% some other race, and 2.7% from two or more races. 10.8% of the population were Hispanic or Latino of any race. | Which group from the census is smaller: Asian or African American? | {
"spans": [
"African American"
],
"types": [
"span"
]
} |
history_1915 | 3fb611a8-9d72-4f34-89ae-f35c9c5718df | As of the census of 2010, there were 516,564 people, 140,602 households, and 114,350 families residing in the county. The population density was 259 people per square mile (100/km²). There were 148,350 housing units, at an average density of 74 per square mile (29/km²). The countys racial makeup was 89.4% Race (United States Census), 0.5% Black or African American, 0.6% American Indian or Alaska Native, 1.4% Asian, 0.8% Native Hawaiian or other Pacific Islander, 4.6% some other race, and 2.7% from two or more races. 10.8% of the population were Hispanic or Latino of any race. | Which group is larger according to the census: people or households? | {
"spans": [
"people"
],
"types": [
"span"
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} |
history_1915 | e1de8295-ca36-40d7-b4d0-35f5b0e4677b | As of the census of 2010, there were 516,564 people, 140,602 households, and 114,350 families residing in the county. The population density was 259 people per square mile (100/km²). There were 148,350 housing units, at an average density of 74 per square mile (29/km²). The countys racial makeup was 89.4% Race (United States Census), 0.5% Black or African American, 0.6% American Indian or Alaska Native, 1.4% Asian, 0.8% Native Hawaiian or other Pacific Islander, 4.6% some other race, and 2.7% from two or more races. 10.8% of the population were Hispanic or Latino of any race. | Which group is smaller according to the census: people or households? | {
"spans": [
"households"
],
"types": [
"span"
]
} |
nfl_1810 | 902c5ede-4645-4bbe-b4fc-6a0ce73e8c61 | The Browns, coming off a close victory over the Panthers, headed to Sun Life Stadium for their Week 13 battle against the Miami Dolphins. After a scoreless first quarter, the Browns scored first on a Phil Dawson 32-yard field goal. The Dolphins tied it at the half with Dan Carpenter hitting a 60-yard field goal, the longest in franchise history. In the second half, Benjamin Watson gave the Browns a 10-3 lead with a 3-yard touchdown reception from Jake Delhomme. The Dolphins responded with Chad Henne driving Miami down the field and tying the game with an 11-yard touchdown pass to Anthony Fasano. Late in the fourth quarter, Mike Adams intercepted Henne's pass and returned it to the 2. The Browns bled out the clock, and Dawson hit the game-winning field goal as time expired, giving the Browns a 13-10 victory. With the win, the Browns improved to 5-7, matching their win total from the 2009 season. | How many points were scored in the first quarter? | {
"spans": [
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nfl_1810 | 715514dc-6dc0-430c-a37d-2efa6731e0ed | The Browns, coming off a close victory over the Panthers, headed to Sun Life Stadium for their Week 13 battle against the Miami Dolphins. After a scoreless first quarter, the Browns scored first on a Phil Dawson 32-yard field goal. The Dolphins tied it at the half with Dan Carpenter hitting a 60-yard field goal, the longest in franchise history. In the second half, Benjamin Watson gave the Browns a 10-3 lead with a 3-yard touchdown reception from Jake Delhomme. The Dolphins responded with Chad Henne driving Miami down the field and tying the game with an 11-yard touchdown pass to Anthony Fasano. Late in the fourth quarter, Mike Adams intercepted Henne's pass and returned it to the 2. The Browns bled out the clock, and Dawson hit the game-winning field goal as time expired, giving the Browns a 13-10 victory. With the win, the Browns improved to 5-7, matching their win total from the 2009 season. | How many wins did the Browns have after the game? | {
"spans": [
"5"
],
"types": [
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} |
nfl_1810 | bacc493b-b278-401e-b13a-4c9498ee6c2b | The Browns, coming off a close victory over the Panthers, headed to Sun Life Stadium for their Week 13 battle against the Miami Dolphins. After a scoreless first quarter, the Browns scored first on a Phil Dawson 32-yard field goal. The Dolphins tied it at the half with Dan Carpenter hitting a 60-yard field goal, the longest in franchise history. In the second half, Benjamin Watson gave the Browns a 10-3 lead with a 3-yard touchdown reception from Jake Delhomme. The Dolphins responded with Chad Henne driving Miami down the field and tying the game with an 11-yard touchdown pass to Anthony Fasano. Late in the fourth quarter, Mike Adams intercepted Henne's pass and returned it to the 2. The Browns bled out the clock, and Dawson hit the game-winning field goal as time expired, giving the Browns a 13-10 victory. With the win, the Browns improved to 5-7, matching their win total from the 2009 season. | How many points did the Browns have at halftime? | {
"spans": [
"3"
],
"types": [
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} |
nfl_1810 | 04aca490-cf3c-4883-876a-a11d7528e93b | The Browns, coming off a close victory over the Panthers, headed to Sun Life Stadium for their Week 13 battle against the Miami Dolphins. After a scoreless first quarter, the Browns scored first on a Phil Dawson 32-yard field goal. The Dolphins tied it at the half with Dan Carpenter hitting a 60-yard field goal, the longest in franchise history. In the second half, Benjamin Watson gave the Browns a 10-3 lead with a 3-yard touchdown reception from Jake Delhomme. The Dolphins responded with Chad Henne driving Miami down the field and tying the game with an 11-yard touchdown pass to Anthony Fasano. Late in the fourth quarter, Mike Adams intercepted Henne's pass and returned it to the 2. The Browns bled out the clock, and Dawson hit the game-winning field goal as time expired, giving the Browns a 13-10 victory. With the win, the Browns improved to 5-7, matching their win total from the 2009 season. | How many points did Cleveland win by? | {
"spans": [
"3"
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"types": [
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]
} |
nfl_1810 | ba3876bb-1b66-4d8d-85fa-cdb3b0b53b90 | The Browns, coming off a close victory over the Panthers, headed to Sun Life Stadium for their Week 13 battle against the Miami Dolphins. After a scoreless first quarter, the Browns scored first on a Phil Dawson 32-yard field goal. The Dolphins tied it at the half with Dan Carpenter hitting a 60-yard field goal, the longest in franchise history. In the second half, Benjamin Watson gave the Browns a 10-3 lead with a 3-yard touchdown reception from Jake Delhomme. The Dolphins responded with Chad Henne driving Miami down the field and tying the game with an 11-yard touchdown pass to Anthony Fasano. Late in the fourth quarter, Mike Adams intercepted Henne's pass and returned it to the 2. The Browns bled out the clock, and Dawson hit the game-winning field goal as time expired, giving the Browns a 13-10 victory. With the win, the Browns improved to 5-7, matching their win total from the 2009 season. | How many total points were scored? | {
"spans": [
"23"
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"types": [
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} |
nfl_1810 | 8578e6b1-e212-4baa-92ed-8a22c33236a9 | The Browns, coming off a close victory over the Panthers, headed to Sun Life Stadium for their Week 13 battle against the Miami Dolphins. After a scoreless first quarter, the Browns scored first on a Phil Dawson 32-yard field goal. The Dolphins tied it at the half with Dan Carpenter hitting a 60-yard field goal, the longest in franchise history. In the second half, Benjamin Watson gave the Browns a 10-3 lead with a 3-yard touchdown reception from Jake Delhomme. The Dolphins responded with Chad Henne driving Miami down the field and tying the game with an 11-yard touchdown pass to Anthony Fasano. Late in the fourth quarter, Mike Adams intercepted Henne's pass and returned it to the 2. The Browns bled out the clock, and Dawson hit the game-winning field goal as time expired, giving the Browns a 13-10 victory. With the win, the Browns improved to 5-7, matching their win total from the 2009 season. | Which QB had the longest TD pass? | {
"spans": [
"Chad Henne"
],
"types": [
"span"
]
} |
nfl_1810 | 66311743-bece-4eda-b1fb-104b78c23377 | The Browns, coming off a close victory over the Panthers, headed to Sun Life Stadium for their Week 13 battle against the Miami Dolphins. After a scoreless first quarter, the Browns scored first on a Phil Dawson 32-yard field goal. The Dolphins tied it at the half with Dan Carpenter hitting a 60-yard field goal, the longest in franchise history. In the second half, Benjamin Watson gave the Browns a 10-3 lead with a 3-yard touchdown reception from Jake Delhomme. The Dolphins responded with Chad Henne driving Miami down the field and tying the game with an 11-yard touchdown pass to Anthony Fasano. Late in the fourth quarter, Mike Adams intercepted Henne's pass and returned it to the 2. The Browns bled out the clock, and Dawson hit the game-winning field goal as time expired, giving the Browns a 13-10 victory. With the win, the Browns improved to 5-7, matching their win total from the 2009 season. | Which team scored more points, Dolphins or Browns? | {
"spans": [
"Browns"
],
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nfl_2978 | 64eb4bb9-4d6f-44bf-9172-3f87fadca164 | The Vikings opened their 2015 season on the road against the San Francisco 49ers. Despite allowing San Francisco to start with the ball, the Vikings made a positive start, as Andrew Sendejo blocked a 28-yard field goal attempt from Phil Dawson, which Marcus Sherels returned 44 yards to the San Francisco 26-yard line. Minnesota QB Teddy Bridgewater was unable to complete a single pass on the next drive, forcing Blair Walsh to attempt a 44-yard field goal; however, he pushed it wide right. After forcing the 49ers to punt on the next series, the Vikings were themselves forced to punt immediately afterwards, only for the 49ers' rookie former rugby league star Jarryd Hayne to muff the catch, allowing the Vikings to recover the ball. The next drive saw the Vikings attempt to convert on 4th-and-3, but Bridgewater's completed pass to tight end Kyle Rudolph fell a yard short of a fresh set of downs. Both sides exchanged punts at the start of the second quarter, with the 49ers eventually returning one 85 yards for a touchdown, only for it to be called back for an illegal block by a San Francisco player. However, the ensuing possession would end with a 49ers touchdown, as they drove 93 yards in just under 5 minutes, before Carlos Hyde finished the series with a 10-yard touchdown run; after finding nowhere to go on his initial run to the right, he beat a Minnesota defender with a spin move and ran back to the left side of the field, where quarterback Colin Kaepernick led him into the end zone. With the Vikings unable to score in the remaining 47 seconds, the first half ended 7-0 to San Francisco. Minnesota started the third quarter with the ball, but they were unable to make it out of their half before being forced to punt. The 49ers then extended their lead on the ensuing possession, driving 73 yards to the Minnesota 11-yard line to set up a 30-yard field goal attempt for Dawson. The Vikings finally got on the scoreboard early in the fourth quarter, as Walsh finished off a 66-yard drive with a 37-yard field goal, but the 49ers pulled further ahead with a second touchdown for Hyde on a 17-yard run. Bridgewater attempted to spark the Vikings back into the game, but a deep pass intended for Rudolph was intercepted by Tramaine Brock, setting up a 25-yard field goal for Dawson. The next drive saw the Vikings go for it again on 4th-and-8, but Bridgewater was sacked for a loss of 14 yards, allowing the 49ers to kneel out the game. | Which team scored first? | {
"spans": [
"49ers"
],
"types": [
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} |
nfl_2978 | 62597e21-97f8-4425-b4bd-09781882c74a | The Vikings opened their 2015 season on the road against the San Francisco 49ers. Despite allowing San Francisco to start with the ball, the Vikings made a positive start, as Andrew Sendejo blocked a 28-yard field goal attempt from Phil Dawson, which Marcus Sherels returned 44 yards to the San Francisco 26-yard line. Minnesota QB Teddy Bridgewater was unable to complete a single pass on the next drive, forcing Blair Walsh to attempt a 44-yard field goal; however, he pushed it wide right. After forcing the 49ers to punt on the next series, the Vikings were themselves forced to punt immediately afterwards, only for the 49ers' rookie former rugby league star Jarryd Hayne to muff the catch, allowing the Vikings to recover the ball. The next drive saw the Vikings attempt to convert on 4th-and-3, but Bridgewater's completed pass to tight end Kyle Rudolph fell a yard short of a fresh set of downs. Both sides exchanged punts at the start of the second quarter, with the 49ers eventually returning one 85 yards for a touchdown, only for it to be called back for an illegal block by a San Francisco player. However, the ensuing possession would end with a 49ers touchdown, as they drove 93 yards in just under 5 minutes, before Carlos Hyde finished the series with a 10-yard touchdown run; after finding nowhere to go on his initial run to the right, he beat a Minnesota defender with a spin move and ran back to the left side of the field, where quarterback Colin Kaepernick led him into the end zone. With the Vikings unable to score in the remaining 47 seconds, the first half ended 7-0 to San Francisco. Minnesota started the third quarter with the ball, but they were unable to make it out of their half before being forced to punt. The 49ers then extended their lead on the ensuing possession, driving 73 yards to the Minnesota 11-yard line to set up a 30-yard field goal attempt for Dawson. The Vikings finally got on the scoreboard early in the fourth quarter, as Walsh finished off a 66-yard drive with a 37-yard field goal, but the 49ers pulled further ahead with a second touchdown for Hyde on a 17-yard run. Bridgewater attempted to spark the Vikings back into the game, but a deep pass intended for Rudolph was intercepted by Tramaine Brock, setting up a 25-yard field goal for Dawson. The next drive saw the Vikings go for it again on 4th-and-8, but Bridgewater was sacked for a loss of 14 yards, allowing the 49ers to kneel out the game. | Which team won this game? | {
"spans": [
"49ers"
],
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"span"
]
} |
nfl_2978 | c0ab15a6-2132-4acb-9909-6e9d9ca705fb | The Vikings opened their 2015 season on the road against the San Francisco 49ers. Despite allowing San Francisco to start with the ball, the Vikings made a positive start, as Andrew Sendejo blocked a 28-yard field goal attempt from Phil Dawson, which Marcus Sherels returned 44 yards to the San Francisco 26-yard line. Minnesota QB Teddy Bridgewater was unable to complete a single pass on the next drive, forcing Blair Walsh to attempt a 44-yard field goal; however, he pushed it wide right. After forcing the 49ers to punt on the next series, the Vikings were themselves forced to punt immediately afterwards, only for the 49ers' rookie former rugby league star Jarryd Hayne to muff the catch, allowing the Vikings to recover the ball. The next drive saw the Vikings attempt to convert on 4th-and-3, but Bridgewater's completed pass to tight end Kyle Rudolph fell a yard short of a fresh set of downs. Both sides exchanged punts at the start of the second quarter, with the 49ers eventually returning one 85 yards for a touchdown, only for it to be called back for an illegal block by a San Francisco player. However, the ensuing possession would end with a 49ers touchdown, as they drove 93 yards in just under 5 minutes, before Carlos Hyde finished the series with a 10-yard touchdown run; after finding nowhere to go on his initial run to the right, he beat a Minnesota defender with a spin move and ran back to the left side of the field, where quarterback Colin Kaepernick led him into the end zone. With the Vikings unable to score in the remaining 47 seconds, the first half ended 7-0 to San Francisco. Minnesota started the third quarter with the ball, but they were unable to make it out of their half before being forced to punt. The 49ers then extended their lead on the ensuing possession, driving 73 yards to the Minnesota 11-yard line to set up a 30-yard field goal attempt for Dawson. The Vikings finally got on the scoreboard early in the fourth quarter, as Walsh finished off a 66-yard drive with a 37-yard field goal, but the 49ers pulled further ahead with a second touchdown for Hyde on a 17-yard run. Bridgewater attempted to spark the Vikings back into the game, but a deep pass intended for Rudolph was intercepted by Tramaine Brock, setting up a 25-yard field goal for Dawson. The next drive saw the Vikings go for it again on 4th-and-8, but Bridgewater was sacked for a loss of 14 yards, allowing the 49ers to kneel out the game. | How many interceptions were there? | {
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nfl_2978 | 657e1f2c-381e-4723-93ce-1ba9dc33048d | The Vikings opened their 2015 season on the road against the San Francisco 49ers. Despite allowing San Francisco to start with the ball, the Vikings made a positive start, as Andrew Sendejo blocked a 28-yard field goal attempt from Phil Dawson, which Marcus Sherels returned 44 yards to the San Francisco 26-yard line. Minnesota QB Teddy Bridgewater was unable to complete a single pass on the next drive, forcing Blair Walsh to attempt a 44-yard field goal; however, he pushed it wide right. After forcing the 49ers to punt on the next series, the Vikings were themselves forced to punt immediately afterwards, only for the 49ers' rookie former rugby league star Jarryd Hayne to muff the catch, allowing the Vikings to recover the ball. The next drive saw the Vikings attempt to convert on 4th-and-3, but Bridgewater's completed pass to tight end Kyle Rudolph fell a yard short of a fresh set of downs. Both sides exchanged punts at the start of the second quarter, with the 49ers eventually returning one 85 yards for a touchdown, only for it to be called back for an illegal block by a San Francisco player. However, the ensuing possession would end with a 49ers touchdown, as they drove 93 yards in just under 5 minutes, before Carlos Hyde finished the series with a 10-yard touchdown run; after finding nowhere to go on his initial run to the right, he beat a Minnesota defender with a spin move and ran back to the left side of the field, where quarterback Colin Kaepernick led him into the end zone. With the Vikings unable to score in the remaining 47 seconds, the first half ended 7-0 to San Francisco. Minnesota started the third quarter with the ball, but they were unable to make it out of their half before being forced to punt. The 49ers then extended their lead on the ensuing possession, driving 73 yards to the Minnesota 11-yard line to set up a 30-yard field goal attempt for Dawson. The Vikings finally got on the scoreboard early in the fourth quarter, as Walsh finished off a 66-yard drive with a 37-yard field goal, but the 49ers pulled further ahead with a second touchdown for Hyde on a 17-yard run. Bridgewater attempted to spark the Vikings back into the game, but a deep pass intended for Rudolph was intercepted by Tramaine Brock, setting up a 25-yard field goal for Dawson. The next drive saw the Vikings go for it again on 4th-and-8, but Bridgewater was sacked for a loss of 14 yards, allowing the 49ers to kneel out the game. | Which player had an interception? | {
"spans": [
"Tramaine Brock"
],
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"span"
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} |
nfl_2978 | 64ed8d7b-6bb3-4f98-b2b0-2bf3d678c6d1 | The Vikings opened their 2015 season on the road against the San Francisco 49ers. Despite allowing San Francisco to start with the ball, the Vikings made a positive start, as Andrew Sendejo blocked a 28-yard field goal attempt from Phil Dawson, which Marcus Sherels returned 44 yards to the San Francisco 26-yard line. Minnesota QB Teddy Bridgewater was unable to complete a single pass on the next drive, forcing Blair Walsh to attempt a 44-yard field goal; however, he pushed it wide right. After forcing the 49ers to punt on the next series, the Vikings were themselves forced to punt immediately afterwards, only for the 49ers' rookie former rugby league star Jarryd Hayne to muff the catch, allowing the Vikings to recover the ball. The next drive saw the Vikings attempt to convert on 4th-and-3, but Bridgewater's completed pass to tight end Kyle Rudolph fell a yard short of a fresh set of downs. Both sides exchanged punts at the start of the second quarter, with the 49ers eventually returning one 85 yards for a touchdown, only for it to be called back for an illegal block by a San Francisco player. However, the ensuing possession would end with a 49ers touchdown, as they drove 93 yards in just under 5 minutes, before Carlos Hyde finished the series with a 10-yard touchdown run; after finding nowhere to go on his initial run to the right, he beat a Minnesota defender with a spin move and ran back to the left side of the field, where quarterback Colin Kaepernick led him into the end zone. With the Vikings unable to score in the remaining 47 seconds, the first half ended 7-0 to San Francisco. Minnesota started the third quarter with the ball, but they were unable to make it out of their half before being forced to punt. The 49ers then extended their lead on the ensuing possession, driving 73 yards to the Minnesota 11-yard line to set up a 30-yard field goal attempt for Dawson. The Vikings finally got on the scoreboard early in the fourth quarter, as Walsh finished off a 66-yard drive with a 37-yard field goal, but the 49ers pulled further ahead with a second touchdown for Hyde on a 17-yard run. Bridgewater attempted to spark the Vikings back into the game, but a deep pass intended for Rudolph was intercepted by Tramaine Brock, setting up a 25-yard field goal for Dawson. The next drive saw the Vikings go for it again on 4th-and-8, but Bridgewater was sacked for a loss of 14 yards, allowing the 49ers to kneel out the game. | How many field goals and field goal attempts were between 25 and 35 yards? | {
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nfl_2978 | 5f107ae3-ea91-493e-83b3-12d984910f3b | The Vikings opened their 2015 season on the road against the San Francisco 49ers. Despite allowing San Francisco to start with the ball, the Vikings made a positive start, as Andrew Sendejo blocked a 28-yard field goal attempt from Phil Dawson, which Marcus Sherels returned 44 yards to the San Francisco 26-yard line. Minnesota QB Teddy Bridgewater was unable to complete a single pass on the next drive, forcing Blair Walsh to attempt a 44-yard field goal; however, he pushed it wide right. After forcing the 49ers to punt on the next series, the Vikings were themselves forced to punt immediately afterwards, only for the 49ers' rookie former rugby league star Jarryd Hayne to muff the catch, allowing the Vikings to recover the ball. The next drive saw the Vikings attempt to convert on 4th-and-3, but Bridgewater's completed pass to tight end Kyle Rudolph fell a yard short of a fresh set of downs. Both sides exchanged punts at the start of the second quarter, with the 49ers eventually returning one 85 yards for a touchdown, only for it to be called back for an illegal block by a San Francisco player. However, the ensuing possession would end with a 49ers touchdown, as they drove 93 yards in just under 5 minutes, before Carlos Hyde finished the series with a 10-yard touchdown run; after finding nowhere to go on his initial run to the right, he beat a Minnesota defender with a spin move and ran back to the left side of the field, where quarterback Colin Kaepernick led him into the end zone. With the Vikings unable to score in the remaining 47 seconds, the first half ended 7-0 to San Francisco. Minnesota started the third quarter with the ball, but they were unable to make it out of their half before being forced to punt. The 49ers then extended their lead on the ensuing possession, driving 73 yards to the Minnesota 11-yard line to set up a 30-yard field goal attempt for Dawson. The Vikings finally got on the scoreboard early in the fourth quarter, as Walsh finished off a 66-yard drive with a 37-yard field goal, but the 49ers pulled further ahead with a second touchdown for Hyde on a 17-yard run. Bridgewater attempted to spark the Vikings back into the game, but a deep pass intended for Rudolph was intercepted by Tramaine Brock, setting up a 25-yard field goal for Dawson. The next drive saw the Vikings go for it again on 4th-and-8, but Bridgewater was sacked for a loss of 14 yards, allowing the 49ers to kneel out the game. | How many field goals did Blair Walsh attempt or complete? | {
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nfl_2978 | 9a9ddd15-8e52-42c5-bab7-03f3442fcd46 | The Vikings opened their 2015 season on the road against the San Francisco 49ers. Despite allowing San Francisco to start with the ball, the Vikings made a positive start, as Andrew Sendejo blocked a 28-yard field goal attempt from Phil Dawson, which Marcus Sherels returned 44 yards to the San Francisco 26-yard line. Minnesota QB Teddy Bridgewater was unable to complete a single pass on the next drive, forcing Blair Walsh to attempt a 44-yard field goal; however, he pushed it wide right. After forcing the 49ers to punt on the next series, the Vikings were themselves forced to punt immediately afterwards, only for the 49ers' rookie former rugby league star Jarryd Hayne to muff the catch, allowing the Vikings to recover the ball. The next drive saw the Vikings attempt to convert on 4th-and-3, but Bridgewater's completed pass to tight end Kyle Rudolph fell a yard short of a fresh set of downs. Both sides exchanged punts at the start of the second quarter, with the 49ers eventually returning one 85 yards for a touchdown, only for it to be called back for an illegal block by a San Francisco player. However, the ensuing possession would end with a 49ers touchdown, as they drove 93 yards in just under 5 minutes, before Carlos Hyde finished the series with a 10-yard touchdown run; after finding nowhere to go on his initial run to the right, he beat a Minnesota defender with a spin move and ran back to the left side of the field, where quarterback Colin Kaepernick led him into the end zone. With the Vikings unable to score in the remaining 47 seconds, the first half ended 7-0 to San Francisco. Minnesota started the third quarter with the ball, but they were unable to make it out of their half before being forced to punt. The 49ers then extended their lead on the ensuing possession, driving 73 yards to the Minnesota 11-yard line to set up a 30-yard field goal attempt for Dawson. The Vikings finally got on the scoreboard early in the fourth quarter, as Walsh finished off a 66-yard drive with a 37-yard field goal, but the 49ers pulled further ahead with a second touchdown for Hyde on a 17-yard run. Bridgewater attempted to spark the Vikings back into the game, but a deep pass intended for Rudolph was intercepted by Tramaine Brock, setting up a 25-yard field goal for Dawson. The next drive saw the Vikings go for it again on 4th-and-8, but Bridgewater was sacked for a loss of 14 yards, allowing the 49ers to kneel out the game. | How many of the 5 field goals attempted were successful? | {
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nfl_2978 | f58784df-62b8-46fd-8d09-99a18775f711 | The Vikings opened their 2015 season on the road against the San Francisco 49ers. Despite allowing San Francisco to start with the ball, the Vikings made a positive start, as Andrew Sendejo blocked a 28-yard field goal attempt from Phil Dawson, which Marcus Sherels returned 44 yards to the San Francisco 26-yard line. Minnesota QB Teddy Bridgewater was unable to complete a single pass on the next drive, forcing Blair Walsh to attempt a 44-yard field goal; however, he pushed it wide right. After forcing the 49ers to punt on the next series, the Vikings were themselves forced to punt immediately afterwards, only for the 49ers' rookie former rugby league star Jarryd Hayne to muff the catch, allowing the Vikings to recover the ball. The next drive saw the Vikings attempt to convert on 4th-and-3, but Bridgewater's completed pass to tight end Kyle Rudolph fell a yard short of a fresh set of downs. Both sides exchanged punts at the start of the second quarter, with the 49ers eventually returning one 85 yards for a touchdown, only for it to be called back for an illegal block by a San Francisco player. However, the ensuing possession would end with a 49ers touchdown, as they drove 93 yards in just under 5 minutes, before Carlos Hyde finished the series with a 10-yard touchdown run; after finding nowhere to go on his initial run to the right, he beat a Minnesota defender with a spin move and ran back to the left side of the field, where quarterback Colin Kaepernick led him into the end zone. With the Vikings unable to score in the remaining 47 seconds, the first half ended 7-0 to San Francisco. Minnesota started the third quarter with the ball, but they were unable to make it out of their half before being forced to punt. The 49ers then extended their lead on the ensuing possession, driving 73 yards to the Minnesota 11-yard line to set up a 30-yard field goal attempt for Dawson. The Vikings finally got on the scoreboard early in the fourth quarter, as Walsh finished off a 66-yard drive with a 37-yard field goal, but the 49ers pulled further ahead with a second touchdown for Hyde on a 17-yard run. Bridgewater attempted to spark the Vikings back into the game, but a deep pass intended for Rudolph was intercepted by Tramaine Brock, setting up a 25-yard field goal for Dawson. The next drive saw the Vikings go for it again on 4th-and-8, but Bridgewater was sacked for a loss of 14 yards, allowing the 49ers to kneel out the game. | Which players attempted a field goal over 28 yards? | {
"spans": [
"Blair Walsh",
"Phil Dawson"
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nfl_2978 | f155102f-ae67-4686-acf8-c9d3d2c5fb6d | The Vikings opened their 2015 season on the road against the San Francisco 49ers. Despite allowing San Francisco to start with the ball, the Vikings made a positive start, as Andrew Sendejo blocked a 28-yard field goal attempt from Phil Dawson, which Marcus Sherels returned 44 yards to the San Francisco 26-yard line. Minnesota QB Teddy Bridgewater was unable to complete a single pass on the next drive, forcing Blair Walsh to attempt a 44-yard field goal; however, he pushed it wide right. After forcing the 49ers to punt on the next series, the Vikings were themselves forced to punt immediately afterwards, only for the 49ers' rookie former rugby league star Jarryd Hayne to muff the catch, allowing the Vikings to recover the ball. The next drive saw the Vikings attempt to convert on 4th-and-3, but Bridgewater's completed pass to tight end Kyle Rudolph fell a yard short of a fresh set of downs. Both sides exchanged punts at the start of the second quarter, with the 49ers eventually returning one 85 yards for a touchdown, only for it to be called back for an illegal block by a San Francisco player. However, the ensuing possession would end with a 49ers touchdown, as they drove 93 yards in just under 5 minutes, before Carlos Hyde finished the series with a 10-yard touchdown run; after finding nowhere to go on his initial run to the right, he beat a Minnesota defender with a spin move and ran back to the left side of the field, where quarterback Colin Kaepernick led him into the end zone. With the Vikings unable to score in the remaining 47 seconds, the first half ended 7-0 to San Francisco. Minnesota started the third quarter with the ball, but they were unable to make it out of their half before being forced to punt. The 49ers then extended their lead on the ensuing possession, driving 73 yards to the Minnesota 11-yard line to set up a 30-yard field goal attempt for Dawson. The Vikings finally got on the scoreboard early in the fourth quarter, as Walsh finished off a 66-yard drive with a 37-yard field goal, but the 49ers pulled further ahead with a second touchdown for Hyde on a 17-yard run. Bridgewater attempted to spark the Vikings back into the game, but a deep pass intended for Rudolph was intercepted by Tramaine Brock, setting up a 25-yard field goal for Dawson. The next drive saw the Vikings go for it again on 4th-and-8, but Bridgewater was sacked for a loss of 14 yards, allowing the 49ers to kneel out the game. | Which player had the most successful or unsuccessful field goal attempts? | {
"spans": [
"Phil Dawson"
],
"types": [
"span"
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} |
nfl_2978 | f971dd14-f362-4398-92b1-297cff142c5b | The Vikings opened their 2015 season on the road against the San Francisco 49ers. Despite allowing San Francisco to start with the ball, the Vikings made a positive start, as Andrew Sendejo blocked a 28-yard field goal attempt from Phil Dawson, which Marcus Sherels returned 44 yards to the San Francisco 26-yard line. Minnesota QB Teddy Bridgewater was unable to complete a single pass on the next drive, forcing Blair Walsh to attempt a 44-yard field goal; however, he pushed it wide right. After forcing the 49ers to punt on the next series, the Vikings were themselves forced to punt immediately afterwards, only for the 49ers' rookie former rugby league star Jarryd Hayne to muff the catch, allowing the Vikings to recover the ball. The next drive saw the Vikings attempt to convert on 4th-and-3, but Bridgewater's completed pass to tight end Kyle Rudolph fell a yard short of a fresh set of downs. Both sides exchanged punts at the start of the second quarter, with the 49ers eventually returning one 85 yards for a touchdown, only for it to be called back for an illegal block by a San Francisco player. However, the ensuing possession would end with a 49ers touchdown, as they drove 93 yards in just under 5 minutes, before Carlos Hyde finished the series with a 10-yard touchdown run; after finding nowhere to go on his initial run to the right, he beat a Minnesota defender with a spin move and ran back to the left side of the field, where quarterback Colin Kaepernick led him into the end zone. With the Vikings unable to score in the remaining 47 seconds, the first half ended 7-0 to San Francisco. Minnesota started the third quarter with the ball, but they were unable to make it out of their half before being forced to punt. The 49ers then extended their lead on the ensuing possession, driving 73 yards to the Minnesota 11-yard line to set up a 30-yard field goal attempt for Dawson. The Vikings finally got on the scoreboard early in the fourth quarter, as Walsh finished off a 66-yard drive with a 37-yard field goal, but the 49ers pulled further ahead with a second touchdown for Hyde on a 17-yard run. Bridgewater attempted to spark the Vikings back into the game, but a deep pass intended for Rudolph was intercepted by Tramaine Brock, setting up a 25-yard field goal for Dawson. The next drive saw the Vikings go for it again on 4th-and-8, but Bridgewater was sacked for a loss of 14 yards, allowing the 49ers to kneel out the game. | How long were each of Hyde's touchdowns? | {
"spans": [
"10-yard",
"17-yard"
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nfl_2978 | 4d48136f-9991-4cf3-bdf0-c45e815a7cac | The Vikings opened their 2015 season on the road against the San Francisco 49ers. Despite allowing San Francisco to start with the ball, the Vikings made a positive start, as Andrew Sendejo blocked a 28-yard field goal attempt from Phil Dawson, which Marcus Sherels returned 44 yards to the San Francisco 26-yard line. Minnesota QB Teddy Bridgewater was unable to complete a single pass on the next drive, forcing Blair Walsh to attempt a 44-yard field goal; however, he pushed it wide right. After forcing the 49ers to punt on the next series, the Vikings were themselves forced to punt immediately afterwards, only for the 49ers' rookie former rugby league star Jarryd Hayne to muff the catch, allowing the Vikings to recover the ball. The next drive saw the Vikings attempt to convert on 4th-and-3, but Bridgewater's completed pass to tight end Kyle Rudolph fell a yard short of a fresh set of downs. Both sides exchanged punts at the start of the second quarter, with the 49ers eventually returning one 85 yards for a touchdown, only for it to be called back for an illegal block by a San Francisco player. However, the ensuing possession would end with a 49ers touchdown, as they drove 93 yards in just under 5 minutes, before Carlos Hyde finished the series with a 10-yard touchdown run; after finding nowhere to go on his initial run to the right, he beat a Minnesota defender with a spin move and ran back to the left side of the field, where quarterback Colin Kaepernick led him into the end zone. With the Vikings unable to score in the remaining 47 seconds, the first half ended 7-0 to San Francisco. Minnesota started the third quarter with the ball, but they were unable to make it out of their half before being forced to punt. The 49ers then extended their lead on the ensuing possession, driving 73 yards to the Minnesota 11-yard line to set up a 30-yard field goal attempt for Dawson. The Vikings finally got on the scoreboard early in the fourth quarter, as Walsh finished off a 66-yard drive with a 37-yard field goal, but the 49ers pulled further ahead with a second touchdown for Hyde on a 17-yard run. Bridgewater attempted to spark the Vikings back into the game, but a deep pass intended for Rudolph was intercepted by Tramaine Brock, setting up a 25-yard field goal for Dawson. The next drive saw the Vikings go for it again on 4th-and-8, but Bridgewater was sacked for a loss of 14 yards, allowing the 49ers to kneel out the game. | How long was Phil Dawson's last successful field goal? | {
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"25-yard"
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nfl_2978 | b710f3cf-c4b6-4fff-b1b5-08f120efdbd9 | The Vikings opened their 2015 season on the road against the San Francisco 49ers. Despite allowing San Francisco to start with the ball, the Vikings made a positive start, as Andrew Sendejo blocked a 28-yard field goal attempt from Phil Dawson, which Marcus Sherels returned 44 yards to the San Francisco 26-yard line. Minnesota QB Teddy Bridgewater was unable to complete a single pass on the next drive, forcing Blair Walsh to attempt a 44-yard field goal; however, he pushed it wide right. After forcing the 49ers to punt on the next series, the Vikings were themselves forced to punt immediately afterwards, only for the 49ers' rookie former rugby league star Jarryd Hayne to muff the catch, allowing the Vikings to recover the ball. The next drive saw the Vikings attempt to convert on 4th-and-3, but Bridgewater's completed pass to tight end Kyle Rudolph fell a yard short of a fresh set of downs. Both sides exchanged punts at the start of the second quarter, with the 49ers eventually returning one 85 yards for a touchdown, only for it to be called back for an illegal block by a San Francisco player. However, the ensuing possession would end with a 49ers touchdown, as they drove 93 yards in just under 5 minutes, before Carlos Hyde finished the series with a 10-yard touchdown run; after finding nowhere to go on his initial run to the right, he beat a Minnesota defender with a spin move and ran back to the left side of the field, where quarterback Colin Kaepernick led him into the end zone. With the Vikings unable to score in the remaining 47 seconds, the first half ended 7-0 to San Francisco. Minnesota started the third quarter with the ball, but they were unable to make it out of their half before being forced to punt. The 49ers then extended their lead on the ensuing possession, driving 73 yards to the Minnesota 11-yard line to set up a 30-yard field goal attempt for Dawson. The Vikings finally got on the scoreboard early in the fourth quarter, as Walsh finished off a 66-yard drive with a 37-yard field goal, but the 49ers pulled further ahead with a second touchdown for Hyde on a 17-yard run. Bridgewater attempted to spark the Vikings back into the game, but a deep pass intended for Rudolph was intercepted by Tramaine Brock, setting up a 25-yard field goal for Dawson. The next drive saw the Vikings go for it again on 4th-and-8, but Bridgewater was sacked for a loss of 14 yards, allowing the 49ers to kneel out the game. | How long were each of Carlos Hyde's touchdown runs? | {
"spans": [
"10-yard",
"17-yard"
],
"types": [
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} |
nfl_2978 | d644921a-3c6f-4a76-ba15-736633815fb4 | The Vikings opened their 2015 season on the road against the San Francisco 49ers. Despite allowing San Francisco to start with the ball, the Vikings made a positive start, as Andrew Sendejo blocked a 28-yard field goal attempt from Phil Dawson, which Marcus Sherels returned 44 yards to the San Francisco 26-yard line. Minnesota QB Teddy Bridgewater was unable to complete a single pass on the next drive, forcing Blair Walsh to attempt a 44-yard field goal; however, he pushed it wide right. After forcing the 49ers to punt on the next series, the Vikings were themselves forced to punt immediately afterwards, only for the 49ers' rookie former rugby league star Jarryd Hayne to muff the catch, allowing the Vikings to recover the ball. The next drive saw the Vikings attempt to convert on 4th-and-3, but Bridgewater's completed pass to tight end Kyle Rudolph fell a yard short of a fresh set of downs. Both sides exchanged punts at the start of the second quarter, with the 49ers eventually returning one 85 yards for a touchdown, only for it to be called back for an illegal block by a San Francisco player. However, the ensuing possession would end with a 49ers touchdown, as they drove 93 yards in just under 5 minutes, before Carlos Hyde finished the series with a 10-yard touchdown run; after finding nowhere to go on his initial run to the right, he beat a Minnesota defender with a spin move and ran back to the left side of the field, where quarterback Colin Kaepernick led him into the end zone. With the Vikings unable to score in the remaining 47 seconds, the first half ended 7-0 to San Francisco. Minnesota started the third quarter with the ball, but they were unable to make it out of their half before being forced to punt. The 49ers then extended their lead on the ensuing possession, driving 73 yards to the Minnesota 11-yard line to set up a 30-yard field goal attempt for Dawson. The Vikings finally got on the scoreboard early in the fourth quarter, as Walsh finished off a 66-yard drive with a 37-yard field goal, but the 49ers pulled further ahead with a second touchdown for Hyde on a 17-yard run. Bridgewater attempted to spark the Vikings back into the game, but a deep pass intended for Rudolph was intercepted by Tramaine Brock, setting up a 25-yard field goal for Dawson. The next drive saw the Vikings go for it again on 4th-and-8, but Bridgewater was sacked for a loss of 14 yards, allowing the 49ers to kneel out the game. | How many weeks into the season was this game? | {
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history_1838 | 01e959a8-2229-4c1b-b0c7-f9e7f456f36e | The film was released for the first time on DVD on October 17, 2000, in a two-pack with its first sequel Toy Story 2. The same day, a 3-disc "Ultimate Toy Box" set was released, featuring Toy Story, Toy Story 2, and a third disc of bonus materials with Toy Story in a 35 mm Widescreen print and Toy Story 2 only being in FullScreen. The twin-pack release was later released individually on March 20, 2001 with the film available in both Widescreen and pan-and-scan. The DVD-pack, U.T.B. set and the original DVD use the 35 mm print of the film to create the copies, rather than using the original files to encode the movie directly to video. The DVD two-pack, the Ultimate Toy Box set, the Gold Classic Collection VHS and DVD, and the original DVD were all put in the Disney Vault on May 1, 2003. On September 6, 2005, a 2-disc "10th Anniversary Edition" was released featuring much of the bonus material from the "Ultimate Toy Box", including a retrospective special with John Lasseter, a home theater mix, as well as a new digital Widescreen picture with the 35 mm Fullscreen version being retained. This DVD went back in the Disney Vault on January 31, 2009 along with Toy Story 2. The 10th Anniversary release was the last version of Toy Story to be released before taken out of the Disney Vault lineup along with Toy Story 2. Also on September 6, 2005, a Universal Media Disc of Toy Story featuring some deleted scenes, a filmmakers reflect and a new "Legacy of Toy Story" was released for the Sony PlayStation Portable. | When was the Ultimate Tox Box set released? | {
"spans": [
"17 October 2000"
],
"types": [
"date"
]
} |
history_1838 | 5293740a-dc83-4548-a496-6e28930f6abc | The film was released for the first time on DVD on October 17, 2000, in a two-pack with its first sequel Toy Story 2. The same day, a 3-disc "Ultimate Toy Box" set was released, featuring Toy Story, Toy Story 2, and a third disc of bonus materials with Toy Story in a 35 mm Widescreen print and Toy Story 2 only being in FullScreen. The twin-pack release was later released individually on March 20, 2001 with the film available in both Widescreen and pan-and-scan. The DVD-pack, U.T.B. set and the original DVD use the 35 mm print of the film to create the copies, rather than using the original files to encode the movie directly to video. The DVD two-pack, the Ultimate Toy Box set, the Gold Classic Collection VHS and DVD, and the original DVD were all put in the Disney Vault on May 1, 2003. On September 6, 2005, a 2-disc "10th Anniversary Edition" was released featuring much of the bonus material from the "Ultimate Toy Box", including a retrospective special with John Lasseter, a home theater mix, as well as a new digital Widescreen picture with the 35 mm Fullscreen version being retained. This DVD went back in the Disney Vault on January 31, 2009 along with Toy Story 2. The 10th Anniversary release was the last version of Toy Story to be released before taken out of the Disney Vault lineup along with Toy Story 2. Also on September 6, 2005, a Universal Media Disc of Toy Story featuring some deleted scenes, a filmmakers reflect and a new "Legacy of Toy Story" was released for the Sony PlayStation Portable. | Which was released first, the two-pack or the twin pack? | {
"spans": [
"two-pack"
],
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]
} |
history_1838 | 2e173dea-0d7e-49fb-a619-a1d3bd99d4bc | The film was released for the first time on DVD on October 17, 2000, in a two-pack with its first sequel Toy Story 2. The same day, a 3-disc "Ultimate Toy Box" set was released, featuring Toy Story, Toy Story 2, and a third disc of bonus materials with Toy Story in a 35 mm Widescreen print and Toy Story 2 only being in FullScreen. The twin-pack release was later released individually on March 20, 2001 with the film available in both Widescreen and pan-and-scan. The DVD-pack, U.T.B. set and the original DVD use the 35 mm print of the film to create the copies, rather than using the original files to encode the movie directly to video. The DVD two-pack, the Ultimate Toy Box set, the Gold Classic Collection VHS and DVD, and the original DVD were all put in the Disney Vault on May 1, 2003. On September 6, 2005, a 2-disc "10th Anniversary Edition" was released featuring much of the bonus material from the "Ultimate Toy Box", including a retrospective special with John Lasseter, a home theater mix, as well as a new digital Widescreen picture with the 35 mm Fullscreen version being retained. This DVD went back in the Disney Vault on January 31, 2009 along with Toy Story 2. The 10th Anniversary release was the last version of Toy Story to be released before taken out of the Disney Vault lineup along with Toy Story 2. Also on September 6, 2005, a Universal Media Disc of Toy Story featuring some deleted scenes, a filmmakers reflect and a new "Legacy of Toy Story" was released for the Sony PlayStation Portable. | How many different type of releases were placed in the Disney Vault? | {
"spans": [
"4"
],
"types": [
"number"
]
} |
history_1838 | d35c3279-086d-4c9d-ad3c-ad6e87fbce4b | The film was released for the first time on DVD on October 17, 2000, in a two-pack with its first sequel Toy Story 2. The same day, a 3-disc "Ultimate Toy Box" set was released, featuring Toy Story, Toy Story 2, and a third disc of bonus materials with Toy Story in a 35 mm Widescreen print and Toy Story 2 only being in FullScreen. The twin-pack release was later released individually on March 20, 2001 with the film available in both Widescreen and pan-and-scan. The DVD-pack, U.T.B. set and the original DVD use the 35 mm print of the film to create the copies, rather than using the original files to encode the movie directly to video. The DVD two-pack, the Ultimate Toy Box set, the Gold Classic Collection VHS and DVD, and the original DVD were all put in the Disney Vault on May 1, 2003. On September 6, 2005, a 2-disc "10th Anniversary Edition" was released featuring much of the bonus material from the "Ultimate Toy Box", including a retrospective special with John Lasseter, a home theater mix, as well as a new digital Widescreen picture with the 35 mm Fullscreen version being retained. This DVD went back in the Disney Vault on January 31, 2009 along with Toy Story 2. The 10th Anniversary release was the last version of Toy Story to be released before taken out of the Disney Vault lineup along with Toy Story 2. Also on September 6, 2005, a Universal Media Disc of Toy Story featuring some deleted scenes, a filmmakers reflect and a new "Legacy of Toy Story" was released for the Sony PlayStation Portable. | How many months was the film in the Disney Vault before being released in a "10th Anniversary Edition?" | {
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history_1838 | e6ceff94-7102-44db-88e8-51262df75831 | The film was released for the first time on DVD on October 17, 2000, in a two-pack with its first sequel Toy Story 2. The same day, a 3-disc "Ultimate Toy Box" set was released, featuring Toy Story, Toy Story 2, and a third disc of bonus materials with Toy Story in a 35 mm Widescreen print and Toy Story 2 only being in FullScreen. The twin-pack release was later released individually on March 20, 2001 with the film available in both Widescreen and pan-and-scan. The DVD-pack, U.T.B. set and the original DVD use the 35 mm print of the film to create the copies, rather than using the original files to encode the movie directly to video. The DVD two-pack, the Ultimate Toy Box set, the Gold Classic Collection VHS and DVD, and the original DVD were all put in the Disney Vault on May 1, 2003. On September 6, 2005, a 2-disc "10th Anniversary Edition" was released featuring much of the bonus material from the "Ultimate Toy Box", including a retrospective special with John Lasseter, a home theater mix, as well as a new digital Widescreen picture with the 35 mm Fullscreen version being retained. This DVD went back in the Disney Vault on January 31, 2009 along with Toy Story 2. The 10th Anniversary release was the last version of Toy Story to be released before taken out of the Disney Vault lineup along with Toy Story 2. Also on September 6, 2005, a Universal Media Disc of Toy Story featuring some deleted scenes, a filmmakers reflect and a new "Legacy of Toy Story" was released for the Sony PlayStation Portable. | How many years after the "10th Anniversary Edition" was released did Toy Story go back in the Disney Vault? | {
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history_1838 | 8890427b-420d-4d78-a5b2-6592f6362123 | The film was released for the first time on DVD on October 17, 2000, in a two-pack with its first sequel Toy Story 2. The same day, a 3-disc "Ultimate Toy Box" set was released, featuring Toy Story, Toy Story 2, and a third disc of bonus materials with Toy Story in a 35 mm Widescreen print and Toy Story 2 only being in FullScreen. The twin-pack release was later released individually on March 20, 2001 with the film available in both Widescreen and pan-and-scan. The DVD-pack, U.T.B. set and the original DVD use the 35 mm print of the film to create the copies, rather than using the original files to encode the movie directly to video. The DVD two-pack, the Ultimate Toy Box set, the Gold Classic Collection VHS and DVD, and the original DVD were all put in the Disney Vault on May 1, 2003. On September 6, 2005, a 2-disc "10th Anniversary Edition" was released featuring much of the bonus material from the "Ultimate Toy Box", including a retrospective special with John Lasseter, a home theater mix, as well as a new digital Widescreen picture with the 35 mm Fullscreen version being retained. This DVD went back in the Disney Vault on January 31, 2009 along with Toy Story 2. The 10th Anniversary release was the last version of Toy Story to be released before taken out of the Disney Vault lineup along with Toy Story 2. Also on September 6, 2005, a Universal Media Disc of Toy Story featuring some deleted scenes, a filmmakers reflect and a new "Legacy of Toy Story" was released for the Sony PlayStation Portable. | How many years after it was released to theaters was the original Toy Story released on DVD for the first time? | {
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history_1838 | fb18362b-8d3b-4227-9b1d-20f1f65558e2 | The film was released for the first time on DVD on October 17, 2000, in a two-pack with its first sequel Toy Story 2. The same day, a 3-disc "Ultimate Toy Box" set was released, featuring Toy Story, Toy Story 2, and a third disc of bonus materials with Toy Story in a 35 mm Widescreen print and Toy Story 2 only being in FullScreen. The twin-pack release was later released individually on March 20, 2001 with the film available in both Widescreen and pan-and-scan. The DVD-pack, U.T.B. set and the original DVD use the 35 mm print of the film to create the copies, rather than using the original files to encode the movie directly to video. The DVD two-pack, the Ultimate Toy Box set, the Gold Classic Collection VHS and DVD, and the original DVD were all put in the Disney Vault on May 1, 2003. On September 6, 2005, a 2-disc "10th Anniversary Edition" was released featuring much of the bonus material from the "Ultimate Toy Box", including a retrospective special with John Lasseter, a home theater mix, as well as a new digital Widescreen picture with the 35 mm Fullscreen version being retained. This DVD went back in the Disney Vault on January 31, 2009 along with Toy Story 2. The 10th Anniversary release was the last version of Toy Story to be released before taken out of the Disney Vault lineup along with Toy Story 2. Also on September 6, 2005, a Universal Media Disc of Toy Story featuring some deleted scenes, a filmmakers reflect and a new "Legacy of Toy Story" was released for the Sony PlayStation Portable. | How many formats was the film released in on March 20, 2001? | {
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history_1838 | bb141277-bcb1-44f2-8aa8-3ab36a0484bf | The film was released for the first time on DVD on October 17, 2000, in a two-pack with its first sequel Toy Story 2. The same day, a 3-disc "Ultimate Toy Box" set was released, featuring Toy Story, Toy Story 2, and a third disc of bonus materials with Toy Story in a 35 mm Widescreen print and Toy Story 2 only being in FullScreen. The twin-pack release was later released individually on March 20, 2001 with the film available in both Widescreen and pan-and-scan. The DVD-pack, U.T.B. set and the original DVD use the 35 mm print of the film to create the copies, rather than using the original files to encode the movie directly to video. The DVD two-pack, the Ultimate Toy Box set, the Gold Classic Collection VHS and DVD, and the original DVD were all put in the Disney Vault on May 1, 2003. On September 6, 2005, a 2-disc "10th Anniversary Edition" was released featuring much of the bonus material from the "Ultimate Toy Box", including a retrospective special with John Lasseter, a home theater mix, as well as a new digital Widescreen picture with the 35 mm Fullscreen version being retained. This DVD went back in the Disney Vault on January 31, 2009 along with Toy Story 2. The 10th Anniversary release was the last version of Toy Story to be released before taken out of the Disney Vault lineup along with Toy Story 2. Also on September 6, 2005, a Universal Media Disc of Toy Story featuring some deleted scenes, a filmmakers reflect and a new "Legacy of Toy Story" was released for the Sony PlayStation Portable. | How many full months after being released on DVD was Toy Story put in the Disney Vault? | {
"spans": [
"30"
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nfl_1812 | ef170d2c-0e5a-4103-9b63-e3e47c52c8bc | Colt McCoy returned for the Cleveland Browns' week 15 Battle of Ohio against the Cincinnati Bengals. The Browns scored on their opening drive on a 20-yard pass from McCoy to Robert Royal. The Bengals answered with Cedric Benson's 18-yard run to tie the game. Over the rest of the second and third quarters, Clint Stitser hit three field goals to give the Bengals a 16-7 lead. After trading field goals in the fourth, the Browns got within two on a 46-yard pass to Brian Robiskie. However, the Browns failed to stop a third down conversion on the Bengals' next possession, and the Browns lost 19-17. With the loss, the Browns fell to 5-9 and finished the season 2-6 on the road. | Who threw a 46 yard touchdown pass? | {
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nfl_1812 | 3875d90e-5267-4ef9-b91b-1aebcf6d0c09 | Colt McCoy returned for the Cleveland Browns' week 15 Battle of Ohio against the Cincinnati Bengals. The Browns scored on their opening drive on a 20-yard pass from McCoy to Robert Royal. The Bengals answered with Cedric Benson's 18-yard run to tie the game. Over the rest of the second and third quarters, Clint Stitser hit three field goals to give the Bengals a 16-7 lead. After trading field goals in the fourth, the Browns got within two on a 46-yard pass to Brian Robiskie. However, the Browns failed to stop a third down conversion on the Bengals' next possession, and the Browns lost 19-17. With the loss, the Browns fell to 5-9 and finished the season 2-6 on the road. | What is the Brown record after the game? | {
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nfl_1812 | a4587490-d860-4043-9ec2-937f11d0e77b | Colt McCoy returned for the Cleveland Browns' week 15 Battle of Ohio against the Cincinnati Bengals. The Browns scored on their opening drive on a 20-yard pass from McCoy to Robert Royal. The Bengals answered with Cedric Benson's 18-yard run to tie the game. Over the rest of the second and third quarters, Clint Stitser hit three field goals to give the Bengals a 16-7 lead. After trading field goals in the fourth, the Browns got within two on a 46-yard pass to Brian Robiskie. However, the Browns failed to stop a third down conversion on the Bengals' next possession, and the Browns lost 19-17. With the loss, the Browns fell to 5-9 and finished the season 2-6 on the road. | How many points were scored in the game? | {
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nfl_1812 | c83e1c50-ca67-48ab-a0b0-cc3f41e3817e | Colt McCoy returned for the Cleveland Browns' week 15 Battle of Ohio against the Cincinnati Bengals. The Browns scored on their opening drive on a 20-yard pass from McCoy to Robert Royal. The Bengals answered with Cedric Benson's 18-yard run to tie the game. Over the rest of the second and third quarters, Clint Stitser hit three field goals to give the Bengals a 16-7 lead. After trading field goals in the fourth, the Browns got within two on a 46-yard pass to Brian Robiskie. However, the Browns failed to stop a third down conversion on the Bengals' next possession, and the Browns lost 19-17. With the loss, the Browns fell to 5-9 and finished the season 2-6 on the road. | How many yards were Colt McCoy's two touchdown passes? | {
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nfl_1812 | 4c704a64-6a0c-4f81-9966-26979c7dd10d | Colt McCoy returned for the Cleveland Browns' week 15 Battle of Ohio against the Cincinnati Bengals. The Browns scored on their opening drive on a 20-yard pass from McCoy to Robert Royal. The Bengals answered with Cedric Benson's 18-yard run to tie the game. Over the rest of the second and third quarters, Clint Stitser hit three field goals to give the Bengals a 16-7 lead. After trading field goals in the fourth, the Browns got within two on a 46-yard pass to Brian Robiskie. However, the Browns failed to stop a third down conversion on the Bengals' next possession, and the Browns lost 19-17. With the loss, the Browns fell to 5-9 and finished the season 2-6 on the road. | How many touchdowns did the Bengals score in the first half? | {
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nfl_1812 | 859329ff-d944-4b0e-aebd-fc724e1aea15 | Colt McCoy returned for the Cleveland Browns' week 15 Battle of Ohio against the Cincinnati Bengals. The Browns scored on their opening drive on a 20-yard pass from McCoy to Robert Royal. The Bengals answered with Cedric Benson's 18-yard run to tie the game. Over the rest of the second and third quarters, Clint Stitser hit three field goals to give the Bengals a 16-7 lead. After trading field goals in the fourth, the Browns got within two on a 46-yard pass to Brian Robiskie. However, the Browns failed to stop a third down conversion on the Bengals' next possession, and the Browns lost 19-17. With the loss, the Browns fell to 5-9 and finished the season 2-6 on the road. | How many yards was the longest passing touchdown of the game? | {
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history_317 | 728f4bdf-7570-4ac5-9e2b-eaea57e6e77f | The City of Charleston Police Department, with a total of 458 sworn officers, 117 civilians, and 27 reserve police officers, is South Carolina's largest police department. Their procedures on cracking down on drug use and gang violence in the city are used as models to other cities to do the same. According to the final 2005 FBI Crime Reports, Charleston crime level was worse than the national average in almost every major category. Greg Mullen, the former Deputy Chief of the Virginia Beach, Virginia Police Department, serves as the current Chief of the Charleston Police Department. The former Charleston police chief was Reuben Greenberg, who resigned August 12, 2005. Greenberg was credited with creating a polite police force that kept police brutality well in check, even as it developed a visible presence in community policing and a significant reduction in crime rates. Crime overall, declining since 1999, has continued to decline in Charleston and in most major cities across the country since then. | How many is the difference between the number of sworn officers and civilians? | {
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history_317 | 76a5ed18-e359-433f-a021-a29b00aa77c1 | The City of Charleston Police Department, with a total of 458 sworn officers, 117 civilians, and 27 reserve police officers, is South Carolina's largest police department. Their procedures on cracking down on drug use and gang violence in the city are used as models to other cities to do the same. According to the final 2005 FBI Crime Reports, Charleston crime level was worse than the national average in almost every major category. Greg Mullen, the former Deputy Chief of the Virginia Beach, Virginia Police Department, serves as the current Chief of the Charleston Police Department. The former Charleston police chief was Reuben Greenberg, who resigned August 12, 2005. Greenberg was credited with creating a polite police force that kept police brutality well in check, even as it developed a visible presence in community policing and a significant reduction in crime rates. Crime overall, declining since 1999, has continued to decline in Charleston and in most major cities across the country since then. | How many is the difference between the number of sworn officers and reserve police officers? | {
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history_317 | f6b7c87c-4c3a-4aa8-88be-6bff43174aa6 | The City of Charleston Police Department, with a total of 458 sworn officers, 117 civilians, and 27 reserve police officers, is South Carolina's largest police department. Their procedures on cracking down on drug use and gang violence in the city are used as models to other cities to do the same. According to the final 2005 FBI Crime Reports, Charleston crime level was worse than the national average in almost every major category. Greg Mullen, the former Deputy Chief of the Virginia Beach, Virginia Police Department, serves as the current Chief of the Charleston Police Department. The former Charleston police chief was Reuben Greenberg, who resigned August 12, 2005. Greenberg was credited with creating a polite police force that kept police brutality well in check, even as it developed a visible presence in community policing and a significant reduction in crime rates. Crime overall, declining since 1999, has continued to decline in Charleston and in most major cities across the country since then. | How many is the difference between the number of civilians and the number of reserve police officers? | {
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history_317 | 5eff216c-0729-444c-ba40-b3e0f333763e | The City of Charleston Police Department, with a total of 458 sworn officers, 117 civilians, and 27 reserve police officers, is South Carolina's largest police department. Their procedures on cracking down on drug use and gang violence in the city are used as models to other cities to do the same. According to the final 2005 FBI Crime Reports, Charleston crime level was worse than the national average in almost every major category. Greg Mullen, the former Deputy Chief of the Virginia Beach, Virginia Police Department, serves as the current Chief of the Charleston Police Department. The former Charleston police chief was Reuben Greenberg, who resigned August 12, 2005. Greenberg was credited with creating a polite police force that kept police brutality well in check, even as it developed a visible presence in community policing and a significant reduction in crime rates. Crime overall, declining since 1999, has continued to decline in Charleston and in most major cities across the country since then. | How many years are between when Reuben Greenberg resigned and when crime has been declining since? | {
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history_317 | b9bc2d2d-e625-4f2f-a82c-8f9df12d69d8 | The City of Charleston Police Department, with a total of 458 sworn officers, 117 civilians, and 27 reserve police officers, is South Carolina's largest police department. Their procedures on cracking down on drug use and gang violence in the city are used as models to other cities to do the same. According to the final 2005 FBI Crime Reports, Charleston crime level was worse than the national average in almost every major category. Greg Mullen, the former Deputy Chief of the Virginia Beach, Virginia Police Department, serves as the current Chief of the Charleston Police Department. The former Charleston police chief was Reuben Greenberg, who resigned August 12, 2005. Greenberg was credited with creating a polite police force that kept police brutality well in check, even as it developed a visible presence in community policing and a significant reduction in crime rates. Crime overall, declining since 1999, has continued to decline in Charleston and in most major cities across the country since then. | How many people are in the City of Charleston Police Department? | {
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history_317 | 6517d844-aa56-4109-853a-bae40c7868f7 | The City of Charleston Police Department, with a total of 458 sworn officers, 117 civilians, and 27 reserve police officers, is South Carolina's largest police department. Their procedures on cracking down on drug use and gang violence in the city are used as models to other cities to do the same. According to the final 2005 FBI Crime Reports, Charleston crime level was worse than the national average in almost every major category. Greg Mullen, the former Deputy Chief of the Virginia Beach, Virginia Police Department, serves as the current Chief of the Charleston Police Department. The former Charleston police chief was Reuben Greenberg, who resigned August 12, 2005. Greenberg was credited with creating a polite police force that kept police brutality well in check, even as it developed a visible presence in community policing and a significant reduction in crime rates. Crime overall, declining since 1999, has continued to decline in Charleston and in most major cities across the country since then. | How many more sworn officers were there compared to reserve police? | {
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history_317 | 060ee774-2c9f-4121-af3f-69c036b98d45 | The City of Charleston Police Department, with a total of 458 sworn officers, 117 civilians, and 27 reserve police officers, is South Carolina's largest police department. Their procedures on cracking down on drug use and gang violence in the city are used as models to other cities to do the same. According to the final 2005 FBI Crime Reports, Charleston crime level was worse than the national average in almost every major category. Greg Mullen, the former Deputy Chief of the Virginia Beach, Virginia Police Department, serves as the current Chief of the Charleston Police Department. The former Charleston police chief was Reuben Greenberg, who resigned August 12, 2005. Greenberg was credited with creating a polite police force that kept police brutality well in check, even as it developed a visible presence in community policing and a significant reduction in crime rates. Crime overall, declining since 1999, has continued to decline in Charleston and in most major cities across the country since then. | How many less reserve police were there compared to civilians in the Charleston Police department? | {
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history_317 | 6ccb6300-5c7b-4f7d-97d7-1a0681d00c58 | The City of Charleston Police Department, with a total of 458 sworn officers, 117 civilians, and 27 reserve police officers, is South Carolina's largest police department. Their procedures on cracking down on drug use and gang violence in the city are used as models to other cities to do the same. According to the final 2005 FBI Crime Reports, Charleston crime level was worse than the national average in almost every major category. Greg Mullen, the former Deputy Chief of the Virginia Beach, Virginia Police Department, serves as the current Chief of the Charleston Police Department. The former Charleston police chief was Reuben Greenberg, who resigned August 12, 2005. Greenberg was credited with creating a polite police force that kept police brutality well in check, even as it developed a visible presence in community policing and a significant reduction in crime rates. Crime overall, declining since 1999, has continued to decline in Charleston and in most major cities across the country since then. | Who was the Chief of the Charleston Police Department first, Mullen or Greenberg? | {
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history_317 | c6406d86-0005-4491-927e-29c4153ff37b | The City of Charleston Police Department, with a total of 458 sworn officers, 117 civilians, and 27 reserve police officers, is South Carolina's largest police department. Their procedures on cracking down on drug use and gang violence in the city are used as models to other cities to do the same. According to the final 2005 FBI Crime Reports, Charleston crime level was worse than the national average in almost every major category. Greg Mullen, the former Deputy Chief of the Virginia Beach, Virginia Police Department, serves as the current Chief of the Charleston Police Department. The former Charleston police chief was Reuben Greenberg, who resigned August 12, 2005. Greenberg was credited with creating a polite police force that kept police brutality well in check, even as it developed a visible presence in community policing and a significant reduction in crime rates. Crime overall, declining since 1999, has continued to decline in Charleston and in most major cities across the country since then. | How many more sworn officers than civilians are in the City of Charleston Police Department? | {
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history_317 | 02512c83-0dfc-4302-8e0b-b32769bb0287 | The City of Charleston Police Department, with a total of 458 sworn officers, 117 civilians, and 27 reserve police officers, is South Carolina's largest police department. Their procedures on cracking down on drug use and gang violence in the city are used as models to other cities to do the same. According to the final 2005 FBI Crime Reports, Charleston crime level was worse than the national average in almost every major category. Greg Mullen, the former Deputy Chief of the Virginia Beach, Virginia Police Department, serves as the current Chief of the Charleston Police Department. The former Charleston police chief was Reuben Greenberg, who resigned August 12, 2005. Greenberg was credited with creating a polite police force that kept police brutality well in check, even as it developed a visible presence in community policing and a significant reduction in crime rates. Crime overall, declining since 1999, has continued to decline in Charleston and in most major cities across the country since then. | How many people are apart of the police department? | {
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history_317 | 38ac1989-4ad1-4b28-b62a-ea89e4925727 | The City of Charleston Police Department, with a total of 458 sworn officers, 117 civilians, and 27 reserve police officers, is South Carolina's largest police department. Their procedures on cracking down on drug use and gang violence in the city are used as models to other cities to do the same. According to the final 2005 FBI Crime Reports, Charleston crime level was worse than the national average in almost every major category. Greg Mullen, the former Deputy Chief of the Virginia Beach, Virginia Police Department, serves as the current Chief of the Charleston Police Department. The former Charleston police chief was Reuben Greenberg, who resigned August 12, 2005. Greenberg was credited with creating a polite police force that kept police brutality well in check, even as it developed a visible presence in community policing and a significant reduction in crime rates. Crime overall, declining since 1999, has continued to decline in Charleston and in most major cities across the country since then. | How many sworn officers, civilians, and reserve police officers are in the City of Charleston Police Department? | {
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history_317 | cdeccdc2-ad39-4cff-a764-1299389284c1 | The City of Charleston Police Department, with a total of 458 sworn officers, 117 civilians, and 27 reserve police officers, is South Carolina's largest police department. Their procedures on cracking down on drug use and gang violence in the city are used as models to other cities to do the same. According to the final 2005 FBI Crime Reports, Charleston crime level was worse than the national average in almost every major category. Greg Mullen, the former Deputy Chief of the Virginia Beach, Virginia Police Department, serves as the current Chief of the Charleston Police Department. The former Charleston police chief was Reuben Greenberg, who resigned August 12, 2005. Greenberg was credited with creating a polite police force that kept police brutality well in check, even as it developed a visible presence in community policing and a significant reduction in crime rates. Crime overall, declining since 1999, has continued to decline in Charleston and in most major cities across the country since then. | What types of officers make up the City of Charleston Police Department? | {
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history_317 | f4911301-0e35-478b-9cf4-a67768bfaf64 | The City of Charleston Police Department, with a total of 458 sworn officers, 117 civilians, and 27 reserve police officers, is South Carolina's largest police department. Their procedures on cracking down on drug use and gang violence in the city are used as models to other cities to do the same. According to the final 2005 FBI Crime Reports, Charleston crime level was worse than the national average in almost every major category. Greg Mullen, the former Deputy Chief of the Virginia Beach, Virginia Police Department, serves as the current Chief of the Charleston Police Department. The former Charleston police chief was Reuben Greenberg, who resigned August 12, 2005. Greenberg was credited with creating a polite police force that kept police brutality well in check, even as it developed a visible presence in community policing and a significant reduction in crime rates. Crime overall, declining since 1999, has continued to decline in Charleston and in most major cities across the country since then. | How many more sworn officers does the City of Charleston Police Department have than civilian employees? | {
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history_317 | 9596a004-1b8c-4aca-a8e7-728beb32d1b0 | The City of Charleston Police Department, with a total of 458 sworn officers, 117 civilians, and 27 reserve police officers, is South Carolina's largest police department. Their procedures on cracking down on drug use and gang violence in the city are used as models to other cities to do the same. According to the final 2005 FBI Crime Reports, Charleston crime level was worse than the national average in almost every major category. Greg Mullen, the former Deputy Chief of the Virginia Beach, Virginia Police Department, serves as the current Chief of the Charleston Police Department. The former Charleston police chief was Reuben Greenberg, who resigned August 12, 2005. Greenberg was credited with creating a polite police force that kept police brutality well in check, even as it developed a visible presence in community policing and a significant reduction in crime rates. Crime overall, declining since 1999, has continued to decline in Charleston and in most major cities across the country since then. | Did Greg Mullen serve for the City of Charleston Police Department or the Virginia Beach Police Department first? | {
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history_317 | fdafdd52-b7e5-4c5a-b10e-8317fb6accc6 | The City of Charleston Police Department, with a total of 458 sworn officers, 117 civilians, and 27 reserve police officers, is South Carolina's largest police department. Their procedures on cracking down on drug use and gang violence in the city are used as models to other cities to do the same. According to the final 2005 FBI Crime Reports, Charleston crime level was worse than the national average in almost every major category. Greg Mullen, the former Deputy Chief of the Virginia Beach, Virginia Police Department, serves as the current Chief of the Charleston Police Department. The former Charleston police chief was Reuben Greenberg, who resigned August 12, 2005. Greenberg was credited with creating a polite police force that kept police brutality well in check, even as it developed a visible presence in community policing and a significant reduction in crime rates. Crime overall, declining since 1999, has continued to decline in Charleston and in most major cities across the country since then. | Who was police chief of the City of Charleston Police Department first, Reuben Greenberg, or Greg Mullen? | {
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history_317 | 6af2ee87-17a2-45ba-8230-b224b24d564a | The City of Charleston Police Department, with a total of 458 sworn officers, 117 civilians, and 27 reserve police officers, is South Carolina's largest police department. Their procedures on cracking down on drug use and gang violence in the city are used as models to other cities to do the same. According to the final 2005 FBI Crime Reports, Charleston crime level was worse than the national average in almost every major category. Greg Mullen, the former Deputy Chief of the Virginia Beach, Virginia Police Department, serves as the current Chief of the Charleston Police Department. The former Charleston police chief was Reuben Greenberg, who resigned August 12, 2005. Greenberg was credited with creating a polite police force that kept police brutality well in check, even as it developed a visible presence in community policing and a significant reduction in crime rates. Crime overall, declining since 1999, has continued to decline in Charleston and in most major cities across the country since then. | How many people are employed by the Charleston Police Department, including civilians and reserves? | {
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} |
history_317 | 016c4d2f-c79a-487a-97ec-a9e41e599843 | The City of Charleston Police Department, with a total of 458 sworn officers, 117 civilians, and 27 reserve police officers, is South Carolina's largest police department. Their procedures on cracking down on drug use and gang violence in the city are used as models to other cities to do the same. According to the final 2005 FBI Crime Reports, Charleston crime level was worse than the national average in almost every major category. Greg Mullen, the former Deputy Chief of the Virginia Beach, Virginia Police Department, serves as the current Chief of the Charleston Police Department. The former Charleston police chief was Reuben Greenberg, who resigned August 12, 2005. Greenberg was credited with creating a polite police force that kept police brutality well in check, even as it developed a visible presence in community policing and a significant reduction in crime rates. Crime overall, declining since 1999, has continued to decline in Charleston and in most major cities across the country since then. | What two states has Greg Mullen held a Chief position? | {
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history_317 | 83e25ee5-c3b8-41c3-b6c3-c6cb068641ef | The City of Charleston Police Department, with a total of 458 sworn officers, 117 civilians, and 27 reserve police officers, is South Carolina's largest police department. Their procedures on cracking down on drug use and gang violence in the city are used as models to other cities to do the same. According to the final 2005 FBI Crime Reports, Charleston crime level was worse than the national average in almost every major category. Greg Mullen, the former Deputy Chief of the Virginia Beach, Virginia Police Department, serves as the current Chief of the Charleston Police Department. The former Charleston police chief was Reuben Greenberg, who resigned August 12, 2005. Greenberg was credited with creating a polite police force that kept police brutality well in check, even as it developed a visible presence in community policing and a significant reduction in crime rates. Crime overall, declining since 1999, has continued to decline in Charleston and in most major cities across the country since then. | Who did Greg Mullen replace in Charleston? | {
"spans": [
"Reuben Greenberg"
],
"types": [
"span"
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} |
nfl_1656 | 5dfc6646-02b6-4d7b-b861-eb2bac0a27da | Still trying to get their first win of the season, the Rams went home for a Week 7 interconference duel with the Indianapolis Colts. St. Louis would trail early in the first quarter as Colts quarterback Peyton Manning completed a 6-yard touchdown pass to wide receiver Reggie Wayne. The Rams would answer with a 30-yard field goal from kicker Josh Brown, but Indianapolis answered with Manning's 27-yard touchdown pass to tight end Dallas Clark. Afterwards, the Colts would get the only score of the second quarter with running back Joseph Addai's 6-yard touchdown run. St. Louis would begin the third quarter with Brown booting a 45-yard field goal, yet Indianapolis continued their domination as cornerback Jacob Lacey return an interception 35 yards for a touchdown. In the fourth quarter, the Colts closed out the game with Manning's 8-yard touchdown pass to wide receiver Austin Collie and running back Chad Simpson's 35-yard touchdown run. | How many yards did Brown kick in field goals? | {
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"75"
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nfl_1656 | c1d01a4f-4226-4edc-a291-bab0b4b582c6 | Still trying to get their first win of the season, the Rams went home for a Week 7 interconference duel with the Indianapolis Colts. St. Louis would trail early in the first quarter as Colts quarterback Peyton Manning completed a 6-yard touchdown pass to wide receiver Reggie Wayne. The Rams would answer with a 30-yard field goal from kicker Josh Brown, but Indianapolis answered with Manning's 27-yard touchdown pass to tight end Dallas Clark. Afterwards, the Colts would get the only score of the second quarter with running back Joseph Addai's 6-yard touchdown run. St. Louis would begin the third quarter with Brown booting a 45-yard field goal, yet Indianapolis continued their domination as cornerback Jacob Lacey return an interception 35 yards for a touchdown. In the fourth quarter, the Colts closed out the game with Manning's 8-yard touchdown pass to wide receiver Austin Collie and running back Chad Simpson's 35-yard touchdown run. | How many yards longer was the longest touchdown pass from Manning compared to his shortest? | {
"spans": [
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nfl_1656 | 66d1bca8-7357-441b-baf6-b9bcc45f257b | Still trying to get their first win of the season, the Rams went home for a Week 7 interconference duel with the Indianapolis Colts. St. Louis would trail early in the first quarter as Colts quarterback Peyton Manning completed a 6-yard touchdown pass to wide receiver Reggie Wayne. The Rams would answer with a 30-yard field goal from kicker Josh Brown, but Indianapolis answered with Manning's 27-yard touchdown pass to tight end Dallas Clark. Afterwards, the Colts would get the only score of the second quarter with running back Joseph Addai's 6-yard touchdown run. St. Louis would begin the third quarter with Brown booting a 45-yard field goal, yet Indianapolis continued their domination as cornerback Jacob Lacey return an interception 35 yards for a touchdown. In the fourth quarter, the Colts closed out the game with Manning's 8-yard touchdown pass to wide receiver Austin Collie and running back Chad Simpson's 35-yard touchdown run. | How many touchdowns did Peyton Manning throw for in the first quarter? | {
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nfl_1656 | a0d49b5e-8ab2-411a-9dea-c95521ccbf88 | Still trying to get their first win of the season, the Rams went home for a Week 7 interconference duel with the Indianapolis Colts. St. Louis would trail early in the first quarter as Colts quarterback Peyton Manning completed a 6-yard touchdown pass to wide receiver Reggie Wayne. The Rams would answer with a 30-yard field goal from kicker Josh Brown, but Indianapolis answered with Manning's 27-yard touchdown pass to tight end Dallas Clark. Afterwards, the Colts would get the only score of the second quarter with running back Joseph Addai's 6-yard touchdown run. St. Louis would begin the third quarter with Brown booting a 45-yard field goal, yet Indianapolis continued their domination as cornerback Jacob Lacey return an interception 35 yards for a touchdown. In the fourth quarter, the Colts closed out the game with Manning's 8-yard touchdown pass to wide receiver Austin Collie and running back Chad Simpson's 35-yard touchdown run. | How many different running backs for the Colts scored a touchdown? | {
"spans": [
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nfl_1656 | 532788c7-96a6-4e56-81b9-172824ace321 | Still trying to get their first win of the season, the Rams went home for a Week 7 interconference duel with the Indianapolis Colts. St. Louis would trail early in the first quarter as Colts quarterback Peyton Manning completed a 6-yard touchdown pass to wide receiver Reggie Wayne. The Rams would answer with a 30-yard field goal from kicker Josh Brown, but Indianapolis answered with Manning's 27-yard touchdown pass to tight end Dallas Clark. Afterwards, the Colts would get the only score of the second quarter with running back Joseph Addai's 6-yard touchdown run. St. Louis would begin the third quarter with Brown booting a 45-yard field goal, yet Indianapolis continued their domination as cornerback Jacob Lacey return an interception 35 yards for a touchdown. In the fourth quarter, the Colts closed out the game with Manning's 8-yard touchdown pass to wide receiver Austin Collie and running back Chad Simpson's 35-yard touchdown run. | How many different players did Peyton Manning throw a touchdown to? | {
"spans": [
"3"
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nfl_1656 | 8747b8e7-c625-4e1d-916d-3dc7954d0758 | Still trying to get their first win of the season, the Rams went home for a Week 7 interconference duel with the Indianapolis Colts. St. Louis would trail early in the first quarter as Colts quarterback Peyton Manning completed a 6-yard touchdown pass to wide receiver Reggie Wayne. The Rams would answer with a 30-yard field goal from kicker Josh Brown, but Indianapolis answered with Manning's 27-yard touchdown pass to tight end Dallas Clark. Afterwards, the Colts would get the only score of the second quarter with running back Joseph Addai's 6-yard touchdown run. St. Louis would begin the third quarter with Brown booting a 45-yard field goal, yet Indianapolis continued their domination as cornerback Jacob Lacey return an interception 35 yards for a touchdown. In the fourth quarter, the Colts closed out the game with Manning's 8-yard touchdown pass to wide receiver Austin Collie and running back Chad Simpson's 35-yard touchdown run. | How many more yards was Josh Brown's second field goal compared to his first? | {
"spans": [
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nfl_1656 | 0ba077e2-7fb8-4085-878a-36975c2057f9 | Still trying to get their first win of the season, the Rams went home for a Week 7 interconference duel with the Indianapolis Colts. St. Louis would trail early in the first quarter as Colts quarterback Peyton Manning completed a 6-yard touchdown pass to wide receiver Reggie Wayne. The Rams would answer with a 30-yard field goal from kicker Josh Brown, but Indianapolis answered with Manning's 27-yard touchdown pass to tight end Dallas Clark. Afterwards, the Colts would get the only score of the second quarter with running back Joseph Addai's 6-yard touchdown run. St. Louis would begin the third quarter with Brown booting a 45-yard field goal, yet Indianapolis continued their domination as cornerback Jacob Lacey return an interception 35 yards for a touchdown. In the fourth quarter, the Colts closed out the game with Manning's 8-yard touchdown pass to wide receiver Austin Collie and running back Chad Simpson's 35-yard touchdown run. | Who scored the last touchdown of the game? | {
"spans": [
"Chad Simpson"
],
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} |
nfl_1656 | b9c04650-0684-4bb9-81a4-c8e56b73486e | Still trying to get their first win of the season, the Rams went home for a Week 7 interconference duel with the Indianapolis Colts. St. Louis would trail early in the first quarter as Colts quarterback Peyton Manning completed a 6-yard touchdown pass to wide receiver Reggie Wayne. The Rams would answer with a 30-yard field goal from kicker Josh Brown, but Indianapolis answered with Manning's 27-yard touchdown pass to tight end Dallas Clark. Afterwards, the Colts would get the only score of the second quarter with running back Joseph Addai's 6-yard touchdown run. St. Louis would begin the third quarter with Brown booting a 45-yard field goal, yet Indianapolis continued their domination as cornerback Jacob Lacey return an interception 35 yards for a touchdown. In the fourth quarter, the Colts closed out the game with Manning's 8-yard touchdown pass to wide receiver Austin Collie and running back Chad Simpson's 35-yard touchdown run. | How many yards was the longest touchdown pass? | {
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nfl_512 | 1967257a-429b-4a89-8f0d-41ac4fea4115 | The Eagles fell to the Chicago Bears in the closing seconds of the game. The first three quarters were essentially a battle of field goals. David Akers successfully converted all three of his first-half field goal attempts, the longest from 37 yards out. Robbie Gould was one for two, and the score was 9-3 Philadelphia at halftime. The Bears took the ball to the Eagles' one-yard line on their first drive of the third quarter, but settled for a field goal. Gould connected for two more field goals early in the fourth quarter to tie the game, then put the Bears ahead 12-9. On their ensuing possession, Donovan McNabb guided the Eagles down the field and fired a touchdown pass to tight end Matt Schobel, putting Philadelphia back on top 16-12 with less than five minutes to play. The Eagles forced a three and out, but their offense could not kill the clock. Chicago got the ball back with less than two minutes left and Brian Griese, with his headset broken, commanded his own drive, marching his team down the field, completing the winning touchdown pass to Muhsin Muhammad with nine seconds remaining. The Eagles fell short on their final opportunity, as the Bears improved to 3-4 with the win. Q1 - PHI - 1:01 - David Akers 24-yard FG (PHI 3-0) Q2 - PHI - 4:08 - David Akers 33-yard FG (PHI 6-0) Q2 - CHI - 1:46 - Robbie Gould 31-yard FG (PHI 6-3) Q2 - PHI - 0:22 - David Akers 37-yard FG (PHI 9-3) Q3 - CHI - 8:04 - Robbie Gould 22-yard FG (PHI 9-6) Q4 - CHI - 14:52 - Robbie Gould 41-yard FG (9-9) Q4 - CHI - 9:21 - Robbie Gould 45-yard FG (CHI 12-9) Q4 - PHI - 4:57 - 13-yard TD pass from Donovan McNabb to Matt Schobel (Akers kick) (PHI 16-12) Q4 - CHI - 0:09 - 15-yard TD pass from Brian Griese to Muhsin Muhammad (Gould kick) (CHI 19-16) | Who caught the Bears touchdown pass? | {
"spans": [
"Muhsin Muhammad"
],
"types": [
"span"
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} |
nfl_512 | 44634769-233e-4354-8f50-a7d346587526 | The Eagles fell to the Chicago Bears in the closing seconds of the game. The first three quarters were essentially a battle of field goals. David Akers successfully converted all three of his first-half field goal attempts, the longest from 37 yards out. Robbie Gould was one for two, and the score was 9-3 Philadelphia at halftime. The Bears took the ball to the Eagles' one-yard line on their first drive of the third quarter, but settled for a field goal. Gould connected for two more field goals early in the fourth quarter to tie the game, then put the Bears ahead 12-9. On their ensuing possession, Donovan McNabb guided the Eagles down the field and fired a touchdown pass to tight end Matt Schobel, putting Philadelphia back on top 16-12 with less than five minutes to play. The Eagles forced a three and out, but their offense could not kill the clock. Chicago got the ball back with less than two minutes left and Brian Griese, with his headset broken, commanded his own drive, marching his team down the field, completing the winning touchdown pass to Muhsin Muhammad with nine seconds remaining. The Eagles fell short on their final opportunity, as the Bears improved to 3-4 with the win. Q1 - PHI - 1:01 - David Akers 24-yard FG (PHI 3-0) Q2 - PHI - 4:08 - David Akers 33-yard FG (PHI 6-0) Q2 - CHI - 1:46 - Robbie Gould 31-yard FG (PHI 6-3) Q2 - PHI - 0:22 - David Akers 37-yard FG (PHI 9-3) Q3 - CHI - 8:04 - Robbie Gould 22-yard FG (PHI 9-6) Q4 - CHI - 14:52 - Robbie Gould 41-yard FG (9-9) Q4 - CHI - 9:21 - Robbie Gould 45-yard FG (CHI 12-9) Q4 - PHI - 4:57 - 13-yard TD pass from Donovan McNabb to Matt Schobel (Akers kick) (PHI 16-12) Q4 - CHI - 0:09 - 15-yard TD pass from Brian Griese to Muhsin Muhammad (Gould kick) (CHI 19-16) | How many field goals did the Robbie Gould kick? | {
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nfl_512 | fa6dbf14-fbd0-4570-8162-7e7c25c8bc78 | The Eagles fell to the Chicago Bears in the closing seconds of the game. The first three quarters were essentially a battle of field goals. David Akers successfully converted all three of his first-half field goal attempts, the longest from 37 yards out. Robbie Gould was one for two, and the score was 9-3 Philadelphia at halftime. The Bears took the ball to the Eagles' one-yard line on their first drive of the third quarter, but settled for a field goal. Gould connected for two more field goals early in the fourth quarter to tie the game, then put the Bears ahead 12-9. On their ensuing possession, Donovan McNabb guided the Eagles down the field and fired a touchdown pass to tight end Matt Schobel, putting Philadelphia back on top 16-12 with less than five minutes to play. The Eagles forced a three and out, but their offense could not kill the clock. Chicago got the ball back with less than two minutes left and Brian Griese, with his headset broken, commanded his own drive, marching his team down the field, completing the winning touchdown pass to Muhsin Muhammad with nine seconds remaining. The Eagles fell short on their final opportunity, as the Bears improved to 3-4 with the win. Q1 - PHI - 1:01 - David Akers 24-yard FG (PHI 3-0) Q2 - PHI - 4:08 - David Akers 33-yard FG (PHI 6-0) Q2 - CHI - 1:46 - Robbie Gould 31-yard FG (PHI 6-3) Q2 - PHI - 0:22 - David Akers 37-yard FG (PHI 9-3) Q3 - CHI - 8:04 - Robbie Gould 22-yard FG (PHI 9-6) Q4 - CHI - 14:52 - Robbie Gould 41-yard FG (9-9) Q4 - CHI - 9:21 - Robbie Gould 45-yard FG (CHI 12-9) Q4 - PHI - 4:57 - 13-yard TD pass from Donovan McNabb to Matt Schobel (Akers kick) (PHI 16-12) Q4 - CHI - 0:09 - 15-yard TD pass from Brian Griese to Muhsin Muhammad (Gould kick) (CHI 19-16) | Which team won the game? | {
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"Chicago Bears"
],
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} |
nfl_512 | 2b1df0a7-6b3d-4cd3-989b-27a189a8a668 | The Eagles fell to the Chicago Bears in the closing seconds of the game. The first three quarters were essentially a battle of field goals. David Akers successfully converted all three of his first-half field goal attempts, the longest from 37 yards out. Robbie Gould was one for two, and the score was 9-3 Philadelphia at halftime. The Bears took the ball to the Eagles' one-yard line on their first drive of the third quarter, but settled for a field goal. Gould connected for two more field goals early in the fourth quarter to tie the game, then put the Bears ahead 12-9. On their ensuing possession, Donovan McNabb guided the Eagles down the field and fired a touchdown pass to tight end Matt Schobel, putting Philadelphia back on top 16-12 with less than five minutes to play. The Eagles forced a three and out, but their offense could not kill the clock. Chicago got the ball back with less than two minutes left and Brian Griese, with his headset broken, commanded his own drive, marching his team down the field, completing the winning touchdown pass to Muhsin Muhammad with nine seconds remaining. The Eagles fell short on their final opportunity, as the Bears improved to 3-4 with the win. Q1 - PHI - 1:01 - David Akers 24-yard FG (PHI 3-0) Q2 - PHI - 4:08 - David Akers 33-yard FG (PHI 6-0) Q2 - CHI - 1:46 - Robbie Gould 31-yard FG (PHI 6-3) Q2 - PHI - 0:22 - David Akers 37-yard FG (PHI 9-3) Q3 - CHI - 8:04 - Robbie Gould 22-yard FG (PHI 9-6) Q4 - CHI - 14:52 - Robbie Gould 41-yard FG (9-9) Q4 - CHI - 9:21 - Robbie Gould 45-yard FG (CHI 12-9) Q4 - PHI - 4:57 - 13-yard TD pass from Donovan McNabb to Matt Schobel (Akers kick) (PHI 16-12) Q4 - CHI - 0:09 - 15-yard TD pass from Brian Griese to Muhsin Muhammad (Gould kick) (CHI 19-16) | Who scored the final point of the game? | {
"spans": [
"Robbie Gould"
],
"types": [
"span"
]
} |
nfl_512 | 777baaec-abfd-47fa-ae73-5d20c5f15280 | The Eagles fell to the Chicago Bears in the closing seconds of the game. The first three quarters were essentially a battle of field goals. David Akers successfully converted all three of his first-half field goal attempts, the longest from 37 yards out. Robbie Gould was one for two, and the score was 9-3 Philadelphia at halftime. The Bears took the ball to the Eagles' one-yard line on their first drive of the third quarter, but settled for a field goal. Gould connected for two more field goals early in the fourth quarter to tie the game, then put the Bears ahead 12-9. On their ensuing possession, Donovan McNabb guided the Eagles down the field and fired a touchdown pass to tight end Matt Schobel, putting Philadelphia back on top 16-12 with less than five minutes to play. The Eagles forced a three and out, but their offense could not kill the clock. Chicago got the ball back with less than two minutes left and Brian Griese, with his headset broken, commanded his own drive, marching his team down the field, completing the winning touchdown pass to Muhsin Muhammad with nine seconds remaining. The Eagles fell short on their final opportunity, as the Bears improved to 3-4 with the win. Q1 - PHI - 1:01 - David Akers 24-yard FG (PHI 3-0) Q2 - PHI - 4:08 - David Akers 33-yard FG (PHI 6-0) Q2 - CHI - 1:46 - Robbie Gould 31-yard FG (PHI 6-3) Q2 - PHI - 0:22 - David Akers 37-yard FG (PHI 9-3) Q3 - CHI - 8:04 - Robbie Gould 22-yard FG (PHI 9-6) Q4 - CHI - 14:52 - Robbie Gould 41-yard FG (9-9) Q4 - CHI - 9:21 - Robbie Gould 45-yard FG (CHI 12-9) Q4 - PHI - 4:57 - 13-yard TD pass from Donovan McNabb to Matt Schobel (Akers kick) (PHI 16-12) Q4 - CHI - 0:09 - 15-yard TD pass from Brian Griese to Muhsin Muhammad (Gould kick) (CHI 19-16) | Which team led at halftime? | {
"spans": [
"Eagles"
],
"types": [
"span"
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} |
nfl_512 | 54d1c43d-8d6f-4a7f-ad91-03dc0f330d7f | The Eagles fell to the Chicago Bears in the closing seconds of the game. The first three quarters were essentially a battle of field goals. David Akers successfully converted all three of his first-half field goal attempts, the longest from 37 yards out. Robbie Gould was one for two, and the score was 9-3 Philadelphia at halftime. The Bears took the ball to the Eagles' one-yard line on their first drive of the third quarter, but settled for a field goal. Gould connected for two more field goals early in the fourth quarter to tie the game, then put the Bears ahead 12-9. On their ensuing possession, Donovan McNabb guided the Eagles down the field and fired a touchdown pass to tight end Matt Schobel, putting Philadelphia back on top 16-12 with less than five minutes to play. The Eagles forced a three and out, but their offense could not kill the clock. Chicago got the ball back with less than two minutes left and Brian Griese, with his headset broken, commanded his own drive, marching his team down the field, completing the winning touchdown pass to Muhsin Muhammad with nine seconds remaining. The Eagles fell short on their final opportunity, as the Bears improved to 3-4 with the win. Q1 - PHI - 1:01 - David Akers 24-yard FG (PHI 3-0) Q2 - PHI - 4:08 - David Akers 33-yard FG (PHI 6-0) Q2 - CHI - 1:46 - Robbie Gould 31-yard FG (PHI 6-3) Q2 - PHI - 0:22 - David Akers 37-yard FG (PHI 9-3) Q3 - CHI - 8:04 - Robbie Gould 22-yard FG (PHI 9-6) Q4 - CHI - 14:52 - Robbie Gould 41-yard FG (9-9) Q4 - CHI - 9:21 - Robbie Gould 45-yard FG (CHI 12-9) Q4 - PHI - 4:57 - 13-yard TD pass from Donovan McNabb to Matt Schobel (Akers kick) (PHI 16-12) Q4 - CHI - 0:09 - 15-yard TD pass from Brian Griese to Muhsin Muhammad (Gould kick) (CHI 19-16) | How many points were scored in the first half? | {
"spans": [
"12"
],
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nfl_512 | 031e0aa7-dc89-4e66-a844-2e9604d3ea29 | The Eagles fell to the Chicago Bears in the closing seconds of the game. The first three quarters were essentially a battle of field goals. David Akers successfully converted all three of his first-half field goal attempts, the longest from 37 yards out. Robbie Gould was one for two, and the score was 9-3 Philadelphia at halftime. The Bears took the ball to the Eagles' one-yard line on their first drive of the third quarter, but settled for a field goal. Gould connected for two more field goals early in the fourth quarter to tie the game, then put the Bears ahead 12-9. On their ensuing possession, Donovan McNabb guided the Eagles down the field and fired a touchdown pass to tight end Matt Schobel, putting Philadelphia back on top 16-12 with less than five minutes to play. The Eagles forced a three and out, but their offense could not kill the clock. Chicago got the ball back with less than two minutes left and Brian Griese, with his headset broken, commanded his own drive, marching his team down the field, completing the winning touchdown pass to Muhsin Muhammad with nine seconds remaining. The Eagles fell short on their final opportunity, as the Bears improved to 3-4 with the win. Q1 - PHI - 1:01 - David Akers 24-yard FG (PHI 3-0) Q2 - PHI - 4:08 - David Akers 33-yard FG (PHI 6-0) Q2 - CHI - 1:46 - Robbie Gould 31-yard FG (PHI 6-3) Q2 - PHI - 0:22 - David Akers 37-yard FG (PHI 9-3) Q3 - CHI - 8:04 - Robbie Gould 22-yard FG (PHI 9-6) Q4 - CHI - 14:52 - Robbie Gould 41-yard FG (9-9) Q4 - CHI - 9:21 - Robbie Gould 45-yard FG (CHI 12-9) Q4 - PHI - 4:57 - 13-yard TD pass from Donovan McNabb to Matt Schobel (Akers kick) (PHI 16-12) Q4 - CHI - 0:09 - 15-yard TD pass from Brian Griese to Muhsin Muhammad (Gould kick) (CHI 19-16) | How many more field goals did hot convert in the first half? | {
"spans": [
"1"
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nfl_512 | 84f89bc5-185e-418b-a6ce-3a71ac7a05ff | The Eagles fell to the Chicago Bears in the closing seconds of the game. The first three quarters were essentially a battle of field goals. David Akers successfully converted all three of his first-half field goal attempts, the longest from 37 yards out. Robbie Gould was one for two, and the score was 9-3 Philadelphia at halftime. The Bears took the ball to the Eagles' one-yard line on their first drive of the third quarter, but settled for a field goal. Gould connected for two more field goals early in the fourth quarter to tie the game, then put the Bears ahead 12-9. On their ensuing possession, Donovan McNabb guided the Eagles down the field and fired a touchdown pass to tight end Matt Schobel, putting Philadelphia back on top 16-12 with less than five minutes to play. The Eagles forced a three and out, but their offense could not kill the clock. Chicago got the ball back with less than two minutes left and Brian Griese, with his headset broken, commanded his own drive, marching his team down the field, completing the winning touchdown pass to Muhsin Muhammad with nine seconds remaining. The Eagles fell short on their final opportunity, as the Bears improved to 3-4 with the win. Q1 - PHI - 1:01 - David Akers 24-yard FG (PHI 3-0) Q2 - PHI - 4:08 - David Akers 33-yard FG (PHI 6-0) Q2 - CHI - 1:46 - Robbie Gould 31-yard FG (PHI 6-3) Q2 - PHI - 0:22 - David Akers 37-yard FG (PHI 9-3) Q3 - CHI - 8:04 - Robbie Gould 22-yard FG (PHI 9-6) Q4 - CHI - 14:52 - Robbie Gould 41-yard FG (9-9) Q4 - CHI - 9:21 - Robbie Gould 45-yard FG (CHI 12-9) Q4 - PHI - 4:57 - 13-yard TD pass from Donovan McNabb to Matt Schobel (Akers kick) (PHI 16-12) Q4 - CHI - 0:09 - 15-yard TD pass from Brian Griese to Muhsin Muhammad (Gould kick) (CHI 19-16) | How many more field goals did David Akers make than Robbie Gould in the first half? | {
"spans": [
"2"
],
"types": [
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} |
nfl_512 | d3c28a12-4ef0-4a34-9daf-e4ee21c89b73 | The Eagles fell to the Chicago Bears in the closing seconds of the game. The first three quarters were essentially a battle of field goals. David Akers successfully converted all three of his first-half field goal attempts, the longest from 37 yards out. Robbie Gould was one for two, and the score was 9-3 Philadelphia at halftime. The Bears took the ball to the Eagles' one-yard line on their first drive of the third quarter, but settled for a field goal. Gould connected for two more field goals early in the fourth quarter to tie the game, then put the Bears ahead 12-9. On their ensuing possession, Donovan McNabb guided the Eagles down the field and fired a touchdown pass to tight end Matt Schobel, putting Philadelphia back on top 16-12 with less than five minutes to play. The Eagles forced a three and out, but their offense could not kill the clock. Chicago got the ball back with less than two minutes left and Brian Griese, with his headset broken, commanded his own drive, marching his team down the field, completing the winning touchdown pass to Muhsin Muhammad with nine seconds remaining. The Eagles fell short on their final opportunity, as the Bears improved to 3-4 with the win. Q1 - PHI - 1:01 - David Akers 24-yard FG (PHI 3-0) Q2 - PHI - 4:08 - David Akers 33-yard FG (PHI 6-0) Q2 - CHI - 1:46 - Robbie Gould 31-yard FG (PHI 6-3) Q2 - PHI - 0:22 - David Akers 37-yard FG (PHI 9-3) Q3 - CHI - 8:04 - Robbie Gould 22-yard FG (PHI 9-6) Q4 - CHI - 14:52 - Robbie Gould 41-yard FG (9-9) Q4 - CHI - 9:21 - Robbie Gould 45-yard FG (CHI 12-9) Q4 - PHI - 4:57 - 13-yard TD pass from Donovan McNabb to Matt Schobel (Akers kick) (PHI 16-12) Q4 - CHI - 0:09 - 15-yard TD pass from Brian Griese to Muhsin Muhammad (Gould kick) (CHI 19-16) | At the end of the first half, how many points had been scored in total? | {
"spans": [
"12"
],
"types": [
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]
} |
nfl_512 | 5a6d7e8a-f2d1-450a-b3a7-d1803ad4dedc | The Eagles fell to the Chicago Bears in the closing seconds of the game. The first three quarters were essentially a battle of field goals. David Akers successfully converted all three of his first-half field goal attempts, the longest from 37 yards out. Robbie Gould was one for two, and the score was 9-3 Philadelphia at halftime. The Bears took the ball to the Eagles' one-yard line on their first drive of the third quarter, but settled for a field goal. Gould connected for two more field goals early in the fourth quarter to tie the game, then put the Bears ahead 12-9. On their ensuing possession, Donovan McNabb guided the Eagles down the field and fired a touchdown pass to tight end Matt Schobel, putting Philadelphia back on top 16-12 with less than five minutes to play. The Eagles forced a three and out, but their offense could not kill the clock. Chicago got the ball back with less than two minutes left and Brian Griese, with his headset broken, commanded his own drive, marching his team down the field, completing the winning touchdown pass to Muhsin Muhammad with nine seconds remaining. The Eagles fell short on their final opportunity, as the Bears improved to 3-4 with the win. Q1 - PHI - 1:01 - David Akers 24-yard FG (PHI 3-0) Q2 - PHI - 4:08 - David Akers 33-yard FG (PHI 6-0) Q2 - CHI - 1:46 - Robbie Gould 31-yard FG (PHI 6-3) Q2 - PHI - 0:22 - David Akers 37-yard FG (PHI 9-3) Q3 - CHI - 8:04 - Robbie Gould 22-yard FG (PHI 9-6) Q4 - CHI - 14:52 - Robbie Gould 41-yard FG (9-9) Q4 - CHI - 9:21 - Robbie Gould 45-yard FG (CHI 12-9) Q4 - PHI - 4:57 - 13-yard TD pass from Donovan McNabb to Matt Schobel (Akers kick) (PHI 16-12) Q4 - CHI - 0:09 - 15-yard TD pass from Brian Griese to Muhsin Muhammad (Gould kick) (CHI 19-16) | How many more points did the Eagles have at the end of the first half? | {
"spans": [
"6"
],
"types": [
"number"
]
} |
nfl_512 | a4fa9aae-a478-469c-9b2e-926c6f32e08a | The Eagles fell to the Chicago Bears in the closing seconds of the game. The first three quarters were essentially a battle of field goals. David Akers successfully converted all three of his first-half field goal attempts, the longest from 37 yards out. Robbie Gould was one for two, and the score was 9-3 Philadelphia at halftime. The Bears took the ball to the Eagles' one-yard line on their first drive of the third quarter, but settled for a field goal. Gould connected for two more field goals early in the fourth quarter to tie the game, then put the Bears ahead 12-9. On their ensuing possession, Donovan McNabb guided the Eagles down the field and fired a touchdown pass to tight end Matt Schobel, putting Philadelphia back on top 16-12 with less than five minutes to play. The Eagles forced a three and out, but their offense could not kill the clock. Chicago got the ball back with less than two minutes left and Brian Griese, with his headset broken, commanded his own drive, marching his team down the field, completing the winning touchdown pass to Muhsin Muhammad with nine seconds remaining. The Eagles fell short on their final opportunity, as the Bears improved to 3-4 with the win. Q1 - PHI - 1:01 - David Akers 24-yard FG (PHI 3-0) Q2 - PHI - 4:08 - David Akers 33-yard FG (PHI 6-0) Q2 - CHI - 1:46 - Robbie Gould 31-yard FG (PHI 6-3) Q2 - PHI - 0:22 - David Akers 37-yard FG (PHI 9-3) Q3 - CHI - 8:04 - Robbie Gould 22-yard FG (PHI 9-6) Q4 - CHI - 14:52 - Robbie Gould 41-yard FG (9-9) Q4 - CHI - 9:21 - Robbie Gould 45-yard FG (CHI 12-9) Q4 - PHI - 4:57 - 13-yard TD pass from Donovan McNabb to Matt Schobel (Akers kick) (PHI 16-12) Q4 - CHI - 0:09 - 15-yard TD pass from Brian Griese to Muhsin Muhammad (Gould kick) (CHI 19-16) | How many touchdowns were scored in the second half of the game? | {
"spans": [
"2"
],
"types": [
"number"
]
} |
nfl_983 | b0f1200f-0397-4320-89eb-7a772a77ad6a | Coming off their bye week, the Bears stayed at home for a Week 9 NFC North rematch with the Detroit Lions. In the first quarter, Chicago drew first blood as kicker Robbie Gould got a 36-yard field goal, while QB Kyle Orton got a 5-yard TD run. In the second quarter, the Lions responded with RB Kevin Smith getting a 1-yard TD run, along with QB Dan Orlovsky completing a 17-yard TD pass to WR Calvin Johnson and a 14-yard TD pass to WR Shaun McDonald. The Bears would respond with Gould getting a 41-yard field goal, yet Detroit replied with kicker Jason Hanson getting a 52-yard field goal. In the third quarter, Chicago began to rally as QB Rex Grossman completed a 6-yard TD pass to WR Rashied Davis. In the fourth quarter, the Bears completed their comeback as Grossman got a 1-yard TD run. The Lions tried to come back, but Chicago's defense prevented any possible rally from happening. Kyle Orton (8/14 for 108 yards) left the game in the second quarter with a sprained right ankle. Q1 - CHI - 11:19 - Robbie Gould 36 yd FG (CHI 3-0) Q1 - CHI - 4:40 - Kyle Orton 5 yd TD run (Gould kick) (CHI 10-0) Q2 - DET - 13:25 - Kevin Smith 1 yd TD run (Jason Hanson kick blocked) (CHI 10-6) Q2 - DET - 13:14 - 17 yd TD pass from Dan Orlovsky to Calvin Johnson (Hanson kick) (DET 13-10) Q2 - DET - 6:55 - 14 yd TD pass from Dan Orlovsky to Shaun McDonald (Hanson kick) (DET 20-10) Q2 - CHI - 4:46 - Robbie Gould 41 yd FG (DET 20-13) Q2 - DET - 1:10 - Jason Hanson 52 yd FG (DET 23-13) Q3 - CHI - 7:05 - 6 yd TD pass from Rex Grossman to Rashied Davis (Gould kick) (DET 23-20) Q4 - CHI - 5:44 - Rex Grossman 1 yd TD run (Gould kick) (CHI 27-23) | What they drew ? | {
"spans": [
"first blood as kicker Robbie"
],
"types": [
"span"
]
} |
nfl_983 | 4bada1e2-049d-4c42-af19-b8c0e138ad0f | Coming off their bye week, the Bears stayed at home for a Week 9 NFC North rematch with the Detroit Lions. In the first quarter, Chicago drew first blood as kicker Robbie Gould got a 36-yard field goal, while QB Kyle Orton got a 5-yard TD run. In the second quarter, the Lions responded with RB Kevin Smith getting a 1-yard TD run, along with QB Dan Orlovsky completing a 17-yard TD pass to WR Calvin Johnson and a 14-yard TD pass to WR Shaun McDonald. The Bears would respond with Gould getting a 41-yard field goal, yet Detroit replied with kicker Jason Hanson getting a 52-yard field goal. In the third quarter, Chicago began to rally as QB Rex Grossman completed a 6-yard TD pass to WR Rashied Davis. In the fourth quarter, the Bears completed their comeback as Grossman got a 1-yard TD run. The Lions tried to come back, but Chicago's defense prevented any possible rally from happening. Kyle Orton (8/14 for 108 yards) left the game in the second quarter with a sprained right ankle. Q1 - CHI - 11:19 - Robbie Gould 36 yd FG (CHI 3-0) Q1 - CHI - 4:40 - Kyle Orton 5 yd TD run (Gould kick) (CHI 10-0) Q2 - DET - 13:25 - Kevin Smith 1 yd TD run (Jason Hanson kick blocked) (CHI 10-6) Q2 - DET - 13:14 - 17 yd TD pass from Dan Orlovsky to Calvin Johnson (Hanson kick) (DET 13-10) Q2 - DET - 6:55 - 14 yd TD pass from Dan Orlovsky to Shaun McDonald (Hanson kick) (DET 20-10) Q2 - CHI - 4:46 - Robbie Gould 41 yd FG (DET 20-13) Q2 - DET - 1:10 - Jason Hanson 52 yd FG (DET 23-13) Q3 - CHI - 7:05 - 6 yd TD pass from Rex Grossman to Rashied Davis (Gould kick) (DET 23-20) Q4 - CHI - 5:44 - Rex Grossman 1 yd TD run (Gould kick) (CHI 27-23) | How many yard they completed in field goal? | {
"spans": [
"41"
],
"types": [
"number"
]
} |
nfl_983 | eaa82cdd-a447-4a9f-95d0-130ceb1d6468 | Coming off their bye week, the Bears stayed at home for a Week 9 NFC North rematch with the Detroit Lions. In the first quarter, Chicago drew first blood as kicker Robbie Gould got a 36-yard field goal, while QB Kyle Orton got a 5-yard TD run. In the second quarter, the Lions responded with RB Kevin Smith getting a 1-yard TD run, along with QB Dan Orlovsky completing a 17-yard TD pass to WR Calvin Johnson and a 14-yard TD pass to WR Shaun McDonald. The Bears would respond with Gould getting a 41-yard field goal, yet Detroit replied with kicker Jason Hanson getting a 52-yard field goal. In the third quarter, Chicago began to rally as QB Rex Grossman completed a 6-yard TD pass to WR Rashied Davis. In the fourth quarter, the Bears completed their comeback as Grossman got a 1-yard TD run. The Lions tried to come back, but Chicago's defense prevented any possible rally from happening. Kyle Orton (8/14 for 108 yards) left the game in the second quarter with a sprained right ankle. Q1 - CHI - 11:19 - Robbie Gould 36 yd FG (CHI 3-0) Q1 - CHI - 4:40 - Kyle Orton 5 yd TD run (Gould kick) (CHI 10-0) Q2 - DET - 13:25 - Kevin Smith 1 yd TD run (Jason Hanson kick blocked) (CHI 10-6) Q2 - DET - 13:14 - 17 yd TD pass from Dan Orlovsky to Calvin Johnson (Hanson kick) (DET 13-10) Q2 - DET - 6:55 - 14 yd TD pass from Dan Orlovsky to Shaun McDonald (Hanson kick) (DET 20-10) Q2 - CHI - 4:46 - Robbie Gould 41 yd FG (DET 20-13) Q2 - DET - 1:10 - Jason Hanson 52 yd FG (DET 23-13) Q3 - CHI - 7:05 - 6 yd TD pass from Rex Grossman to Rashied Davis (Gould kick) (DET 23-20) Q4 - CHI - 5:44 - Rex Grossman 1 yd TD run (Gould kick) (CHI 27-23) | What all field goals did Robbie Gould make? | {
"spans": [
"36-yard",
"41-yard"
],
"types": [
"span",
"span"
]
} |
nfl_983 | 95ca121c-e8ad-486b-b2eb-baec50b4eff0 | Coming off their bye week, the Bears stayed at home for a Week 9 NFC North rematch with the Detroit Lions. In the first quarter, Chicago drew first blood as kicker Robbie Gould got a 36-yard field goal, while QB Kyle Orton got a 5-yard TD run. In the second quarter, the Lions responded with RB Kevin Smith getting a 1-yard TD run, along with QB Dan Orlovsky completing a 17-yard TD pass to WR Calvin Johnson and a 14-yard TD pass to WR Shaun McDonald. The Bears would respond with Gould getting a 41-yard field goal, yet Detroit replied with kicker Jason Hanson getting a 52-yard field goal. In the third quarter, Chicago began to rally as QB Rex Grossman completed a 6-yard TD pass to WR Rashied Davis. In the fourth quarter, the Bears completed their comeback as Grossman got a 1-yard TD run. The Lions tried to come back, but Chicago's defense prevented any possible rally from happening. Kyle Orton (8/14 for 108 yards) left the game in the second quarter with a sprained right ankle. Q1 - CHI - 11:19 - Robbie Gould 36 yd FG (CHI 3-0) Q1 - CHI - 4:40 - Kyle Orton 5 yd TD run (Gould kick) (CHI 10-0) Q2 - DET - 13:25 - Kevin Smith 1 yd TD run (Jason Hanson kick blocked) (CHI 10-6) Q2 - DET - 13:14 - 17 yd TD pass from Dan Orlovsky to Calvin Johnson (Hanson kick) (DET 13-10) Q2 - DET - 6:55 - 14 yd TD pass from Dan Orlovsky to Shaun McDonald (Hanson kick) (DET 20-10) Q2 - CHI - 4:46 - Robbie Gould 41 yd FG (DET 20-13) Q2 - DET - 1:10 - Jason Hanson 52 yd FG (DET 23-13) Q3 - CHI - 7:05 - 6 yd TD pass from Rex Grossman to Rashied Davis (Gould kick) (DET 23-20) Q4 - CHI - 5:44 - Rex Grossman 1 yd TD run (Gould kick) (CHI 27-23) | How many yards difference was Robbie Gould's longest and shortest field goal? | {
"spans": [
"5"
],
"types": [
"number"
]
} |
nfl_983 | befd3a00-4f8d-42e7-8fb8-affaa3370af6 | Coming off their bye week, the Bears stayed at home for a Week 9 NFC North rematch with the Detroit Lions. In the first quarter, Chicago drew first blood as kicker Robbie Gould got a 36-yard field goal, while QB Kyle Orton got a 5-yard TD run. In the second quarter, the Lions responded with RB Kevin Smith getting a 1-yard TD run, along with QB Dan Orlovsky completing a 17-yard TD pass to WR Calvin Johnson and a 14-yard TD pass to WR Shaun McDonald. The Bears would respond with Gould getting a 41-yard field goal, yet Detroit replied with kicker Jason Hanson getting a 52-yard field goal. In the third quarter, Chicago began to rally as QB Rex Grossman completed a 6-yard TD pass to WR Rashied Davis. In the fourth quarter, the Bears completed their comeback as Grossman got a 1-yard TD run. The Lions tried to come back, but Chicago's defense prevented any possible rally from happening. Kyle Orton (8/14 for 108 yards) left the game in the second quarter with a sprained right ankle. Q1 - CHI - 11:19 - Robbie Gould 36 yd FG (CHI 3-0) Q1 - CHI - 4:40 - Kyle Orton 5 yd TD run (Gould kick) (CHI 10-0) Q2 - DET - 13:25 - Kevin Smith 1 yd TD run (Jason Hanson kick blocked) (CHI 10-6) Q2 - DET - 13:14 - 17 yd TD pass from Dan Orlovsky to Calvin Johnson (Hanson kick) (DET 13-10) Q2 - DET - 6:55 - 14 yd TD pass from Dan Orlovsky to Shaun McDonald (Hanson kick) (DET 20-10) Q2 - CHI - 4:46 - Robbie Gould 41 yd FG (DET 20-13) Q2 - DET - 1:10 - Jason Hanson 52 yd FG (DET 23-13) Q3 - CHI - 7:05 - 6 yd TD pass from Rex Grossman to Rashied Davis (Gould kick) (DET 23-20) Q4 - CHI - 5:44 - Rex Grossman 1 yd TD run (Gould kick) (CHI 27-23) | What all touchdowns did Dan Orlovsky make? | {
"spans": [
"17-yard",
"14-yard"
],
"types": [
"span",
"span"
]
} |
nfl_983 | e319c6f7-0ce2-41e5-b4be-8697b97e9419 | Coming off their bye week, the Bears stayed at home for a Week 9 NFC North rematch with the Detroit Lions. In the first quarter, Chicago drew first blood as kicker Robbie Gould got a 36-yard field goal, while QB Kyle Orton got a 5-yard TD run. In the second quarter, the Lions responded with RB Kevin Smith getting a 1-yard TD run, along with QB Dan Orlovsky completing a 17-yard TD pass to WR Calvin Johnson and a 14-yard TD pass to WR Shaun McDonald. The Bears would respond with Gould getting a 41-yard field goal, yet Detroit replied with kicker Jason Hanson getting a 52-yard field goal. In the third quarter, Chicago began to rally as QB Rex Grossman completed a 6-yard TD pass to WR Rashied Davis. In the fourth quarter, the Bears completed their comeback as Grossman got a 1-yard TD run. The Lions tried to come back, but Chicago's defense prevented any possible rally from happening. Kyle Orton (8/14 for 108 yards) left the game in the second quarter with a sprained right ankle. Q1 - CHI - 11:19 - Robbie Gould 36 yd FG (CHI 3-0) Q1 - CHI - 4:40 - Kyle Orton 5 yd TD run (Gould kick) (CHI 10-0) Q2 - DET - 13:25 - Kevin Smith 1 yd TD run (Jason Hanson kick blocked) (CHI 10-6) Q2 - DET - 13:14 - 17 yd TD pass from Dan Orlovsky to Calvin Johnson (Hanson kick) (DET 13-10) Q2 - DET - 6:55 - 14 yd TD pass from Dan Orlovsky to Shaun McDonald (Hanson kick) (DET 20-10) Q2 - CHI - 4:46 - Robbie Gould 41 yd FG (DET 20-13) Q2 - DET - 1:10 - Jason Hanson 52 yd FG (DET 23-13) Q3 - CHI - 7:05 - 6 yd TD pass from Rex Grossman to Rashied Davis (Gould kick) (DET 23-20) Q4 - CHI - 5:44 - Rex Grossman 1 yd TD run (Gould kick) (CHI 27-23) | Which all players caught touchdown passes from Dan Orlovsky? | {
"spans": [
"Calvin Johnson",
"Shaun McDonald"
],
"types": [
"span",
"span"
]
} |
nfl_983 | cd275dd6-9227-4db6-af91-609664dce5b8 | Coming off their bye week, the Bears stayed at home for a Week 9 NFC North rematch with the Detroit Lions. In the first quarter, Chicago drew first blood as kicker Robbie Gould got a 36-yard field goal, while QB Kyle Orton got a 5-yard TD run. In the second quarter, the Lions responded with RB Kevin Smith getting a 1-yard TD run, along with QB Dan Orlovsky completing a 17-yard TD pass to WR Calvin Johnson and a 14-yard TD pass to WR Shaun McDonald. The Bears would respond with Gould getting a 41-yard field goal, yet Detroit replied with kicker Jason Hanson getting a 52-yard field goal. In the third quarter, Chicago began to rally as QB Rex Grossman completed a 6-yard TD pass to WR Rashied Davis. In the fourth quarter, the Bears completed their comeback as Grossman got a 1-yard TD run. The Lions tried to come back, but Chicago's defense prevented any possible rally from happening. Kyle Orton (8/14 for 108 yards) left the game in the second quarter with a sprained right ankle. Q1 - CHI - 11:19 - Robbie Gould 36 yd FG (CHI 3-0) Q1 - CHI - 4:40 - Kyle Orton 5 yd TD run (Gould kick) (CHI 10-0) Q2 - DET - 13:25 - Kevin Smith 1 yd TD run (Jason Hanson kick blocked) (CHI 10-6) Q2 - DET - 13:14 - 17 yd TD pass from Dan Orlovsky to Calvin Johnson (Hanson kick) (DET 13-10) Q2 - DET - 6:55 - 14 yd TD pass from Dan Orlovsky to Shaun McDonald (Hanson kick) (DET 20-10) Q2 - CHI - 4:46 - Robbie Gould 41 yd FG (DET 20-13) Q2 - DET - 1:10 - Jason Hanson 52 yd FG (DET 23-13) Q3 - CHI - 7:05 - 6 yd TD pass from Rex Grossman to Rashied Davis (Gould kick) (DET 23-20) Q4 - CHI - 5:44 - Rex Grossman 1 yd TD run (Gould kick) (CHI 27-23) | How many field goals between 35 and 45 yards were scored? | {
"spans": [
"2"
],
"types": [
"number"
]
} |
nfl_983 | 279cc270-0f65-4877-85e1-3fbd69b65231 | Coming off their bye week, the Bears stayed at home for a Week 9 NFC North rematch with the Detroit Lions. In the first quarter, Chicago drew first blood as kicker Robbie Gould got a 36-yard field goal, while QB Kyle Orton got a 5-yard TD run. In the second quarter, the Lions responded with RB Kevin Smith getting a 1-yard TD run, along with QB Dan Orlovsky completing a 17-yard TD pass to WR Calvin Johnson and a 14-yard TD pass to WR Shaun McDonald. The Bears would respond with Gould getting a 41-yard field goal, yet Detroit replied with kicker Jason Hanson getting a 52-yard field goal. In the third quarter, Chicago began to rally as QB Rex Grossman completed a 6-yard TD pass to WR Rashied Davis. In the fourth quarter, the Bears completed their comeback as Grossman got a 1-yard TD run. The Lions tried to come back, but Chicago's defense prevented any possible rally from happening. Kyle Orton (8/14 for 108 yards) left the game in the second quarter with a sprained right ankle. Q1 - CHI - 11:19 - Robbie Gould 36 yd FG (CHI 3-0) Q1 - CHI - 4:40 - Kyle Orton 5 yd TD run (Gould kick) (CHI 10-0) Q2 - DET - 13:25 - Kevin Smith 1 yd TD run (Jason Hanson kick blocked) (CHI 10-6) Q2 - DET - 13:14 - 17 yd TD pass from Dan Orlovsky to Calvin Johnson (Hanson kick) (DET 13-10) Q2 - DET - 6:55 - 14 yd TD pass from Dan Orlovsky to Shaun McDonald (Hanson kick) (DET 20-10) Q2 - CHI - 4:46 - Robbie Gould 41 yd FG (DET 20-13) Q2 - DET - 1:10 - Jason Hanson 52 yd FG (DET 23-13) Q3 - CHI - 7:05 - 6 yd TD pass from Rex Grossman to Rashied Davis (Gould kick) (DET 23-20) Q4 - CHI - 5:44 - Rex Grossman 1 yd TD run (Gould kick) (CHI 27-23) | Which players scored touchdowns from one yard? | {
"spans": [
"Kevin Smith",
"Grossman"
],
"types": [
"span",
"span"
]
} |
nfl_983 | 14787b40-3a3a-4571-8897-63eafd12b062 | Coming off their bye week, the Bears stayed at home for a Week 9 NFC North rematch with the Detroit Lions. In the first quarter, Chicago drew first blood as kicker Robbie Gould got a 36-yard field goal, while QB Kyle Orton got a 5-yard TD run. In the second quarter, the Lions responded with RB Kevin Smith getting a 1-yard TD run, along with QB Dan Orlovsky completing a 17-yard TD pass to WR Calvin Johnson and a 14-yard TD pass to WR Shaun McDonald. The Bears would respond with Gould getting a 41-yard field goal, yet Detroit replied with kicker Jason Hanson getting a 52-yard field goal. In the third quarter, Chicago began to rally as QB Rex Grossman completed a 6-yard TD pass to WR Rashied Davis. In the fourth quarter, the Bears completed their comeback as Grossman got a 1-yard TD run. The Lions tried to come back, but Chicago's defense prevented any possible rally from happening. Kyle Orton (8/14 for 108 yards) left the game in the second quarter with a sprained right ankle. Q1 - CHI - 11:19 - Robbie Gould 36 yd FG (CHI 3-0) Q1 - CHI - 4:40 - Kyle Orton 5 yd TD run (Gould kick) (CHI 10-0) Q2 - DET - 13:25 - Kevin Smith 1 yd TD run (Jason Hanson kick blocked) (CHI 10-6) Q2 - DET - 13:14 - 17 yd TD pass from Dan Orlovsky to Calvin Johnson (Hanson kick) (DET 13-10) Q2 - DET - 6:55 - 14 yd TD pass from Dan Orlovsky to Shaun McDonald (Hanson kick) (DET 20-10) Q2 - CHI - 4:46 - Robbie Gould 41 yd FG (DET 20-13) Q2 - DET - 1:10 - Jason Hanson 52 yd FG (DET 23-13) Q3 - CHI - 7:05 - 6 yd TD pass from Rex Grossman to Rashied Davis (Gould kick) (DET 23-20) Q4 - CHI - 5:44 - Rex Grossman 1 yd TD run (Gould kick) (CHI 27-23) | Which quarterback had the longest touchdown run? | {
"spans": [
"Kyle Orton"
],
"types": [
"span"
]
} |
nfl_983 | df7f7c7f-45e6-4a18-8f2a-4830bf58e372 | Coming off their bye week, the Bears stayed at home for a Week 9 NFC North rematch with the Detroit Lions. In the first quarter, Chicago drew first blood as kicker Robbie Gould got a 36-yard field goal, while QB Kyle Orton got a 5-yard TD run. In the second quarter, the Lions responded with RB Kevin Smith getting a 1-yard TD run, along with QB Dan Orlovsky completing a 17-yard TD pass to WR Calvin Johnson and a 14-yard TD pass to WR Shaun McDonald. The Bears would respond with Gould getting a 41-yard field goal, yet Detroit replied with kicker Jason Hanson getting a 52-yard field goal. In the third quarter, Chicago began to rally as QB Rex Grossman completed a 6-yard TD pass to WR Rashied Davis. In the fourth quarter, the Bears completed their comeback as Grossman got a 1-yard TD run. The Lions tried to come back, but Chicago's defense prevented any possible rally from happening. Kyle Orton (8/14 for 108 yards) left the game in the second quarter with a sprained right ankle. Q1 - CHI - 11:19 - Robbie Gould 36 yd FG (CHI 3-0) Q1 - CHI - 4:40 - Kyle Orton 5 yd TD run (Gould kick) (CHI 10-0) Q2 - DET - 13:25 - Kevin Smith 1 yd TD run (Jason Hanson kick blocked) (CHI 10-6) Q2 - DET - 13:14 - 17 yd TD pass from Dan Orlovsky to Calvin Johnson (Hanson kick) (DET 13-10) Q2 - DET - 6:55 - 14 yd TD pass from Dan Orlovsky to Shaun McDonald (Hanson kick) (DET 20-10) Q2 - CHI - 4:46 - Robbie Gould 41 yd FG (DET 20-13) Q2 - DET - 1:10 - Jason Hanson 52 yd FG (DET 23-13) Q3 - CHI - 7:05 - 6 yd TD pass from Rex Grossman to Rashied Davis (Gould kick) (DET 23-20) Q4 - CHI - 5:44 - Rex Grossman 1 yd TD run (Gould kick) (CHI 27-23) | Who scored the last touchdown of the game? | {
"spans": [
"Rex Grossman"
],
"types": [
"span"
]
} |
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