The language is pretty clear that it extends an existing warranty, and the extended coverage only covers the same types of costs covered by the original warranty. I do not think it is possible to construe it as creating a warranty where there wasn't one originally.
If you're within 120 days you could try Purchase Protection (for damage), or within 90 days you could try Return Protection. But I think if it's been a full year and there was no original warranty, there is no CSR protection that covers that.