Waterloo Region Record

Patriots game

Patriots, Brady, Belichick prove they’re the NFL’s best. Ever.

- Adam Kilgore and Liz Clarke

New England Patriots oach Bill Belichick, left, quarterbac­k Tom Brady, centre, and running back LeGarrette Blount celebrate after defeating the Atlanta Falcons during Super Bowl 51 at NRG Stadium onSunday night in Houston, Texas. The Patriots defeated the Falcons 34-28 in overtime. More on the Super Bowl:

New England quarterbac­k Tom Brady claimed his fifth National Football League title Sunday night in a fashion beyond imaginatio­n, leading the Patriots’ historic comeback from a 25point deficit and lifting his club to a 34-28 victory in the first Super Bowl ever to reach overtime.

Having started the season on a fourgame suspension levied by NFL commission­er Roger Goodell, Brady ended it by stamping himself the greatest quarterbac­k of all time without any legitimate doubt, kneeling on the NRG Stadium turf, his face in the ground, before coach Bill Belichick embraced him.

“You the (expletive) greatest,” Patriots running back LeGarrette Blount told Brady, pounding his chest.

No team has ever come back from more than 10 points to win the Super Bowl — until the New England Patriots. The Patriots needed the first overtime in Super Bowl history, after 50 Super Bowls without an extra period, but erased a 25-point third-quarter deficit to the Atlanta Falcons highlighte­d by a 91-yard, game-tying touchdown drive with less than a minute left in the fourth quarter to force overtime.

New England’s James White scored the game-winning touchdown on a twoyard run.

Regulation ended in scary fashion. Dion Lewis, a running back with a history of leg injuries, rolled his right ankle and collapsed without anyone making contact with him. Lewis was running down the left sideline on a trick play — the Patriots faked a kneel down with three seconds left, but the play never threatened to result in a score.

Fittingly, the first-ever Super Bowl overtime was set up by one of the more incredible catches in Super Bowl history. The Patriots have been the victims of miracle catches in the Super Bowl. In the fourth quarter of Super Bowl LI, one injected life into their attempt at a historic comeback.

Brady led the Patriots on a 91-yard touchdown drive which, combined with a two-point conversion, tied the game at 28 with less than a minute remaining, erasing the 25-point lead the Atlanta Falcons held deep into the third quarter.

The key play was magic, provided by Julian Edelman.

With the ball, down 28-20, having already scored 17 consecutiv­e points, Brady dropped back to pass and lofted a pass deep down the middle in the direction of Edelman, whom the Falcons had surrounded with three defenders. After a deflection, Edelman dove, fully extended his arms and trapped the ball against a Falcons defender’s leg.

Atlanta challenged the call, but the ruling remained: It was a catch by Edelman, a 23-yard gain to the Atlanta 41, in a drive that started on the Patriots’ own nine.

David Tyree’s helmet catch from the 2008 Super Bowl immediatel­y played on the Fox broadcast. For obvious reasons.

The drive finished when James White plunged into the end zone, and Brady tied it with a swing screen pass to Danny Amendola for a two-point conversion.

Trailing by 16 in the fourth quarter of Super Bowl LI, the reeling New England Patriots desperatel­y needed a gamechangi­ng play. They got exactly that — and promptly cashed in the opportunit­y to suddenly move within one possession of tying the score.

Linebacker Dont’a Hightower sacked and stripped the ball from Falcons quarterbac­k Matt Ryan on third-and-long, smashing Ryan’s blindside after the Falcons botched a blocking assignment. Defensive tackle Alan Branch recovered at the Atlanta 25-yard line.

Five plays later, Brady found Danny Amendola for a touchdown. They added a two-point conversion on a direct snap to running back James White, pulling to 28-20 with five minutes, 56 seconds left.

In the third quarter, Brady hit running back James White for a touchdown. But the 13-play, 75-yard drive took six minutes, 23 seconds, draining clock the Patriots will need for them to come all the way back.

And, to make matters work, Gostkowski missed the extra point, doinking it off the right upright.

Adding to the Pats’ problems following their TD, they then attempted an onside kick, which the Falcons recovered despite an illegal-touching penalty on the Pats.

The Falcons — fittingly referred to as “the other team” by U.S. President Donald Trump during his pregame show interview — stunned the favoured Patriots in the first half and took a commanding, 21-3 lead into halftime. A sixyard pass from MVP Matt Ryan to Tevin Coleman on the Falcons’ second drive of the third quarter extended the margin to 28-3.

The Falcons threatened to spoil the delicious storyline of Goodell handing the Lombardi Trophy to Brady, whom Goodell suspended for four games at the start of the season, stemming from the Deflategat­e controvers­y.

 ?? KEVIN C. COX, GETTY IMAGES ??
KEVIN C. COX, GETTY IMAGES
 ?? EZRA SHAW, GETTY IMAGES ?? Tom Brady of the New England Patriots celebrates after James White scored a touchdown during overtime of Super Bowl LI at NRG Stadium in Houston on Sunday night. The Pats made a great comeback.
EZRA SHAW, GETTY IMAGES Tom Brady of the New England Patriots celebrates after James White scored a touchdown during overtime of Super Bowl LI at NRG Stadium in Houston on Sunday night. The Pats made a great comeback.
 ?? ERIC GAY, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Atlanta Falcons’ Matt Ryan fumbles as he is hit by New England Patriots’ Dont’a Hightower during the second half Sunday. Atlanta blew a 28-3 lead to lose.
ERIC GAY, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Atlanta Falcons’ Matt Ryan fumbles as he is hit by New England Patriots’ Dont’a Hightower during the second half Sunday. Atlanta blew a 28-3 lead to lose.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada