The Phnom Penh Post

Falcons, Patriots reach Super Bowl

- Rob Woollard

TOM Brady led the New England Patriots into t he seventh Super Bowl of his career on Sunday with a clinica l 36-17 defeat of t he Pittsburgh Steelers after t he At lanta Falcons routed the Green Bay Packers to reach the NFL showpiece.

Brady, 39, will now be chasing a record-equalling fifth Super Bowl crown in Houston on February 5 after throwing three touchdowns for 384 yards in a convincing defeat of the Steelers at Foxborough’s Gillette Stadium.

Brady’s latest Super Bowl appearance­s comes a full 15 years after he led the Patriots to victory over the St Louis Rams in the 2002 championsh­ip game.

“It’s incredible. The team showed a lot of mental toughness over the course of the year,” added Brady, who was suspended for the first four games of the season over for his role in the long-running “Deflategat­e” saga.

“I’m just happy for the team,” Brady added. “I know we’re playing a great team in a couple of weeks, but it’d be great to finish it off.”

Brady was at his deadly best on Sunday as the Bill Belichick-coached Pats outsmarted the Steelers with a series of clever plays which often left Pittsburgh’s defence chasing shadows.

After a field goal from Stephen Gostkowski opened the scoring for New England, Brady picked out wide open receiver Chris Hogan for the first touchdown with a 16-yard pass.

The Steelers responded with a 5-yard touchdown run from DeAngelo Williams which reduced the deficit, but Brady found Hogan once again with a clever play-fake that left the Patriots defender in acres of space to make it 17-6.

Ryan rampant as Falcons soar

Chris Boswell and Gostkowski traded field goals to keep the score respectabl­e, but New England took full control with two quick touchdowns in the third quarter from running back LeGarrette Blount and receiver Julian Edelman which propelled the hosts into a 33-9 lead.

Steelers quarterbac­k Ben Roethlisbe­rger endured a frustratin­g evening, unable to get any change out of a dominant Patriots defence until finding Cobi Hamilton with a 30-yard pass for a consolatio­n score late in the fourth quarter.

Earlier on Sunday, Matt Ryan led a dominant offensive display as Atlanta crushed Green Bay 44-21 in their last ever game at the Georgia Dome.

The Falcons surged into a 24-0 halftime lead after overwhelmi­ng the Packers defence with their varied running and passing game as Green Bay quarterbac­k Aaron Rodgers was never able to get going.

“We’ve got some more business at Houston in two weeks,” Ryan said after the Falcons were presented the NFC Championsh­ip trophy.

“We showed up. We did exactly what we’ve been doing all year. It feels really good,” added Ryan, who complet- ed 27 out of 38 pass attempts for 392 yards and four touchdowns.

Green Bay star Rodgers said Atlanta had just been too good. “We played a hot team. You’ve got to give them credit,” Rodgers said.

“Matt is playing incredible right now, and that’s a very good offence.”

Rodgers was left frustrated as the Packers squandered vital early scoring opportunit­ies through a missed Mason Crosby field goal and a fumble from Aaron Ripkowski near the Atlanta line with a touchdown begging.

“I feel like we hurt ourselves in the first half more than they really stopped us,” Rodgers said.

The Falcons, meanwhile, looked threatenin­g whenever they ventured into Green Bay territory.

Mohamed Sanu scored the opening touchdown from a flipped shovel pass from Ryan before the Atlanta quarterbac­k grabbed his team’s second sixpointer with a 14-yard run into the end zone.

Ryan punished a Rodgers intercepti­on with a pass to find Julio Jones from five yards, leaving the Falcons 24-0 ahead at the break.

Jones then galloped away for a 73yard touchdown in the opening minutes of the third quarter to put Atlanta 31-0 ahead.

Further Atlanta touchdowns came from Devonta Freeman and Tevin Coleman and although Green Bay attempted to give the scoreline some respectabi­lity with touchdowns from Jordy Nelson, Davante Adams, and Jared Cook, the result was never in doubt.

 ?? MADDIE MEYER/GETTY IMAGES/AFP ?? Tom Brady of the New England Patriots celebrates behind the AFC Championsh­ip trophy after the Pats defeated the Pittsburgh Steelers on Sunday.
MADDIE MEYER/GETTY IMAGES/AFP Tom Brady of the New England Patriots celebrates behind the AFC Championsh­ip trophy after the Pats defeated the Pittsburgh Steelers on Sunday.

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