The Phnom Penh Post

Brady’s Patriots to defend Super Bowl crown against the Eagles

-

DEFENDING champion New England booked a third Super Bowl trip in four seasons on Sunday, edging Jacksonvil­le 24-20 to reach an NFL championsh­ip showdown against the Philadelph­ia Eagles.

Five-time Super Bowl champion Tom Brady’s two fourth-quarter touchdown passes rallied the Patriots into Super Bowl 52 against an Eagles squad that routed Minnesota 38-7, humbling the Vikings’ top-rated defensive unit.

The Patriots boosted their record of Super Bowl appearance­s to 10 and could match Pittsburgh’s record six Super Bowl triumphs on February 4 at Minneapoli­s, Minnesota.

“It’s pretty crazy,” Brady said. “It’s pretty amazing to be on a team that wins these kind of games. It’s so great.”

Nick Foles, who took over as Philadelph­ia’s quarterbac­k last month after an injury to Carson Wentz, completed 26-of-33 passes for 352 yards and three touchdowns as the underdog Eagles humiliated the visitors.

“This moment, it’s unbelievab­le. It’s humbling,” Foles said. “The team was amazing. I’m a little speechless. It’s amazing soaking this all in. We all believe in each other. Everyone was against us. We came in here and came out with an amazing victory.”

It will be a rematch of Super Bowl 39 from 2005, when Brady threw two touchdown passes and the Patriots won 24-21 for their third title in four seasons, equal to the same run they could complete in two weeks.

“Now we have to go to Minnesota and finish the job,” Patriots owner Robert Kraft said.

The Eagles, whose two Super Bowl defeats also include 1981, last won an NFL title in 1960 before the Super Bowl era began.

Brady, who needed stitches for a right hand injury suffered on Wednesday in practice, lost his favourite target, tight end Rob Gronkowski, to a second-quarter concussion.

But the 40-year-old quarterbac­k completed 26-of-38 passes for 290 yards, 138 of them in the fourth quarter. “We said whatever it ta kes,” Brady said. “That was a great sec- ond half. Just so proud of our team. Amazing.”

Unkindest cut of all

Brady finally addressed t he Wednesday cut to his throwing hand that became a major pregame concern.

“It was just a pretty good cut. I dealt with it the best I could,” Brady said. “I’ve had a lot worse. Wednesday, Thursday and Friday were a little scary. I gained some confidence on Saturday and we did just enough to win.”

New England pulled within 2017 on Brady’s 9-yard touchdown pass to Danny Amendola with 8:44 remaining.

Amendola returned a punt 20 yards to the Jaguars’ 30-yard line, then made a diving catch and three plays later leaped high and made an acrobatic tiptoe landing for a 4-yard touchdown reception to create the final margin.

“It means a lot. We worked so hard for this,” said Amendola, who caught seven passes for 84 yards.

New England’s Stephon Gilmore batted down a fourth-down pass to halt the last Jaguars’ drive.

“We’ve got a lot of guys that fight and never give up, that know how to play situationa­l football,” Patriots coach Bill Belichick said. “I’m really proud of these guys.”

Foles shines as Eagles soar

Foles proved he can deliver in big games to doubters that wrote off the Eagles when Wentz went down.

“I’m so happy for Nick,” Eagles coach Doug Pederson said. “For everything he has been through and battled he has stayed true and stayed the course. We all believed in him.”

Case Keenum’s 25-yard touchdown pass to Kyle Rudolph opened the scoring for Minnesota, but Patrick Robinson returned an intercepte­d Keenum pass 50 yards for a touchdown to equalise at 7-7.

Former Patriot rusher LeGarrette Blount ran 11 yards for an Eagles touchdown and Foles followed with touchdown passes of 53 and five yards to Alshon Jeffery and 41 yards to Torrey Smith.

Eagles defensive end Chris Long, who played on New England’s 2017 Super Bowl champions, said they expected to shut down Minnesota.

“We’re not surprised at all,” Long said. “We just keep grinding.”

The Vikings, whose last Super Bowl was in 1977, would have been the first team to play a Super Bowl in its home stadium. Dome-based teams fell to 0-13 in outdoor conference championsh­ip contests.

 ?? JIM ROGASH/GETTY IMAGES/AFP ?? Star quarterbac­k Tom Brady holds aloft the Lamar Hunt trophy after the New England Patriots won the AFC Championsh­ip Game against the Jacksonvil­le Jaguars at Gillette Stadium on Sunday in Foxborough, Massachuse­tts.
JIM ROGASH/GETTY IMAGES/AFP Star quarterbac­k Tom Brady holds aloft the Lamar Hunt trophy after the New England Patriots won the AFC Championsh­ip Game against the Jacksonvil­le Jaguars at Gillette Stadium on Sunday in Foxborough, Massachuse­tts.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Cambodia