The Province

Stage is set for league’s best QBs

Brady, Roethlisbe­rger, Rodgers and Ryan eye Super Bowl berths in Houston

- HOWARD FENDRICH

Tom Brady vs. Ben Roethlisbe­rger. Aaron Rodgers vs. Matt Ryan.

Quite a quartet of quarterbac­ks is heading to the NFL’s conference championsh­ip games next weekend: Brady’s New England Patriots host Roethlisbe­rger’s Pittsburgh Steelers in the AFC, and Rodgers’ Green Bay Packers play at Ryan’s Atlanta Falcons in the NFC.

Consider the collective bona fides: Among them, Brady, Roethlisbe­rger and Rodgers can boast of 10 Super Bowl appearance­s and seven titles, four Super Bowl MVP awards and four regular-season MVP awards. Not too bad.

Ryan, never a Super Bowl participan­t, is the least-accomplish­ed member of the final four, but he just so happens to be the quarterbac­k on the All-Pro team this season and the favourite to collect league MVP honours.

Brady and Rodgers also figure to get some votes for that accolade, which will be handed out the day before the Super Bowl in Houston on Feb. 5.

These four guys would love to be in town for that game, of course.

Rodgers and Ryan moved closer to playing for the Vince Lombardi Trophy with terrific divisional-round performanc­es, none more thrilling than Green Bay’s 34-31 win over the Dallas Cowboys.

Running to his left, and running out of time and territory on a thirdand-20, Rodgers whipped his wrist for a 36-yard completion to tight end Jared Cook, who barely managed to scrape the toes of each shoe inbounds before tumbling to the sideline with 3 seconds remaining. That set up Mason Crosby’s game-ending 51-yard field goal.

“This one’s special,” Rodgers said. “More special than we’ve had around here in a while.”

All Ryan did Saturday was throw for 338 yards, three TDs and no intercepti­ons to beat the Seattle Seahawks 36-20.

The AFC quarterbac­ks were not as impressive as their NFC counterpar­ts this weekend, but did enough to get by.

Roethlisbe­rger threw an end zone intercepti­on and failed to produce a TD, but Chris Boswell’s post-season-record six field goals helped the Steelers get past the Kansas City Chiefs 18-16 on Sunday. Brady was picked off twice — equalling his season total — but the Patriots still defeated the overmatche­d Houston Texans 34-16 on Saturday.

Each conference title game is a rematch from this season.

Here’s a closer look at next Sunday’s matchups: Packers at Falcons, 12:05 p.m. (opening line: Atlanta minus-4) A 33-32 loss 2 1/2 months ago to the Falcons began a four-game skid for the Packers that dropped them to 4-6. Rodgers insisted he didn’t think Green Bay was done, and look at it now: eight consecutiv­e victories and a second NFC title game in three years.

Ryan and Atlanta are also on an impressive run, winning five games in a row by scoring at least 33 points each time — and he has 14 TD passes and zero intercepti­ons in that span.

“They are good at what they do,” Packers linebacker Nick Perry said.

This could be another high-scoring game, with players such as Julio Jones, Taylor Gabriel, Randall Cobb and Davante Adams causing problems for a pair of defences that are not all that special. Steelers at Patriots, 3:40 p.m. (opening line: New England,

minus-5 1/2) New England is in its record sixth consecutiv­e AFC title game, 11th overall for the duo of Brady and coach Bill Belichick. They’ve had a relatively easy path so far this season, which began with a four-game “Deflategat­e” suspension for the 39-year-old QB, but Pittsburgh’s defence and versatile offence could present a challenge.

Steelers RB Le’Veon Bell already has run for 337 yards in two playoff games, while WR Antonio Brown has a pair of 100-plus-yard games, too.

New England is missing TE Rob Gronkowski, but its star in the divisional round was Dion Lewis, who became the first player in the Super Bowl era with TDs via catch, run and kick return in a post-season game.

 ?? — GETTY IMAGES FILES ?? Quarterbac­k Aaron Rodgers and the Packers have won eight consecutiv­e games since sitting at 4-6 around mid-season. The Packers visit Atlanta on Sunday.
— GETTY IMAGES FILES Quarterbac­k Aaron Rodgers and the Packers have won eight consecutiv­e games since sitting at 4-6 around mid-season. The Packers visit Atlanta on Sunday.

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