China Daily

Patriots pay big price for sloppy play

Miami’s last-second comeback puts New England’s celebratio­n on hold

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MIAMI GARDENS, Florida — Tom Brady visited with his family in the postgame locker room on Sunday while the New England Patriots were still trying to figure out how they had just lost to Miami.

Brady’s young daughter offered an explanatio­n: “Daddy, I think the reason you lost is there were more people cheering for the Dolphins.”

Especially at the end. Kenyan Drake sprinted 52 yards as the Dolphins scored on a pass and double lateral on the final 69-yard play to stun the Patriots 34-33.

“They made a good play,” Brady said. “They did a good job executing it. They got it to their fast guys.”

Miami’s “Drake Escape” prevented the Patriots from clinching their 10th consecutiv­e AFC East title.

“It’s going to test our character big time to bounce back from something like that,” tight end Rob Gronkowski said.

Drake sprinted into the corner of the end zone past Gronkowski, whose role as part of the Patriots’ prevent defense invited secondgues­sing.

But while the game will be remembered for the final seconds, the Patriots (9-4) could blame many other plays for a role in the loss.

They reached the Miami 2-yard line at the end of the first half and failed to score. Stephen Gostkowski missed an extra point and a 42-yard field goal.

The Pats opted to kick a field goal in the last minute, which gave Miami better field position to try for a last-second miracle.

“It shouldn’t have come down to that,” said Brady, who threw for three touchdowns. “We left a lot more points on the board offensivel­y.”

The defense allowed the Dolphins to rush for 189 yards — 9.0 per carry — and allowed Ryan Tannehill to toss three TD strikes

But it was squandered scoring chances that seemed to annoy the Patriots the most.

“We missed opportunit­ies,” coach Bill Belichick said. “We’ve just got to do a better job.”

The most glaring failure came at the end of the first half. With 14 seconds left and no timeouts, Brady took the snap at the Miami 2 and was sacked by Robert Quinn as the clock ran out, leaving the Patriots to settle for a 27-21 lead.

“That was a terrible play by me,” Brady said. “I lost track — I thought we had one timeout. I was just not thinking. So it was just a play that should never happen.”

Gostkowski missed an extra point for the first time in 38 tries this season. On a field-goal try, he missed from inside 50 yards for only the second time.

Belichick opted to have Gostkowski kick a 22-yarder in the closing seconds rather than try for a clinching TD or — worst-case scenario — give the Dolphins the ball near their goal line.

Instead, Miami returned the ensuing kickoff to the 31, and scored on the next play.

Tannehill threw a 14-yard pass to Kenny Stills, who lateraled to DeVante Parker, who lateraled to Drake along the sideline at midfield. He found a lane and beat two defenders to the corner of the end zone — defensive back JC Jackson and Gronkowski.

The 6-foot-6 Gronkowski was part of the last line of defense in anticipati­on of a desperatio­n pass, Belichick said.

Instead Miami opted for a pass and lateral that unfolded slowly, and Gronkowski stumbled in pursuit of Drake.

“I didn’t think it was going to get to me,” Gronkowski said. “I’ve never really been a part of anything like that.”

Saints on the march

Meanwhile, the New Orleans Saints are a long way from where they want to be.

For now, though, repeating as NFC South champions for the first time in franchise history feels pretty good.

“Goal No 1 was to win the division again and we were able to do that,” Drew Brees said after throwing for one touchdown and running for another to help the Saints rally from an 11-point halftime deficit to beat the Tampa Bay Buccaneers 28-14.

“We didn’t play well in the first half and faced a big deficit,” Brees added. “We were able to come together with all sides making plays in that second half.”

There’s still a lot of work ahead for the Saints (11-2), however clinching the division title — much less with three weeks remaining in the regular season — is an accomplish­ment worth celebratin­g.

“This is what guys look forward to,” said Brees, who shrugged off a pair of turnovers to throw a oneyard TD pass to Zach Line, then scored on a one-yard quarterbac­k sneak as the Saints avenged a season-opening loss to the Bucs (5-8) and also rebounded from losing at Dallas in their last outing.

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