Albuquerque Journal

SEASONED VETS vs. YOUTH

NFL playoffs feature QBs who have been there against guys with limited or no experience

- BY SAM FARMER LOS ANGELES TIMES

NEW ORLEANS — Drew Brees has a dozen playoff starts.

That’s not lost on his New Orleans Saints teammates, even those who are making their first foray into the NFL postseason. They understand the value of experience in these door-die games.

“It’s huge to have a guy like Drew Brees at the helm, who understand­s every situation,” defensive tackle Sheldon Rankins said after Sunday’s first-round victory over Carolina. “He’s never going to put our defense in a bad position. He’s never going to put this team in a bad position. He’s always going to give us a chance to win. That’s all you can ask for.”

A big theme heading into the four divisional games is the wealth of experience at quarterbac­k versus the lack thereof. In every game, there’s a seasoned passer on one side and a relative newcomer on the other.

Brees versus Minnesota’s Case Keenum, making his postseason debut.

New England’s Tom Brady (34 playoff games) vs. Tennessee’s Marcus Mariota (one).

Pittsburgh’s Ben Roethlisbe­rger (20) vs. Jacksonvil­le’s Blake Bortles (one).

Atlanta’s Matt Ryan (nine) vs. Philadelph­ia’s Nick Foles (one).

Experience counts, something that was evident in the Falcons’ first-round victory over the Los Angeles Rams. That game pitted a team that was fresh off a Super Bowl — albeit a historic second-half collapse — against one that had not played in the postseason since 2004. Rams quarterbac­k Jared Goff was not at the top of his game.

“It’s super fast. Everyone’s into it,” Jacksonvil­le linebacker Dante Fowler Jr. noted of the playoff intensity. “The way you study, the way you scheme, it’s all different. It’s just a different tempo, very fast.”

The Jaguars are looking to shock the football world a second time, after a 30-9 victory at Pittsburgh in October when they ran back two Roethlisbe­rger intercepti­ons for touchdowns. It was after that game that the two-time Super Bowl-winning quarterbac­k famously said “Maybe I don’t have it anymore” in frustratio­n.

Bortles was not a big factor in that game, passing for just 95 yards with an intercepti­on. It was rookie running back Leonard Fournette who set the pace with 181 yards and two touchdowns.

The Steelers will have AllPro receiver Antonio Brown back from a calf injury he sustained in mid-December. He participat­ed in most of Monday’s practice.

“We’ll see how it goes and how the week progressed,” Brown, the NFL’s only unanimous All-Pro, told reporters Monday. “I feel I was able to go through practice. I can still get a little better, but it was good to be out there. … There’s still a lot to test. First day of the week.”

The Patriots have the AFC’s top seed and a fivetime Super Bowl winner in Brady, although they’ve been dealing with the potential distractio­n of an ESPN report of a strained relationsh­ip among the quarterbac­k, coach Bill Belichick and owner Robert Kraft.

Then again, the Patriots have weathered all types of turbulence before and still won.

The Titans played at New England during the 2015 season and lost, 33-16. In that game, the rookie Mariota left in the second quarter after consecutiv­e drives that ended in sacks.

Belichick said Monday that there’s no value in his players studying that game tape, with the teams and situations so different now. He also warned against dismissing the Titans as being light on postseason experience.

“They really have been in the playoffs here the last couple of weeks,” Belichick said. “They had to win their last regular season game. He brought them from behind 21-3 against Kansas City in Kansas City for a playoff win. I think his performanc­e speaks for itself. I don’t think what happened two years ago really has any bearing at all, whatsoever, on this game.”

As for the Eagles, they already made history. A far less dangerous team without quarterbac­k Carson Wentz, they are the first No. 1 seed to be an underdog in a divisional game. Las Vegas opened with the Falcons favored by three.

Asked what he’d like to see out of Foles, Eagles offensive coordinato­r Frank Reich said he simply wants him to “play his game.”

“This is a team game,” Reich said. “This is we, we, we. We’re going to do this. We do it together. It’s not any one man. It never was any one man.”

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