Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

Falcons hitting road back to Super Bowl with win

- By Greg Beacham

The Atlanta Falcons know they’ll have to win three consecutiv­e road games to get a chance for Super Bowl redemption.

The Falcons already nabbed the first victory by spoiling a festive night in Los Angeles, and they seem quite confident about their chances to run the table in other people’s buildings on the way to Minneapoli­s.

Matt Ryan passed for 218 yards and hit Julio Jones for an 8-yard touchdown with 5:48 to play, and the defending NFC champion Falcons advanced from the wildcard round with a 26-13 victory over the upstart Rams on Saturday night.

Devonta Freeman rushed for an early score and Matt Bryant kicked four field goals for the Falcons (11-6), who dropped to the sixth seed in the conference after

finishing one game out of first place in the NFC South. Atlanta went only 5-3 on the road in the regular season.

But judging from a comprehens­ively solid performanc­e against the hungry Rams (11-6), that tough division race and last season’s deep playoff run prepared Atlanta for the grind necessary to win back-to-back NFC titles.

“We don’t care where we play these games, because we know it’s about us, not the crowd or the opponent,” Atlanta safety Ricardo Allen said.

The next place they’re headed is Philadelph­ia: The Falcons advanced to face the top-seeded Eagles

on Jan. 13.

“Doesn’t matter where we’re going, we’re going,” Ryan said. “And that’s the most exciting part.”

Atlanta’s journey to the Super Bowl last season ended infamously with that blown 28-3 lead against New England. In their first playoff game since, the Falcons spoiled the Rams’ first playoff game in 13 years with a methodical performanc­e derived from hardearned experience.

The Falcons’ defense held the NFL’s highest-scoring offense to one touchdown while muzzling Todd Gurley and harassing Jared Goff, who went 24 for 45 in his playoff debut.

Jones caught nine passes for 94 yards for Atlanta, which never trailed while winning playoff games in consecutiv­e seasons for the

first time in franchise history. Against an opponent that had just six players on its roster with prior postseason appearance­s, the Falcons’ experience showed through.

“I think having gone through these situations, understand­ing what it’s like, the atmosphere, those kinds of things, knowing that it’s going to be tough, all those things kind of carry forward,” Ryan said. “But at the end of the day, experience or no experience, you’ve got to execute.”

A raucous crowd of 74,300 packed the Coliseum on a crisp evening for the first NFL playoff game in the nation’s second-largest city since early 1994. Los Angeles went 21 years without pro football before the Rams returned last season,

and the franchise emphatical­ly ended a 13-year streak of non-winning seasons this fall with an inspiring run to the Rams’ first division title since 2003.

Robert Woods caught nine passes for 142 yards, but rookie Cooper Kupp scored the Rams’ only touchdown late in the first half. Pro Bowl kick returner Pharoh Cooper also muffed a punt and fumbled a kickoff return early, leading to 10 points for the Falcons.

LA LETDOWN

The Falcons ruined a celebrator­y night for the Rams, who rebounded from a rough homecoming season in 2016 with an outstandin­g debut year under 31-year-old Sean McVay, the youngest head coach to reach the playoffs in NFL history.

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