Guymon Daily Herald

Analysis: Old nemesis standing in way of Tom Brady, Bucs

- By ROB MAADDI

TAMPA, Fla. — Despite winning an unpreceden­ted seven Super Bowl rings, Tom Brady is still haunted by one that slipped away — literally.

As Brady and the Tampa Bay Buccaneers (13-4) prepare to host the Philadelph­ia Eagles (9-8) in an NFC wild-card game Sunday, the GOAT has been forced to recall his big drop. It occurred in Philadelph­ia's 41-33 win over New England in the Super Bowl four years ago when Brady let a pass from wide receiver Danny Amendola bounce off his fingertips.

Making matters worse, Eagles quarterbac­k Nick Foles caught a touchdown pass later in the game on a trick play called "Philly! Philly!" that will be immortaliz­ed in Philadelph­ia.

"Every time I see an Eagles fan I get reminded of that play," Brady said on his SiriusXM podcast this week.

Eagles fans also have an unhealthy obsession with Brady running off the field after that loss and not shaking Foles' hand. That happened again when Brady and the Bucs lost to Foles and the Chicago Bears in 2020. For all his success, Brady can be a sore loser at times.

"I've shaken Nick's hand plenty of times, though," Brady said Thursday. "I have a lot of respect for

Nick. I try to be a good sport as best I can. I know it doesn't always look like that because sometimes I get a little (ticked off) out there, but for the most part I try to be a good sport."

Eagles fans won't let him forget when he isn't. They don't win many championsh­ips in Philly, so they have to settle for small victories.

The city's prickly attitude rubbed off on Eagles quarterbac­k Jalen Hurts this week. The normally pleasant Hurts, who will make his first career playoff start compared to Brady's 46th, was in no mood to talk about his counterpar­t.

Asked for his first memory watching the 44-yearold Brady play in the NFL, the 23-year-old Hurts sniped: "I don't remember."

Hurts was 6 years old when Brady led the Patriots to a 24-21 win over Donovan McNabb, Terrell Owens and the Eagles to capture his third Super Bowl title following the 2004 season. No team has repeated as champions since that victory. Brady and the Bucs aim to end that streak. First, they have to get through the Eagles.

This will be Brady's third time facing Philadelph­ia in the postseason. While the first two were Super Bowls, this also is a do-or-die game.

The Buccaneers and Eagles are no strangers in the postseason, either. They've split four meetings.

The previous one evokes bitter memories for Eagles fans. The Buccaneers closed out old Veterans

Stadium with a 27-10 victory in the NFC championsh­ip game on Jan. 19, 2003. It was the first time in franchise history that Tampa had won a game in temperatur­es under 30 degrees. Ronde Barber sealed the win with a 92-yard pick-6 off McNabb with 3:12 left in the game.

Tampa, led by coach Jon Gruden and quarterbac­k Brad Johnson, went on to beat the Raiders in the Super Bowl, then didn't win another playoff game until Brady arrived last season.

Before that, the Eagles beat the Buccaneers in wild-card games in each of the previous two seasons. A 31-9 win over Tampa on Jan. 12, 2002, ended coach Tony Dungy's tenure with the Buccaneers. Dungy ended up going to Indianapol­is where he teamed with Peyton Manning to win a Super Bowl, and eventually made the Pro Football Hall of Fame.

The Bucs beat the Eagles 24-17 on Dec. 29, 1979, in the divisional round in their first playoff game in their fourth season. Doug Williams threw just 15 passes in that game as Ricky Bell ran for 142 yards on 38 carries.

Brady might throw that many passes in the first quarter alone this week. He led the NFL in several statistica­l categories, including 5,316 yards passing, 43 TDs, 485 completion­s, and 719 attempts.

All he needs is a victory no matter how the Bucs earn it to erase the sting of that dropped pass and the Super Bowl 52 loss.

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