New York Post

DEJA VU BIRDS

Falcon's Super implosion had equally aggressive precedent in 1999 British Open collapse

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IT’S A dirty job, but someone’s gotta do it. Sweeping up after the Super Bowl: I knew we had seen such an ending and heard such a reason for it, before, but I couldn’t put my typing finger on it. Then Jack Alesi, recently retired basketball coach at Brooklyn’s Xaverian High School and a go-to guy for wisdom, nailed it:

The 1999 British Open! Jean van de Velde!

Like Falcons coach Dan Quinn, who was up by 25 points, but wanted to “stay aggressive,” van de Velde was up by three shots on what should have been the final hole. Although he would have won with a double-bogey six, he “stayed aggressive.” So, cue Verne Lundquist’s “bless his heart,” he made seven, then lost in a playoff to Paul Lawrie.

That squiggly line between aggressive and reckless was not only breached, Sunday, it was dismissed.

Several times in the fourth quarter and with the game clock running, Atlanta didn’t even bother to run time off the play clock, providing aid, comfort, inspiratio­n and the ball to the Patriots. Once, with the game clock moving, the Falcons snapped the ball with 15 seconds left on the play clock! Crazy!

At 28-20, that second-down sack of Matt Ryan was doubly crazy as, 1) a couple of runs into the line then a field goal logically would have won it, and, 2) the Pats’ appeared to be playing for the inconceiva­ble, a pass, as their defense went after Ryan right from the snap!

It was like a head-on collision of bad ideas, only one survivor.

Meanwhile, had Ryan completed that second-down pass for a first down or even for a few yards prior to trying a short field goal, few, the next day (or week, year, decade), would be condemning the play as senseless. On the contrary, we would have been told Quinn and company are cold-blooded, fearless, confident.

It brings to mind Carlos Beltran, playing center field for Houston in the 2004 NLCS. With the Astros winning, Beltran made a fabulous diving catch when he might have chosen to cut it off on a hop, limiting the batter to a single.

FOX’s Steve Lyons then hollered that Beltran “just prevented an inside-the-park home run!” But it sure looked the other way, as if Beltran had very nearly caused one. Other things … Lady Gaga’s performanc­e proved that talent, alone — unadorned and unaccompan­ied by inappropri­ate (read: vulgar) conduct and commentary (read: political) — can win the hearts of acrossthe-board halftime audiences. Of course, having arrived already half-undressed, she saved us all a lot of time.

The most disappoint­ing element of FOX’s halftime was the forced-sell appearance of FS1 late-night show hostess Katie Nolan, who betrayed her stock-in-trade TV and Twitter persona by keeping it clean.

Nolan is thus nominated for the Weekend Boomer Esiason Phonius Balonius Hall of Fame for acting like an angel on weekend TV while acting like a pig during weekday gigs. Esiason is Craig Carton’s weekday co-host on the simulcaste­d, high-brow Pee-Pee and Poo-Poo show.

In the end, those anticipati­ng the low had to wait until the end, Willie McGinest — former Patriot and a USC man — in his capacity as New England’s official recipient of the Super Bowl trophy (McGinest even wore a nice suit in anticipati­on) held out the trophy while repeatedly exhorting the Pats to “Kiss that mother------!”

Now, for McGinest, it’s back to his new job, his public self-awareness and civil comportmen­t having landed him an analyst position on the NFL Network.

Told ya sweeping up afterwards is a dirty job.

 ?? USA TODAY Sports ?? WINGS CLIPPED: Matt Ryan gets sacked by Trey Flowers as the Falcons’ Super Bowl lead crumbles in the fourth quarter.
USA TODAY Sports WINGS CLIPPED: Matt Ryan gets sacked by Trey Flowers as the Falcons’ Super Bowl lead crumbles in the fourth quarter.

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