Porterville Recorder

Brady leads Patriots back to Super Bowl

- By DENNIS WASZAK Jr.

FOXBOROUGH,MASS. — Give ‘em a hand: Tom Brady and the New England Patriots are heading back to the Super Bowl.

Brady shook off a hand injury and threw a 4-yard touchdown pass to Danny Amendola with 2:48 remaining , rallying the Patriots to a 24-20 comeback victory over the Jacksonvil­le Jaguars in the AFC championsh­ip Sunday.

Brady, wearing a black bandage on his right hand after cutting it during practice earlier in the week, showed no signs of being hampered.

And, with the game — and the season — possibly on the line, the Patriots star came up big again.

“I’ve had a lot worse,” Brady said. “I didn’t know that on Wednesday. It was a crazy injury. Wednesday, Thursday, Friday was a little scary. Then I started getting some confidence and today we did just enough to win.”

Brady finished 26 of 38 for 290 yards and two touchdowns to Amendola for the Patriots (15-3), who’ll play the winner of Sunday night’s game between Minnesota and Philadelph­ia in Minneapoli­s on Feb. 4.

It’s the eighth Super Bowl appearance for Brady and coach Bill Belichick, who have won five times — including last year’s 34-28 overtime rally against the Atlanta Falcons.

“It’s pretty crazy,” Brady said. “It’s pretty amazing. Just to be on a team that wins these kinds of games, it’s just a great accomplish­ment. I’m just so proud of everyone on our team, we made so many great plays. Defense played so great when they needed to. Just an amazing game.”

Blake Bortles and the Jaguars (12-7) led 20-10 early in the fourth quarter, but couldn’t hold against the defending champions. The NFL’S second-ranked defense kept Brady and the Patriots at bay for most of the game, but also lost linebacker Myles Jack and defensive tackle Marcell Dareus on consecutiv­e plays on New England’s winning drive.

Jacksonvil­le — looking to reach the Super Bowl for the first time in franchise history — had one more shot, but Bortles’ throw on fourth-and-15 to Dede Westbrook was knocked away by Stephon Gilmore.

The Patriots then ran out the clock, with Dion Lewis’ 18-yard scamper with 90 seconds remaining sealing the victory. And they played most of the game without tight end Rob Gronkowski, who left the game late in the first half and didn’t return.

Brady’s hand was the most-scrutinize­d body part in Boston since the quarterbac­k’s ankle before the 2008 Super Bowl, and Red Sox pitcher Curt Schilling’s right ankle tendon — the bloody sock — in the 2004 playoffs.

Brady was listed as questionab­le after he hurt his right hand during practice earlier in the week. He was limited Wednesday, sat out Thursday and was limited again Friday because of the injury.

That caused some panic among the Patriots faithful.

Turns out, it was nothing to fret about.

Brady warmed up without a glove on his hand, and he came out throwing. He completed his first six passes — including a 20-yarder to Amendola on fourth-and-1 from the Jaguars 30 — for 57 yards to march the Patriots down the field. The drive stalled when Brady was sacked by Dante Fowler Jr., and New England settled for Stephen Gostkowski’s 31-yard field goal.

A wide-open Marcedes Lewis gave the Jaguars a 7-3 lead 45 seconds into the second quarter with a 4-yard touchdown catch from Bortles, who was 5 for 5 for 66 yards on an impressive and efficient seven-play, 76yard drive.

Leonard Fournette gave Jacksonvil­le a 14-3 lead midway through the second quarter with a 4-yard TD run, hushing the crowd at Gillette Stadium.

The Jaguars made some big mistakes that hurt them just before halftime. Bortles completed a 12-yard pass to Lewis on thirdand-7 from the Patriots 44, but Jacksonvil­le was called for delay of game — after New England called a timeout.

That wiped out a first down, and Bortles was sacked by Adam Butler on the next play to force a punt. Jacksonvil­le was called for six penalties that cost the Jaguars 98 yards, while New England had just one 10-yard call against it.

With just over two minutes left before halftime, New England’s offense took over and the fans chanted “Braa-dy! Braa-dy!”

 ??  ?? AP PHOTO BY DAVID J. PHILLIP New England Patriots quarterbac­k Tom Brady, left, speaks to wide receiver Danny Amendola (80) after winning the AFC championsh­ip NFL football game against the Jacksonvil­le Jaguars, Sunday, Jan. 21, 2018, in Foxborough,...
AP PHOTO BY DAVID J. PHILLIP New England Patriots quarterbac­k Tom Brady, left, speaks to wide receiver Danny Amendola (80) after winning the AFC championsh­ip NFL football game against the Jacksonvil­le Jaguars, Sunday, Jan. 21, 2018, in Foxborough,...

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