The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Tom Brady, Sergio Dipp bounce back big in Week 2

- By Arnie Stapleton

Tom Brady and Sergio Dipp both had big Week 2 bounce-backs in after their opening weekend bumbles.

The Patriots’ 40-year-old QB rebounded from a tough 16-for-36 debut to throttle the Saints’ secondary with a trio of TD passes in the first quarter on his way to a 36-20 win over fellow graybeard Drew Brees.

Behind Josh McDaniels’ aggressive calls, Brady topped 300 yards by halftime and finished with 447 yards as the Patriots (1-1) put their 15-point home loss to Kansas City behind them

“To be 0-1 with a 10-day break felt like a year,” Brady said.

Dipp must have felt like that, too.

The ESPN Deportes reporter was the subject of ample sneering after his awkward debut on “Monday Night Football” in Denver. But he produced a Brady-like ricochet with a classic tweet Sunday.

During the Broncos’ 42-17 clubbing of the Cowboys, he tweeted a photo of a smirking Broncos coach Vance Joseph and declared, “I tried to tell you all . ... Vance Joseph is having the time of his life!!! “Well played. Joseph did have a good time — except for calling a timeout that allowed Dallas to kick a long field goal just before halftime. Dallas had no timeouts left and Joseph had all three of his, so he was hoping to get the ball back before halftime to extend a 21-7 lead.

After Jason Witten caught a 7-yard pass, Joseph called time with 1:33 left, something he admitted Monday was a mistake because he couldn’t see the line of scrimmage well and thought it was only a 4-yard gain.

“So that was a rookie coach making a rookie mistake ,” Joseph said. “I heard about from (D-line coach Bill) Kollar: ‘What are you doing?’ Sorry, coach, I thought it was a 4-yard gain. So, I was chastised for it by Bill Kollar. That won’t happen again.”

The Broncos, by the way, held a classy reunion for DeMarcus Ware, who spent his first nine seasons in Dallas before a three-year run in Denver, where he won his only Super Bowl ring.

He was introduced not as a former Bronco but simply as an honorary captain for the coin flip .

“I had an opportunit­y from two great owners to have 12 years of fun,” said Ware, who took his young son to midfield for the coin toss.

“He loves football,” Ware said. “But I’m not going to push him into football. I said, ‘Daddy’s played enough football. Why don’t you play a little basketball, so you can get a little extra guaranteed money?”’

The Steelers honored longtime president and chairman Dan Rooney five months after his death. Ben Roethlisbe­rger took a knee in prayer and then sprinted to midfield holding the flag honoring Rooney. Roethlisbe­rger showed off a T-shirt afterward that was a tip-of-thecap to the man who meant so much to Pittsburgh.

“I had tears in my eyes” during the introducti­on, Roethlisbe­rger said. So did many others. “An emotional game for us,” Pittsburgh coach Mike Tomlin said after the Steelers’ 26-9 victory over the Vikings. “My first regular-season home game without Mr. Rooney. It was great to be a part of the recognitio­n of him and his services and all that he has provided us.”

Among the more dubious decisions in Week 2 was Bears rookie Tarik Cohen’s ill-advised choice to scoop a punt off the ground while surrounded by Buccaneers and run with it deep in Chicago territory. He couldn’t hold on and the Bucs recovered. That set up Tampa Bay’s first touchdown, Jameis Winston’s 13-yard pass to Mike Evans.

“We wanted a pick-me-up for our fans” who dealt with Hurricane Irma last week, Winston said after delivering just that with a 29-7 win over the Bears.

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