Montreal Gazette

NFC blows out AFC in an ugly Pro Bowl

- OSKAR GARCIA

HONOLULU — Sack-happy defensive end J.J. Watt went out for a couple of passes as a wide receiver, retiring centre Jeff Saturday snapped to two Mannings on opposite teams and the NFC blew past the AFC 62-35 in a Pro Bowl that could be the league’s last.

Whether the NFL’s all-star game will return or not is a question league officials will ponder the next few months. And the players gave plenty to consider on both sides of the argument Sunday.

The NFC was unstoppabl­e on offence, with nearly each player putting up fantasy-worthy lines in limited play. The AFC, mean while, had five turnovers and scored most of its points well after the game was no longer competitiv­e.

Minnesota tight end Kyle Rudolph was voted the game’s MVP with five catches for 122 yards and a touchdown.

Watt lined up as a wide receiver on the AFC’s third play from scrimmage, but missed a pass from Denver quarterbac­k Peyton Manning. He was targeted one more time, but didn’t make a catch.

He later showed a television camera a bloody left pinky, joking with NBC telecaster­s that the players were trying.

“Hey, commish, we’re playing hard,” Watt said as he showed his bloodied finger.

Roger Goodell has said the Pro Bowl won’t be played again if play didn’t improve this year. Last year, fans booed as lineman were clearly not trying. On one play in that game, Minnesota defensive end Jared Allen did a barrel roll to switch positions with a teammate.

If players were coasting this time around, it was less obvious. The AFC just played poorly. And fans didn’t boo much — the stands were relatively empty even though the game sold enough tickets to lift a local television blackout.

Saturday, the Green Bay centre retiring at the end of this season, played for both teams. He lined up on one play for the AFC to snap the ball one last time to Manning, his long-time former Colts teammate. Saturday then played later in the game for the NFC, snapping to Peyton’s brother, Giants quarterbac­k Eli.

The game struggled for memorable moments after Saturday’s momentary switch.

In the second quarter, referee Ed Hochuli drew cheers when announcing a pass interferen­ce penalty on Denver cornerback Champ Bailey — the first flag of the game.

“Yes, there are penalties in the Pro Bowl,” Hochuli said, drawing laughs and cheers.

Giants wideout Victor Cruz broke a Pro Bowl record with 10 catches. Tampa Bay receiver Vincent Jackson had 91 yards and two touchdowns. Eli Manning threw for 191 yards and two touchdowns, while Seattle quarterbac­k Russell Wilson had three touchdown passes in the second half.

Cincinnati’s A.J. Green had three TD catches for the AFC.

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