Penticton Herald

Patriots have habit of Super Bowl trips, Rams are newcomers

- By The Associated Press

ATLANTA — Hey, have you guys been here before?

If you’re a New England Patriot, answer pretty much is “all the time.”

If you play for the Rams, the response basically is “never in my life.”

So if experience is a factor in Sunday’s Super Bowl, the overwhelmi­ng edge is with the 2 1/2-point favourites from Foxborough who are 5-3 in NFL title games with Tom Brady at quarterbac­k and Bill Belichick in the hoodie on the sideline.

The Rams, whose past two trips to the Super Bowl were representi­ng St. Louis in 2000 and ’02, have four players who have gotten this far.

New England has four on their defensive line alone.

“Probably, throughout the week, it gives them an advantage,” Rams tackle Andrew Whitworth admitted — and he’s finishing up his 13th NFL season, though it’s his first that ends in February.

“They kind of know this week. They know when things are a little anxious, when to kind of, ‘Hey, turn it on and get ready to play.’ They probably have a process and plan for the week.”

Athletes in every sport talk about how helpful a comfort zone can be. It’s even more pronounced when it accompanie­s events such as the Super Bowl, which, for better or worse, transcends football.

Brady and most of his teammates, in their third straight visit, barely flinch at all the attention, media demands and alteration­s to the norm that they encounter during Super Bowl week — although they were taken aback somewhat by the cacophony the and circus atmosphere of opening night on Monday. Aside from Aqib Talib, C.J. Anderson, Brandin Cooks and Sam Shields, for the Rams this is uncharted territory.

Rams coach Sean McVay tends to dismiss that theory, however. Using quarterbac­k Jared Goff as an example, McVay could have been speaking for his entire squad, which has made a sensationa­l turnaround in his two seasons in charge.

“He’s an unfazed quarterbac­k,” McVay says.

“I think his way to have success and handle adversity the same demonstrat­es that poise and confidence you want from your quarterbac­k.”

Nowhere is the experience matchup more uneven than at QB.

At 41, Brady already is the oldest quarterbac­k to start a Super Bowl. Goff is 24 and one of the youngest.

Well, maybe nowhere is an exaggerati­on, because Belichick, at 66, could become the oldest coach to win a Super Bowl. He has worked 41 post-season games, with 30 victories — most among head coaches in NFL history. He’s the only head coach with five Super Bowl rings.

McVay is half his age and in his first NFL title game, the youngest Super Bowl head man.

Rams President Kevin Demoff hears all of that so-called evidence, then cites so many positives about McVay that he sounds like the next dominant coach.

Sunday will be a powerful acid test for McVay and his team.

GRONK’S FINALE?

There’s widespread speculatio­n that Patriots star tight end Rob Gronkowski could be playing his final NFL game, set to retire following the Super Bowl.

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