The Prince George Citizen

PATRIOTS TIGHTEN GRIP ON DYNASTY

- Eddie PELLS

ATLANTA — Greying but still gritty, Tom Brady, Bill Belichick and the Patriots came to the Super Bowl intending to stave off, for at least one more game, the inevitable onslaught of the NFL’s future.

Job well done.

Pro football never looked flatter, older and more stuck in the days of the VCR than it did Sunday.

In a Super Bowl only New England could love, the Patriots won their sixth title by lumbering their way to a 13-3 victory over the Los Angeles Rams – that young, brash, highflying team with the 33-year-old coach and the 24-year-old quarterbac­k who were, we thought, changing football before our very eyes.

If only we could’ve kept them open. Among the Super Bowl records set: fewest points by both teams (16); fewest points by the winning team (13); fewest combined points through three quarters (six); most consecutiv­e drives ending with a punt (eight by the Rams); longest punt (65 yards).

The halftime show with Maroon 5 offered no relief – roundly ripped, including by an Associated Press reviewer who called it “Empty. Boring. Basic. Sleepy.”

He could have said the same about the game. But give credit where it’s due.

The defence designed by Belichick turned Rams quarterbac­k Jared Goff into a jittery mess. He completed 19 of 38 passes for 229 yards, with an assortment of rushed throws, misread coverages and, in the tiny windows in which LA showed any sign of life, a pair of terrible passes.

One, trailing 3-0 in the third quarter, was late and high to wide-open Brandin Cooks in the end zone; the other, trailing 10-3 with 4:17 left in the fourth quarter, was high under pressure for an easy intercepti­on by Patriots cornerback Stephon Gilmore that essentiall­y ended the game.

“I know I definitely have a lot to learn from this one,” said Rams coach Sean McVay, who, at 33, is exactly half the age of Belichick.

McVay has been the flavour of the month in the copycat NFL. Other teams have hired away three of his assistant coaches over the last two years, as the league tries to catch up with his newfangled offence that cracked 30 points in 13 games this season.

On Sunday, it managed one 53-yard field goal from Greg Zuerlein and didn’t take a snap inside the New England 20.

Gilmore’s intercepti­on came minutes after Brady engineered the game’s lone touchdown drive.

It was five plays and included four straight completion­s: 18 yards to Rob Gronkowski, 13 yards to Julian Edelman, seven yards to backup running back Rex Burkhead, then a 29-yard teardrop placed perfectly into the arms of Gronkowski, who was double-covered. Sony Michel ran it in from two yards for the touchdown with seven minutes left.

“We couldn’t get points on the board for one reason or another,” Brady said, “but in the end, it feels a lot better than last year, when we did get some points on the board.”

Last year, the Patriots fell 41-33 to Philly in a back-and-forth thriller that essentiall­y featured one good defensive play: a sack and strip on Brady by Eagles defensive end Brandon Graham with the clock running down.

The year before, the Patriots scored 31 points in the second half and overtime for a riveting 34-28 comeback win over Atlanta and title No. 5.

Then, this.

New England’s road to a sixth Lombardi Trophy – tied with Pittsburgh for the most – was never easy this season. The Patriots lost five times, didn’t have home-field advantage through the playoffs and, after every loss, were beset by questions over whether the 41-year-old Brady and his 66-year-old coach might be winding down.

Through it all, though, they could score. New England averaged 27.2 points a game. And in the run through the playoffs, the offence scored 10 touchdowns and Brady barely got touched, and never got sacked.

They were not clicking like that Sunday at the $1.5 billion Mercedes-Benz Stadium, where 70,081 fans – most of them cheering for New England – watched the game.

Other than Edelman, whose 10 catches for 141 yards won him MVP honours and made him look like a combinatio­n of Michael Irvin and Jerry Rice considerin­g everything happening around him, the Patriots were out of sync.

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 ?? AP PHOTO ?? Julian Edelman of the New England Patriots celebrates with the Vince Lombardi Trophy on Sunday in Atlanta.
AP PHOTO Julian Edelman of the New England Patriots celebrates with the Vince Lombardi Trophy on Sunday in Atlanta.

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