The Telegram (St. John's)

Eighth straight trip

Michel scores three touchdowns, Patriots roll past Chargers 41-28

- BY KYLE HIGHTOWER

Sony Michel ran for 129 yards and had three touchdowns and the New England Patriots beat the Los Angeles Chargers 41-28 in the divisional playoffs on Sunday to earn their eighth straight trip to the AFC championsh­ip game.

New England (12-5) will play at Kansas City in next week’s AFC title game. The Patriots beat the Chiefs 43-40 in Foxborough in Week 6.

It is the 13th conference championsh­ip game appearance by the Patriots during the Tom Brady-bill Belichick era. The Chargers (13-5) haven’t reached the AFC title game since the 2007 season.

Quarterbac­k Philip Rivers finished 25 of 51 for 331 yards, three touchdowns and an intercepti­on. He is 0-5 in games played in Foxborough, including 0-3 in the postseason.

Brady finished 34 of 44 for 343 yards and a touchdown. He improves to 8-0 as a starter against Rivers, who drops to 1-8 against New England all-time.

James White tied Darren Sproles’ NFL post-season record with 15 catches, totalling 97

yards.

New England scored on its first four possession­s of the game to build a 35-7 halftime lead.

Julian Edelman had catches for 151 yards.

The Chargers added three touchdowns in the second half, but it was much too late.

Los Angeles lost for just the nine

second time on the road (8-2) and first time outside Los Angeles this season. In its past four trips to the playoffs, Los Angeles has lost in the divisional round.

Rivers seemed poised to keep Los Angeles in the game, connecting with Keenan Allen for a 43-yard score on Los Angeles’ first offensive possession. It was the longest touchdown of Allen’s

career, including the post-season.

It turned out to be just a blip. The Chargers punted the four other times they had the ball in the first half.

The Patriots were efficient throughout the opening 30 minutes, going 5 for 5 in the red zone, 5 of 6 on third down and committing only one penalty.

New England didn’t go threeand-out for the first time until its fifth offensive touch of the day when it punted with 3:32 left in the second quarter.

But Ryan Allen’s 48-yard punt was fumbled by Desmond King, sending the ball rolling toward the sideline.

The referees ruled the ball went out of bounds before New England’s Albert Mcclellan appeared to recover it. But the play was reversed after a challenge by Bill Belichick.

The turnover proved costly, with the Patriots scoring just four plays later when Michel crossed the goal line from five yards for his third touchdown of the half.

New England establishe­d the run early, creating big holes in a Chargers defence that ended the regular season ranked ninth in the NFL, allowing just 106 rushing yards per game.

Michel carried 16 times for 105 yards in the first half.

He set the tone early, scoring from 1 yard on the opening possession of the game. It capped a 14-play, 83-yard drive in which he rushed five times for 15 yards and had a nineyard reception.

The Patriots added scoring drives of 67, 58, 87 and 35 yards.

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? New England Patriots running back Sony Michel (26) tumbles into the end zone for his third touchdown against the Los Angeles Chargers during the first half of an NFL divisional playoff game Sunday in Foxborough, Mass.
AP PHOTO New England Patriots running back Sony Michel (26) tumbles into the end zone for his third touchdown against the Los Angeles Chargers during the first half of an NFL divisional playoff game Sunday in Foxborough, Mass.

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