Albuquerque Journal

BRADY VS. MAHOMES

Tampa Bay Buccaneers, Kansas City Chiefs win and will meet in Super Bowl LV

- BY STEVE MEGARGEE

GREEN BAY, Wis. — Tom Brady has a new team, in a new town. The destinatio­n is the same: another Super Bowl. At home, too. The man with six NFL titles will become the first quarterbac­k to play a Super Bowl on his team’s home field. He owes the Tampa Bay defense that sacked Aaron Rodgers five times, and a curious late call on fourth-andgoal by the Packers as Brady and the Bucs beat top-seeded Green Bay 31-26 for the NFC title Sunday.

“It’s great to get another road win and now we got a home game, and who would have ever thought a home Super Bowl for us,” Brady said. “But we did it.

“I thought the defense was spectacula­r. They’ve done that all year.”

The Bucs (14-5) will face the Kansas City Chiefs at Tampa’s Raymond James Stadium on Feb. 7.

No, a host team in the Super Bowl has never happened in 54 previous games.

“We’re coming home,” said Bucs coach Bruce Arians, whose first NFL coaching job was as an assistant in 1989 with Kansas City, and won two league Coach of the Year awards, with Indianapol­is in 2012, Arizona in 2014. He will make his first trip to the Super Bowl as a head coach. “We’re coming home to win.”

Brady is back in his first year at Tampa Bay after reaching this stage nine times with the New England Patriots. He went 20 of 36 for 286 yards and three touchdowns, but also threw three intercepti­ons as Tampa Bay squandered most of an 18-point lead.

Shaquil Barrett and Jason Pierre-Paul combined for five sacks to help the Bucs hang on for their franchise-record eighth consecutiv­e road victory.

It’s quite a step up for a team that had one winning record in the last nine seasons.

“Tom is the GOAT (greatest of all time),” said Bucs receiver Scotty Miller, who caught a

39-yard touchdown pass with 1 second left until halftime. “Last year, we ended 7-9. This year, we’re going to the Super Bowl. He’s the biggest reason.”

The Bucs snapped Green Bay’s seven-game winning streak. They were aided by a strange decision from Packers coach Matt LaFleur with just over two minutes remaining in a 31-23 game.

After three straight incompleti­ons had the Packers facing fourthand-goal from the 8, the Packers elected to kick a field goal to get within five.

“Anytime it doesn’t work out you always regret it, right?” LaFleur said. “It was just circumstan­ce of having three shots and coming away with no yards. And knowing that you not only need the touchdown but you’d need the 2-point. The way I was looking at it is we essentiall­y had four timeouts with the 2-minute warning, we knew we needed to get a stop.”

Tampa Bay then ran out the clock on the Packers (14-4).

“I understand the thinking — above two minutes with all of our timeouts — but it wasn’t my decision,” Rodgers said.

The Packers lost in the NFC championsh­ip game for the fourth time in the last seven seasons. Green Bay hasn’t reached the Super Bowl since its 2010 championsh­ip season.

Rodgers went 33 of 48 for 346 yards with three touchdowns and one intercepti­on, but fell to 1-4 in conference championsh­ip games as a starting quarterbac­k. The Packers had the NFL’s best redzone offense this season, but they twice settled for field goals after having a first-and-goal Sunday.

“I’m just pretty gutted,” Rodgers said. “It’s a long season. You put so much into it to get to this point. We had our chances.”

Tampa Bay took command in the middle portion of the game.

After Sean MurphyBunt­ing intercepte­d a Rodgers pass and Tampa Bay converted a fourthand-4, the Bucs were at Green Bay’s 39 while leading 14-10 with 8 seconds remaining in the second quarter. The Bucs passed up a long field-goal attempt, and Brady found Miller down the left sideline for a 39-yard touchdown with just 1 second remaining.

“We didn’t come here to not take chances to win the game,” Arians said. “Love the play we had. Got a great matchup and got a TD. That was huge.”

The Packers got the ball to start the second half, and Aaron Jones caught a short third-down pass. He took a huge hit from Jordan Whitehead that knocked the ball loose. Devin White recovered and ran 21 yards to the Green Bay 8.

One play later, Brady found a wide-open Cameron Brate to extend Tampa Bay’s lead to 28-10.

The Packers rallied as Brady threw intercepti­ons on three straight drives for just the second time in his career. Green Bay cut the lead to 28-23 late in the third quarter on Rodgers’ touchdown passes to Robert Tonyan and Davante Adams.

Twice in the fourth quarter, the Packers got the ball with a chance to take the lead after Jaire Alexander picked off Brady passes deep in Green Bay territory. Both times, the Packers went three-and-out.

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 ?? MATT LUDTKE/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Tampa Bay Buccaneers’ Sean Murphy-Bunting intercepts a pass intended for Green Bay Packers’ Allen Lazard late in the first half. Replays showed that Murphy-Bunting held Lazard before intercepti­ng the pass.
MATT LUDTKE/ASSOCIATED PRESS Tampa Bay Buccaneers’ Sean Murphy-Bunting intercepts a pass intended for Green Bay Packers’ Allen Lazard late in the first half. Replays showed that Murphy-Bunting held Lazard before intercepti­ng the pass.
 ?? MATT LUDTKE/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Tampa Bay Buccaneers quarterbac­k Tom Brady threw three touchdown passs and three intercepti­ons. He completed 20 of his 36 pass attempts for 280 yards to lead the Bucs to a 31-26 win over the Green Bay Packers.
MATT LUDTKE/ASSOCIATED PRESS Tampa Bay Buccaneers quarterbac­k Tom Brady threw three touchdown passs and three intercepti­ons. He completed 20 of his 36 pass attempts for 280 yards to lead the Bucs to a 31-26 win over the Green Bay Packers.

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