Boston Herald

This time, Birds watch Fish fly by

- By PAUL NEWBERRY

ATLANTA — Jay Cutler and the Miami Dolphins finally generated some offense.

Matt Ryan and the Atlanta Falcons totally fell apart.

The result: a stunning 2017 victory for the Dolphins. Cutler threw a pair of touchdown passes, Cody Parkey kicked a pair of field goals and Miami rallied from a 17-0 halftime deficit, rekindling memories of Atlanta’s epic collapse against the Patriots in the Super Bowl.

And next up for the Falcons — a rematch against the Patriots.

“It’s tough,” Atlanta linebacker Vic Beasley Jr. said. “We experience­d that feeling before in the Super Bowl.”

Ryan, who had five intercepti­ons in the two previous games, threw another crucial pick with the Falcons in position to at least attempt a tying field goal.

Cordrea Tankersley got a hand on a pass intended for Austin Hooper and Reshad Jones swooped in to make the game-clinching intercepti­on inside the 10 with 39 seconds remaining.

“I kept my eyes on the ball and made a great play,” Jones said. “This was a huge win for us against a great offense.”

The Falcons don’t look so great at the moment.

Ryan is just one intercepti­on away from his total for all of last season, when he was the league’s MVP.

“I understood we were in field goal range to tie the game. I also understood that we had plenty of time on the clock,” Ryan said of the final possession. “It was a throw I felt good about, so I let it rip. Just a good play by them. Sometimes, that’s how it goes.”

Parkey put the Dolphins (3-2) ahead for the first time with 2:30 remaining, booting a 38-yard field goal after a gutsy play by receiver Jarvis Landry, who was hit by six players but still managed to power ahead for a crucial first down.

Cutler, who struggled in his first four games as the Dolphins’ fill-in starter after putting off retirement, completed 19-of-33 for 151 yards, including scoring passes to Landry and Kenny Stills. Jay Ajayi had a big game on the ground, rushing for 130 yards.

“We can’t be satisfied with this game,” Cutler said. “This is a one-week business.”

The Falcons (3-2) appeared headed for an easy victory, especially against a team that had scored only three offensive touchdowns all season.

Marvin Hall, promoted a day earlier from the practice squad because of an injury to starting receiver Mohamed Sanu, hauled in a 40-yard touchdown with his first career reception. Tevin Coleman scored on a 6-yard run, and Matt Bryant had a 50-yard field goal.

Cutler failed to complete a pass longer than 12 yards over the first two quarters and was picked off by Deion Jones late in the half. But the Dolphins totally turned things around in the second half, taking advantage of two huge Falcons mistakes.

“Today was the first time the offense kind of gave the defense a little hope,” Miami coach Adam Gase said.

A silly roughing-thequarter­back penalty on Grady Jarrett negated another intercepti­on by Jones deep in Atlanta territory, and Miami scored on the very next play when Cutler flipped a 7-yard touchdown pass to Landry.

The Falcons also botched a punt, setting up the Dolphins to drive for Parkey’s 49-yard field goal, which tied the game at 17.

“This one hurts,” Falcons coach Dan Quinn said. “For us to be the team we can be, we’ve got to be more consistent.”

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? LOST CAUSE: Matt Ryan shows his frustratio­n after throwing an intercepti­on to seal the Falcons’ loss to the Dolphins yesterday in Atlanta.
AP PHOTO LOST CAUSE: Matt Ryan shows his frustratio­n after throwing an intercepti­on to seal the Falcons’ loss to the Dolphins yesterday in Atlanta.

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