Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Act your age: Senior moment for Brady, Rivers

- By Kyle Hightower

FOXBOROUGH, Mass. — Tom Brady typically shrugs off any mention of records or milestones he sets.

But even he had to chuckle at the one he and Chargers quarterbac­k Philip Rivers will mark when they meet in Sunday’s divisional playoffs.

Brady, who will be 41 years and 163 days old, and Rivers, at 37 years and 36 days old, will combine to be the oldest pair of quarterbac­ks to face each other in an NFL playoff game, breaking the mark Brady held with Peyton Manning.

“Nice,” Brady said of the impending footnote. “Nice and old.”

Sunday will be just the fourth playoff meeting between the teams, with the Patriots holding a 2-1 edge.

Rivers enters Sunday with a 1-7 record against the Patriots, including 0-4 in games in Foxborough and 0-2 in the playoffs. Rivers earned his lone victory against New England during the 2008 regular season, when the Chargers were still in San Diego. Brady was sidelined New England for that game by a knee injury and Matt Cassel started in his place.

Brady is 7-0 as a starter against Rivers.

The Patriots (11-5), who captured their 10th straight AFC East title this season, will be seeking their eighth consecutiv­e trip to the AFC title game.

The Chargers (13-4) haven’t even been to the conference title game since losing 21-12 to the Patriots during the 2007 season.

Rivers played in that game just days removed from tearing the ACL in his right knee. He limped his way through it while being intercepte­d twice and failing to throw a touchdown pass.

It’s become the toughness brand for a quarterbac­k that hasn’t missed a game since becoming the Chargers starter in 2006.

Rivers, who led his team to five wins in its last six regular-season games and a road win at Baltimore in the wild-card round last week, said he’s tried to keep past shortcomin­gs against New England out of his mind this week.

“It’s not something you think about a whole lot,” he said. “It exists and it’s there but again, and I mean this, I don’t feel that I’m playing Tom. Certainly, it’s a Tom Brady-led team and we know how things work with the quarterbac­k and the head coach that have the record attached to it. We’ve got a heck of a challenge.”

It will also be a chance to earn a signature win for second-year Chargers coach Anthony Lynn, who has steered Los Angeles through its relocation and a season that included a game in London.

To have another chance at this stage of his career to notch a playoff win against a New England team that has been the standard in the conference is an opportunit­y not lost on Rivers.

“Fired up to have a shot,” Rivers said.

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