Lodi News-Sentinel

Super Bowl loss to Patriots still a sore subject for Atlanta

- — Tom Rock, Newsday

ATLANTA — Having the Patriots here is opening some old wounds for Falcons fans.

It was only two short years ago that the Falcons led the Patriots, 28-3, in Super Bowl LI in Houston, only to lose, 34-28, in overtime. Now many of those same Patriots — Bill Belichick, Tom Brady, Julian Edelman — are back to try to win another ... and in the Falcons’ new stadium.

“We hate them,” said Carl Dukes, host of the “Dukes and Bell” radio show on 92.9 The Game in Atlanta.

Beau Morgan, executive producer of the show, said that there is only one way the city will ever get over that collapse, and that’s by winning a Super Bowl of their own.

But having New Englanders invade the south is actually not the worst-case scenario for Atlanta.

Dukes said leading up to the conference title games there was grave concern from listeners and callers that the Saints would be in Super Bowl LIII, which would have meant a division rival.

“The most horrible nightmare in Atlanta would be having the Saints in our city, in our building, playing for a championsh­ip,” Dukes said. “Having the Saints play the Patriots was our second-worst nightmare. Thank God it didn’t play out that way.”

So having the Patriots in town against the Rams is actually the lesser of several evils for Atlanta. Most in the city are rooting for the Rams, especially because head coach Sean McVay grew up not far from here.

But what might have happened if the Patriots and Saints were playing?

Said Dukes: “We actually would have been Patriot fans.”

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