New York Post

White-hot night for unknown RB

- By MARK CANNIZZARO

HOUSTON — Sometimes, lives change forever at Super Bowls.

Every year at this time, as much drama is centered on what little-known player might become the unlikely hero as there is for what the actual result of the game will be.

In Super Bowl LI Sunday night at NRG Stadium, we got a double dose of drama — a stunning 34-28 comeback overtime victory by the Patriots over the Falcons and yet another in a long line of unlikely heroes: New England utility running back James White.

In the big picture, what Patriots quarterbac­k Tom Brady did in en route to yet another Super Bowl MVP was beyond words.

But it was White who willed the Patriots to their fifth Super Bowl title in franchise history. He scored three touchdowns, including the game-winning walk-off score — a 2-yard rushing touchdown 3:48 into overtime.

White caught a Super Bowl-record 14 passes for 110 yards, breaking the previous record held by Denver receiver Demaryius Thomas. White also rushed for 29 yards on six carries, with two of those carries going for TDs, matching his career total in rushing TDs. He also scored a crucial two-point conversion that kept the Patriots comeback alive.

His game-winning score was a microcosm of the entire New England recordsett­ing comeback in that he was not going to be denied.

Falcons safety Ricardo Allen had White by the legs short of the goal line, then cornerback­s Robert Alford and Jalen Collins hit him high. And that still was not enough as he bulled his way across the plane of the goal line to end one of the most thrilling Super Bowls in the game’s 51-year history.

“When I saw the hole, I said, ‘I’ve got to get in,’ ’’ White said. “It was just a great call by [offensive coordinato­r Josh] McDaniels. The offensive line did a great job of blocking and I just found a way into the end zone. We went into the locker room at the half and said the game wasn’t over.’’

White’s first score, a 5-yard reception from Brady with 2:06 remaining in the third quarter, cut the Atlanta lead to 28-9. After a Brady scoring pass to Danny Amendola, White scored on a two-point conversion to make it a one-possession game at 28-20 with 5:56 left in regulation.

White then scored from 1 yard out with 57 seconds remaining in regulation to cut the Atlanta lead to 28-26 before the Patriots converted yet another two-point conversion to send to overtime at 28-28.

That, of course, set up White’s game-winning TD — his third of the Super Bowl after he’d scored five in the previous 18 games.

And so another unlikely, little-known Super Bowl hero was born.

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