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EPIC RALLY, OT WIN GIVES PATS 5TH TITLE

Down by 25, Brady leads rally to 5th title

- By Sam Farmer Los Angeles Times

Above, New England Patriots quarterbac­k Tom Brady raises the Vince Lombardi Trophy as coach Bill Belichick, right, celebrates with him after their overtime win against the Atlanta Falcons Sunday at NRG Stadium in Houston. Belichick and Brady became the first coach and quarterbac­k, respective­ly, to win five Super Bowls. Brady was named the game’s MVP. Left, singer Lady Gaga performs during the Super Bowl LI halftime show.

HOUSTON — It was a game that left the football world Brady Gaga.

After a first half in which he played like that impostor in a Tom Brady mask, the New England Patriots quarterbac­k put on a Super Bowl performanc­e for the ages Sunday, leading his team back from a 25-point deficit to beat the Atlanta Falcons in overtime, 34-28.

Half the crowd at NRG Stadium was delirious, and half was stunned. But Brady was wholly spectacula­r, surpassing Hall of Fame quarterbac­ks Joe Montana and Terry Bradshaw to win his fifth Lombardi Trophy — a fifth, too, for Bill Belichick, the most of any head coach.

“We all brought each other back,” Brady said. “We never felt out of it.”

The knockout blow was not a pass but a run, a 2-yard carry around the right side by James White, who just pushed his way across the plane of the end zone on the first possession of the extra period — the first overtime game in the 51-year history of the Super Bowl.

That the Patriots were even in that position was stunning, considerin­g midway through the third quarter they trailed 28-3 and had barely registered a pulse. The Falcons looked as if they could coast through the second half and collect

the first Super Bowl win in franchise history.

Patriots safety Patrick Chung had some blunt criticism for anyone who questions Brady’s place in the pantheon of quarterbac­ks.

“Whoever says that he’s not the greatest,” he said, “you guys are stupid.”

Now, for more of the stupefying: The Patriots are the first team to win a postseason game after trailing by more than 16 points in the final quarter. It was also the largest comeback in New England history in any game, with Brady’s previous best being a 24-point comeback against Denver in 2013.

“We made history,” defensive end Chris Long said. “We absolutely, positively made history.”

With the win, New England became the fourth team with at least five Lombardi Trophies, joining San Francisco (five), Dallas (five) and Pittsburgh (six).

Even though the Patriots only won by six, it was their biggest margin of victory in any Super Bowl. Their previous four wins came by three, three, three and four points.

NFL commission­er Roger Goodell was loudly booed by New England fans when he presented the trophy to Patriots owner Robert Kraft on the podium, the reaction a byproduct of Brady’s fourgame Deflategat­e suspension.

“A lot has transpired over the last two years,” Kraft said as the boos turned to cheers. “And I don’t think that needs any explanatio­n.”

New England defeated five different NFC teams to reach the NFL’s mountainto­p: St. Louis, Carolina, Philadelph­ia, Seattle and Atlanta.

This was a Patriots team that had not trailed since Week 12, and the Falcons — led by quarterbac­k Matt Ryan, the NFL’s most valuable player – had the league’s No. 1 offense and a staggering collection of weapons on that side of the ball.

But the Patriots had Brady, which means they’re never really out of it.

“We were just worrying about beating them by one point,” Patriots receiver Danny Amendola said. “We knew we had to come out in the second half and play, no matter what. They were coming at us with a lot of things. We just wanted to be resilient, we wanted to be tough mentally, and we got it done.”

Getting it done meant digging their way out of a 16-point hole in the final 5 minutes, 56 seconds. That was accomplish­ed with a 6-yard touchdown pass to Amendola, followed by a conversion run by White, then a 1-yard run by White with 57 seconds left, and a Brady-to-Amendola conversion pass to forge a tie at 28.

The final tally for White was three touchdowns — two rushing and one receiving.

“We went into the locker room at halftime and said the game wasn’t over,” said White, who called the comeback “an amazing feeling.”

The Falcons are left to ponder what might have been.

“There’s nothing you can really say,” Ryan said. “That’s a tough loss. Obviously very disappoint­ed, very close to getting done what we wanted to get done. But it’s hard to find the words tonight.”

Coach Dan Quinn was defensive coordinato­r in Seattle when the Patriots ripped out the Seahawks’ heart in the Super Bowl two years ago. In that game, everyone questioned why Pete Carroll would opt to throw the ball — leading to a New England intercepti­on — rather than running Marshawn Lynch near the goal line with the game on the line.

This time, Quinn’s Falcons decided to throw at a pivotal point, when running the ball might have won them the game. With less than five minutes remaining and the Falcons looking to protect their eight-point lead, they moved deep into New England territory and had a first down at the Patriots 22. A field goal would have made it a two-score game.

But Ryan dropped back to pass on second down and was sacked for a 12-yard loss. On third down, he completed a short pass to Mohamed Sanu, but the Falcons were moved back again — and out of field goal range — by a holding call.

“I think at the end, when we go back and watch it tomorrow, there were things that we could have done different or played differentl­y,” Quinn said.

 ?? JAMIE SQUIRE/GETTY IMAGES ?? Patriots QB Tom Brady celebrates after New England scored in overtime to beat Atlanta in Super Bowl LI Sunday in Houston. Brady became the first QB to win five Super Bowl titles.
JAMIE SQUIRE/GETTY IMAGES Patriots QB Tom Brady celebrates after New England scored in overtime to beat Atlanta in Super Bowl LI Sunday in Houston. Brady became the first QB to win five Super Bowl titles.
 ??  ?? Atlanta 28 (OT) New England 34
Atlanta 28 (OT) New England 34
 ?? TIMOTHY A. CLARY/AFP/GETTY IMAGES ??
TIMOTHY A. CLARY/AFP/GETTY IMAGES
 ?? DARRON CUMMINGS/ASSOCIATED PRESS ??
DARRON CUMMINGS/ASSOCIATED PRESS
 ??  ??
 ?? CHARLIE RIEDEL/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Patriots RB James White drives toward the goal line for the game-winning 2-yard TD run in overtime on Sunday.
CHARLIE RIEDEL/ASSOCIATED PRESS Patriots RB James White drives toward the goal line for the game-winning 2-yard TD run in overtime on Sunday.
 ?? ELSA/GETTY IMAGES ?? Julian Edelman, left, and Chris Hogan, right, celebrate after Danny Amendola (behind Edelman) caught a 2-point conversion pass to tie the score at 28 late in the fourth quarter.
ELSA/GETTY IMAGES Julian Edelman, left, and Chris Hogan, right, celebrate after Danny Amendola (behind Edelman) caught a 2-point conversion pass to tie the score at 28 late in the fourth quarter.

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