Milwaukee Journal Sentinel - Packer Plus

Herbert, Crosby help send AFC past NFC

- Greg Beacham

From Darius Leonard’s rambling pick-6 on the opening drive to Mac Jones’ blissfully enthusiast­ic Griddy dance at the 2-minute warning, the Pro Bowl’s Vegas debut was a messy, chaotic show.

And Justin Herbert, Maxx Crosby and the AFC stars all won big.

Herbert hit Mark Andrews with two touchdown passes, leading the AFC to a 41-35 victory over the NFC on Sunday in the return of the Pro Bowl.

“I think it’s a great opportunit­y to come out here and play some of the best football players this game has to offer,” Herbert said. “What an opportunit­y to learn more about their game, understand them, get to know them and just have some fun.”

Jones passed for 112 yards and threw a touchdown pass, and the New England rookie also did a memorable rendition of the Griddy in the first Las Vegas edition of the NFL’s annual all-star game, back from a one-year hiatus caused by the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Herbert won the offensive MVP award after passing for 98 yards and finding the Baltimore tight end for two TDs in the first half of the Los Angeles Chargers star’s first Pro Bowl appearance. Andrews had five catches for 82 yards.

Crosby, from the hometown Raiders, won the defensive MVP award with two sacks, three batted passes and three tackles for loss in a pleasingly sloppy game featuring seven intercepti­ons, with at least one thrown by each of the six quarterbac­ks.

“I didn’t want to injure or hurt anybody, but I still wanted to have some fun and work on my game,” Crosby said.

The AFC has won five consecutiv­e Pro Bowls since the league returned to a conference format in the 2016-17 season. Its players took home $80,000 apiece from Vegas, while the NFC got $40,000.

Kyler Murray passed for 160 yards and three touchdowns for the NFC. The Arizona star made it close when he hit Minnesota’s Dalvin Cook for a TD with

2:36 to play, trimming the AFC’s lead to six points.

Jones then got stopped on a scramble in the waning minutes, but kept running about 55 more yards to the end zone and celebrated alone with the Griddy, pioneered by Minnesota’s Justin Jefferson. After learning his celebratio­n was premature, Jones hit Pittsburgh’s Najee Harris for a first down on the next play to allow the AFC to run out the clock.

The Pro Bowl moved to Las Vegas for the first time after a four-year run in Orlando, and a less-than-capacity crowd at Allegiant Stadium mostly cheered for the Raiders and booed their AFC West rivals. Otherwise there was a decidedly mellow vibe on the field from the moment Leonard returned an intercepti­on 45 rambling yards for a TD.

Both teams treated the Pro Bowl with all the seriousnes­s it deserves: Tackling to the ground was rare while both teams effectively played two-hand touch, and neither defense put up more than a perfunctor­y pass rush.

The informal rules to prevent excessive violence were also quite flexible: Tampa Bay’s Antoine Winfield returned an intercepti­on 63 yards for a score to end the first quarter, but only after running through a pretty clear two-hand touch from Las Vegas’ Hunter Renfrow.

Renfrow got the day’s biggest single cheer when he made a tip-toe TD grab in the back of the end zone.

Can’t kick it: In another attempt at violence-reducing innovation, the Pro Bowl was played with no kickoffs. The game started with the NFC offense on its own 15 in the so-called “spot and choose” method of eliminatin­g dangerous kickoffs from football. The winner of the opening coin toss has the option to choose where to spot the ball on the field or whether to start the game with the ball. Neither Pro Bowl punter got to play, either. AFC coach Mike Vrabel told Las Vegas’ AJ Cole earlier in the week that the team wouldn’t be punting — so Cole said he ate two hot dogs at halftime. “I’m just here for moral support, basically,” Cole said. “Just passing out water and high-fives.”

Wish I was a baller: Tampa Bay’s Mike Evans went up and over the Raiders’ Denzel Perryman for a 19-yard TD catch in the first half. Perryman then went into the locker room at halftime and tweeted: “Lol i know i know, only if i was taller.”

Brothers gotta hug: Buffalo receiver Stefon Diggs got to go against his little brother, Dallas cornerback Trevon Diggs, for the first time as profession­als. Stefon even switched to defensive back when Trevon came in as a receiver for the NFC in the first half, and Stefon got credit for a pass breakup in the end zone after a good bit of hand-fighting between the brothers. Stefon called checkmate when he juked Trevon to the ground at the goal line on a TD run in the third quarter.

America’s playground: The stars seemed to enjoy Vegas, even if many didn’t hit the casinos. New Orleans’ Cameron Jordan spent the week at various attraction­s with his wife and children.

“It’s been a setup that, with some tweaking, can be phenomenal,” the seven-time Pro Bowl selection said. “Sensationa­l, even.”

The Pro Bowl will be followed to Vegas by the NFL draft in April. Super Bowl 58 will be here Feb. 11, 2024.

Brady absent: Tom Brady ended his NFL career by not participat­ing in the final 13 Pro Bowls for which he was selected, including this season. The seventime champion quarterbac­k hasn’t played in a Pro Bowl since 2005.

 ?? AP ?? AFC quarterbac­k Justin Herbert was named offensive MVP of the Pro Bowl after tossing two touchdown passes in the first half.
AP AFC quarterbac­k Justin Herbert was named offensive MVP of the Pro Bowl after tossing two touchdown passes in the first half.
 ?? AP ?? Bengals rookie wide receiver Ja'Marr Chase finished third in the NFL in receiving touchdowns with 13.
AP Bengals rookie wide receiver Ja'Marr Chase finished third in the NFL in receiving touchdowns with 13.

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