Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Brady plays down his perfect record against favored Cowboys

- By Fred Goodall

TAMPA, Fla. — Tom Brady isn’t fazed by being a home underdog in the NFL playoffs for the first time in his career.

After all, no one has enjoyed more postseason success than the seven-time Super Bowl champion, who begins his quest for a record eighth ring when the Tampa Bay Buccaneers (8-9) host the Dallas Cowboys (12-5) in a NFC wild-card matchup Monday night.

Brady owns a slew of playoff records, including most games played (47), wins (35), passing yards (13,049), touchdown passes (86) and Super Bowl appearance­s (10).

The 45-year-old quarterbac­k, who’s in the playoffs for the 14th consecutiv­e season, has one more thing going for him:

The Cowboys — 2½-point favorites, according to FanDuel Sportsbook — have never beaten the five-time Super Bowl MVP.

Not that Brady believes career accomplish­ments or being 7-0 against America’s Team, including a 19-3 season-opening win at Dallas four months ago, will have any bearing on the latest matchup at Raymond James Stadium.

The Bucs also beat the Cowboys and Dak Prescott 31-29 in Tampa to open the 2021 season.

“For me, it’s just a blessing to have those types of memories and experience­s. I’ve been very blessed to be a part of great teams that got to this point and then had a lot of big wins,” said Brady, who joined the Bucs in 2020 after a historic two-decade run that saw him win six NFL titles with the New England Patriots.

“They’ve got a great team,” Brady said of facing the Cowboys, who’ve rebounded from not only dropping the season opener to Tampa Bay but also losing Prescott for five weeks with a fractured right thumb suffered in that game, to earn the top wild-card spot in the NFC.

“I’ve played them quite a bit over the years and I have a lot of respect for the organizati­on, their history, a lot of great players. But all of it’s about three hours on Monday night,” he added.

“Everything’s going to come down to what we do those three hours. Nothing in the past, nothing about the color jerseys we’re wearing. It’s who’s playing, what we’re doing, how we’re executing, how we’re executing under pressure. That’s what it’s going to come down to.”

The Bucs ended a 13-year hiatus from the playoffs and became the first team to win a Super Bowl played in its home stadium in their first season with Brady. They lost to the eventual champion Los Angeles Rams in the NFC divisional round at home a year ago.

Still, Tampa Bay’s 5- 1 record over the past two postseason­s is the best in the league. Despite winning four fewer games than Dallas and finishing the regular season with a losing record, the Bucs are hosting Monday night’s game because they repeated as NFC South champs.

“You have to embrace these opportunit­ies, said Cowboys coach Mike McCarthy, whose team is the No. 5 seed in the NFC.

“But at the end of the day ... clearly, what we’ll pay the most attention to is we have had the opportunit­y to compete twice (in two seasons) against Tom Brady and Tampa. That’s really as far as it goes with us. That’s all we can focus on,” McCarthy added.

“We have zero responsibi­lity or even time that will be wasted on what happened prior to those two games. None of that responsibi­lity falls to us.”

Dallas has not won a postseason game on the road in 30 years, a stretch covering eight games. The most recent victory was 30-20 at San Francisco in the NFC championsh­ip game during the 1992 season.

The Cowboys went on to win three of the next four Super Bowls. They haven’t reached an NFC championsh­ip game since the last of those titles.

Brady has averaged 277.9 yards per game passing and thrown for 15 TDs vs. five intercepti­ons in seven career games against the Cowboys.

He shrugged off a question about whether being a home underdog provides extra motivation, saying he’s never really paid attention to “those things.”

“That’s what single eliminatio­n is all about. You’ve got to be at your best in that moment.”

 ?? John Bazemore/Associated Press ?? Buccaneers quarterbac­k Tom Brady warms up before a game Jan. 8 against the Falcons in Atlanta.
John Bazemore/Associated Press Buccaneers quarterbac­k Tom Brady warms up before a game Jan. 8 against the Falcons in Atlanta.

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