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Brady’s Pats to face Ryan’s Birds

- By Howard Fendrich Associated Press Pro Football Writer

A season that began with Tom Brady serving a fourgame suspension will end with him in the Super Bowl, where his New England Patriots will take on Matt Ryan and the Atlanta Falcons.

While much of the attention between now and the NFL championsh­ip game on Feb. 5 in Houston will be focused on Brady vs. Ryan, the truly key matchup could be Atlanta’s score-at-will offense, which produced the most points during the regular season, against the unheralded defense of New England, which allowed the fewest.

And these two teams are playing their best football at the most important time.

AFC champion New England (16-2) has won nine consecutiv­e games — and hasn’t even trailed since Nov. 27. NFC champion Atlanta (13-5) has won its past six in a row, scoring at least 33 points in each.

“We’ll enjoy this,” Ryan said after earning his first Super Bowl trip in his ninth season, “but we’ve got some work to do.”

Brady and coach Bill Belichick will be seeking their — and the Patriots’ — fifth Lombardi Trophy, and second in three years. This will be the franchise’s league-record ninth appearance in the Super Bowl, including titles in the 2002, 2004, 2005 and 2015 editions.

“This team showed a lot of mental toughness over the course of the year,” Brady said.

The Falcons have never won the Super Bowl. This will be Atlanta’s second trip to the big game; it lost to Denver in 1999.

The club’s never had a quarterbac­k quite as good as Ryan, though.

The guy nicknamed “Matty Ice” went 27 for 38 for 392 yards, four touchdowns and zero intercepti­ons, while adding a rushing TD, to boot, leading Atlanta past Matt Ryan Tom Brady Aaron Rodgers and the Green Bay Packers 44-21 on Sunday in the NFC championsh­ip game.

“We did exactly what we’ve been doing all year and it feels really good,” Ryan said after becoming the first quarterbac­k in NFL history to throw for at least three TDs in four consecutiv­e postseason games. “We’ll be ready to go. That’s for sure.”

Later Sunday, the 39-yearold Brady tied Hall of Famer Joe Montana’s record with a ninth three-TD postseason game, helping the Patriots beat Ben Roethlisbe­rger 36-17 for the AFC championsh­ip.

Oddsmakers didn’t even wait for the second game to end before making New England a 3-point favorite over Atlanta in the Super Bowl.

New England opened the season with a 3-1 record despite using two backup quarterbac­ks while playing those games without Brady after he went through a lengthy court battle in an unsuccessf­ul bid to have his ban overturned for what became known as “Deflategat­e.” NFL Commission­er Roger Goodell suspended Brady because the league said it determined the Patriots intentiona­lly underinfla­ted footballs used in an AFC championsh­ip game victory two years ago.

During Sunday’s game in Foxborough, Massachuse­tts, spectators mocked Goodell by chanting “Where is Roger?” — he chose to attend the game in Atlanta instead.

And as well as Brady played — 32 for 42 for 384 yards, those three scores and zero intercepti­ons — it was the way New England’s defense played that stood out.

Right from the get-go, too: On Pittsburgh’s first two drives, nine plays yielded a total of 26 yards.

Then there was the stand late in the second quarter, when the Steelers had firstand-goal at the 1-foot line and wound up settling for a field goal.

And, by game’s end, the Patriots had forced two turnovers.

New England ranked No. 1 in the NFL in points allowed per game at 15.6, and it gave up only 326.4 yards per game, eighth-best.

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