The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Year of comebacks, surprises

Clemson, Patriots, Federer, Garcia big winners from 2017.

- By Eddie Pells

It began as the Year of the Comeback.

In college football, where Clemson got the last laugh in a wild fourth quarter in which the lead changed hands three times.

And in pro football, where the New England Patriots rallied from 25 points down to send the Super Bowl to overtime for the first time in its history, then cruised to a quick touchdown for the franchise’s fifth title.

The rest of 2017 might have been called the Year of the Unexpected. From Sergio Garcia’s long-overdue green jacket to Roger Federer’s late-in-the-game return to the top to Usain Bolt losing not one, but two races in his finale, the year’s best events kept us guessing.

Back and forth: Clemson and Alabama met for the second straight year with the national title on the line and one question to answer: How would they top the 45-40 thriller from the year before? Alabama won that game and appeared to be on track for a repeat, leading 24-14 after three quarters that were more or less a snoozefest. The fourth quarter was much different. It included four touchdowns, three lead changes over the final 4:38, and ultimately, the winner — a 2-yard throw from Deshaun Watson to Hunter Renfrow with 1 second left that gave Clemson the 35-31 win and its first title since 1981.

Super comeback: Did the Falcons choke this game away or did the Patriots wrest it away? Either way, it was a comeback for the history books. Atlanta took a 28-3 lead with 8:31 left in the third quarter. From there, Atlanta’s prevent defense and questionab­le calls on offense combined with New England’s refusal to give up turned it into an all-timer. The Patriots’ tying drive was highlighte­d by a remarkable catch by Julian Edelman. New England tied the game at 28, won the overtime coin toss and Atlanta’s shocked defense offered no resistance. The Patriots won 34-28.

Only a number: He was 35, coming off a knee injury and much closer to the end of his career than his prime. Nobody could be blamed for overlookin­g Roger Federer. Yet the father of four, playing his first big tournament after sitting out for six months, came back in classic fashion, turning back the clock to top his longtime rival, Rafael Nadal, in a memorable Australian Open final. Federer overcame a break in the fifth set to capture his 18th Grand Slam title with a 4, 3-6, 6-1, 3-6, 6-3 victory. It was Federer’s first major since Wimbledon in 2012. And he would go on to take No. 19 later this year at Wimbledon.

Seeing green: Two shots behind with six holes to play, the Masters looked like another in a long string of major disappoint­ments for Sergio Garcia. But Garcia did not fade. He saved par after hitting his drive into an azalea bush on No. 13, then made eagle on No. 15 to set up a playoff with Justin Rose that Garcia won. Garcia could’ve won it with a 5-foot birdie putt on No. 18, but it rolled out. Garcia persisted. Rose hit his drive into the trees on the playoff hole and couldn’t scramble to save par. The result: Garcia wearing the green jacket and capturing his first major. No one had ever played more majors as a pro (70) before winning one for the first time.

Some farewell: World championsh­ips were supposed to be a stroll down the straightaw­ay followed by an oversized going-away party for track’s biggest star, Usain Bolt. Not even close. Bolt finished third in the final 100-meter race of his career, unable to find the overdrive that had sparked him to all those Olympic medals. Then, in his curtain call, the 6-foot-5 sensation pulled up lame in the anchor leg of the 400 relay. The crowd gasped. Bolt was placed in a wheelchair and later limped off the track. It was proof, yet again, that nobody commands the spotlight quite like Bolt — even on those rare occasions when he doesn’t win.

Long ball: Ten innings, seven home runs, 5 hours, 17 minutes. The Astros topped the Dodgers 13-12 in Game 5 of the World Series. The teams combined for 28 hits and used 14 pitchers. In a game in which the long ball reigned, it was a simple single off the bat of Alex Bregman that brought home Carlos Correa for the winning run.

 ?? PHOTOS BY ASSOCIATED PRESS, GETTY IMAGES ?? Quarterbac­k Tom Brady (left) raises another trophy for the Patriots following an improbable Super Bowl comeback; Roger Federer (top right) kisses the Wimbledon trophy as he wins his 19th career major and second of 2017 at age 35; and Sergio Garcia wins...
PHOTOS BY ASSOCIATED PRESS, GETTY IMAGES Quarterbac­k Tom Brady (left) raises another trophy for the Patriots following an improbable Super Bowl comeback; Roger Federer (top right) kisses the Wimbledon trophy as he wins his 19th career major and second of 2017 at age 35; and Sergio Garcia wins...
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