Ten
years removed from his last Super Bowl win, Tom Brady wasn't letting this one
slip away.
Sure,
the brilliant Brady needed a huge play by an undrafted rookie to preserve New
England's 28-24 Super Bowl victory over Seattle on Sunday night. But Brady's
imprint was all over the Patriots' sensational fourth-quarter rally for their
fourth NFL championship of the Brady-Bill Belichick era.
"You
know, whatever it takes," the record-setting Brady said after throwing for
four touchdowns, including a 3-yarder to Julian Edelman with 2:02 remaining as
New England rallied from a 10-point deficit. "Every team has a journey and
a lot of people lost faith in us ... but we held strong, we held together, and
it's a great feeling."
The
Patriots (15-4) had to survive a last-ditch drive by the Seahawks (14-5), who
got to the 1, helped by a spectacular juggling catch by Jermaine Kearse. Then
Malcolm Butler stepped in front of Ricardo Lockette to pick off Russell
Wilson's pass and complete one of the wildest Super Bowl finishes.
Brady
leaped for joy on the Patriots sideline after Butler's first career
interception.
"It
wasn't the way we drew it up," said Brady, who won his third Super Bowl
MVP award. "It was a lot of mental toughness. Our team has had it all
year. We never doubted each other, so that's what it took."
Brady
surpassed Joe Montana's mark of 11 Super Bowl touchdown passes with a 4-yarder
to Danny Amendola to bring the Patriots within three points
Seattle,
seeking to become the first repeat NFL champion since New England a decade ago,
was outplayed for the first half, yet tied at 14. The Seahawks scored the only
10 points of the third period, but the NFL-leading defense couldn't slow the
brilliant Brady when it counted most.
"He's
Tom Brady," Edelman said. "He's the greatest quarterback on the
planet."
It
didn't matter how much air was in the balls, Brady was unstoppable when the
pressure was strongest. While pushing aside the controversy over air pressure
in the footballs stemming from the AFC title game, the Patriots toyed with
Seattle in the final 12 minutes.
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Seattle
didn't quit -- it never does -- and Kearse's 33-yard catch with 1:06 remaining
got it to the 5. Marshawn Lynch rushed for 4 yards, then backup cornerback
Butler, who was victimized on Kearse's reception, made the biggest play of his
first NFL season with 20 seconds remaining.
"I
just had a vision that I was going to make a big play and it came true,"
said Butler, an undrafted rookie from West Alabama. "I'm just blessed. I
can't explain it right now. It's crazy."
Seahawks
linebacker Bruce Irvin was ejected in the final seconds for instigating a
near-brawl, delaying the celebration for the Patriots.
Soon they were mobbing one another on
the same field where their 2007 unbeaten season was ruined in the Super Bowl by
the Giants. They also fell to the Giants for the 2011 title.
But
thanks to superstar Brady and the obscure Butler, they are champions again.
"Malcolm,
what a play," Brady said. "I mean, for a rookie to make a play like
that in a Super Bowl and win us the game, it was unbelievable."
Brady
has equaled Montana with four Lombardi Trophies and three Super Bowl MVPs. He
stands alone with 13 Super Bowl touchdown passes. He was 37 for 50 for 328
yards against the NFL's top-ranked defense.
He
also was picked off twice; Brady was intercepted a total of two times in his
previous five Super Bowls.
Yet,
he picked apart the Seahawks on fourth-quarter drives of 68 and 64 yards,
solidifying his championship legacy.
His
heroics offset those of Chris Matthews, one of Seattle's least-used players
before the postseason. Matthews recovered the onside kick that helped the
Seahawks beat Green Bay in overtime for the NFC crown, and had a breakout
performance Sunday.
Having
never caught a pass in the NFL, Matthews grabbed four for 109 yards and a
touchdown. Lynch ran for 102 yards, but didn't get the ball at the 1 on the
decisive play -- a decision the Seahawks will rue forever.
"For
it to come down to a play like that, I hate that we have to live with
that," coach Pete Carroll said, "because we did everything right to
win the football game.
The
teams got down to football under the open retractable roof at University of
Phoenix Stadium -- the first venue to host an indoor and an outdoor Super Bowl
-- after dealing with distractions far beyond the typical Super Bowl hype. The
Patriots are still being investigated for using for those under-inflated
footballs the AFC championship game.
It
was a game of spurts by both teams before a crowd of 70,288 that was clearly
pro-Seattle.
Jeremy
Lane made the first big play to negate a nearly eight-minute drive by the
Patriots with a leaping interception at the goal line late in the first
quarter. Lane made his first pro interception, but left with a wrist injury
after being tackled by Julian Edelman.
His
replacement, Tharold Simon, got torched by Brady the rest of the way.
Wilson
was getting no time to look downfield and he didn't get off a pass in the first
quarter. When Brady completed his record 50th postseason TD throw, 11 yards to
Brandon LaFell against Simon, it was 7-0.
Seattle
went to its bench to help tie it.
Matthews'
first career catch, a reaching 44-yarder over Kyle Arrington and by far the
longest first-half play for Seattle, led to Lynch's bruising 3-yard TD run to
make it 7-7.
But
Brady to Rob Gronkowski made it 14-7 and seemed to finish off a dominant first
half for the Patriots. Except no one told the resilient Seahawks.
A
dormant offense turned dangerous in a span of 29 seconds, covering 80 yards in
five plays, including a late gamble. Lockette caught a 23-yard pass and
Arrington was flagged for a facemask, putting Seattle at the 10 with :06
remaining. Carroll went for it and the new Seahawks star, Matthews, grabbed
Wilson's pass in the left corner of the end zone.
It
was the most lopsided halftime tie imaginable.
Then
Seattle stormed to a 24-14 lead in the third quarter on Steven Hauschka's
27-yard field goal and Doug Baldwin's 3-yard TD reception. New England was
stumbling -- until Brady once again stepped up.
"I've
been at it for 15 years and we've had a couple of tough losses in this
game," Brady said. "This one came down to the end, and this time, we
made the plays."
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