Advertisement
Rob Gronkowski makes one of his three first-half touchdown catches. ASSOCIATED PRESSAP

NFL Playoffs: Tebow Time up; Saints martyred

The second round of the NFL post-season got off to a blistering start last night with wins for Tom Brady’s New England Patriots and the unfavoured San Francisco 49ers.

TOM BRADY TOOK on Tebowmania and brought the New England Patriots within a game of another Super Bowl appearance.

Brady tied an NFL postseason record with six touchdown passes, including five in the first half, as the Patriots roughed up Tim Tebow and the Denver Broncos 45-10 on Saturday night.

“He’s been around the block a few times. He knows how to win games,” Denver’s Champ Bailey said of Brady. “If you’re not ready to punch him in the mouth, he’s going to eat you up all night.”

The Patriots (14-3) will face the winner of Sunday’s Houston-Baltimore game in the AFC championship. The Texans (11-6) are coming off the first postseason victory in franchise history and meet the Ravens (12-4), who were 8-0 at home during the regular season.

At San Francisco, the Alex Smith-to-Vernon Davis connection has the 49ers in the NFC championship game and the stunned New Orleans Saints headed home.

Smith threw a 14-yard touchdown pass to Davis with 9 seconds left just after Drew Brees put the high-powered Saints ahead, and resurgent San Francisco (14-3) capitalized on five New Orleans turnovers for a thrilling 36-32 playoff victory.

Joe Montana to Dwight Clark in 1982 was “The Catch.” Steve Young to Terrell Owens in 1999 was “The Catch II.” This group of 49ers has its own playoff-punctuating play.

“You’ve got to call it ‘The Grab,’” Davis said. “We were down. I had to make it happen to take my teammates where we want to go.”

The 49ers will take on the winner of Sunday’s showdown between Aaron Rodgers and the defending Super Bowl champion Green Bay Packers (15-1) and Eli Manning and the New York Giants (10-7).

At Foxborough, Mass., the Patriots snapped a three-game postseason losing streak and lifted the Patriots to the verge of their fifth Super Bowl trip in 11 seasons.

“We came in and started fast, and it was a big win for us,” said Brady, who even got off a 48-yard punt on third down.

It also ended one of the season’s most exciting story lines — one that began when Denver was 1-4 and made Tebow a starter. The one-time third-stringer promptly won six in a row and seven of eight, with a string of stunning comebacks.

“I was really proud of what he showed and where he brought this football team,” coach John Fox said. “We’re a work-in-progress.”

Patriots All-Pro tight end Rob Gronkowski tied a postseason mark with three touchdown catches, all in the opening half. Brady’s sixth TD was to his other tight end, Aaron Hernandez, as the quarterback tied Steve Young and Daryle Lamonica for the most in a postseason game; Brady’s five in one half set a league playoff mark.

“There were a lot of ups and downs this season,” Tebow said. “To win some special games, to get in the playoffs, there’s a lot of great things about this year.”

At San Francisco, Smith ran for a 28-yard TD with 2:11 left and threw another scoring pass to Davis in the first quarter. Coach Jim Harbaugh’s NFC West champions proved that a hard-hitting, stingy defense can still win in the modern, wide-open NFL by holding off one of league’s most dynamic offenses.

“This is big for us,” Davis said. “It’s history. It’s legendary.”

Brees completed a 66-yard touchdown pass to Jimmy Graham with 1:37 left and the Saints seemed poised to rally from a 17-point deficit for a victory. Then Smith and Davis delivered.

San Francisco triumphed in its first playoff game in nine years, and is a win away from returning to the Super Bowl for the first time since capturing the franchise’s fifth championship after the 1994 season.

Brees, whose team was coming off consecutive 600-yard games, completed 40 of 63 passes for 462 yards and four touchdowns and was sacked three times. He also threw two interceptions, his first in the postseason in five years, and New Orleans (14-4) fell short again in its quest to get back to the Super Bowl after winning it all two years ago. The Saints are still searching for the first postseason road victory in franchise history after falling to 0-5.

“It stings right now because of the expectation level that we had coming into this tournament and understanding that if we win here, we’re into the NFC championship game and anything can happen,” Brees said. “That’s tough. Tough to swallow at this point.”

– AP

Sunday Papers: some of the week’s best sportswriting>

The sporting tweets of the week>

Here are 11 of our favourite pictures from the past seven days>

Close
3 Comments
    Submit a report
    Please help us understand how this comment violates our community guidelines.
    Thank you for the feedback
    Your feedback has been sent to our team for review.