February 06, 2005

Super Bowl XXXIX: Patriots Dynasty Official

Super Bowl XXXIX

The New England Patriots won the Super Bowl (again!) defeating the Philadelphia Eagles 24-21, making it an official dynasty with a third championship victory in four years. The game's MVP was New England receiver Deion Branch, with 11 receptions for 133 yards, though Eagles receiver Terrell Owens turned in an impressive performance of his own at nine-for-122 - and T.O. was getting screws installed in his ankle a month ago! Here's a recap:

    This time Brady was, well, Brady. That meant 23-for-33 and 236 yards of passing for two touchdowns. That meant no interceptions. That meant a 9-0 postseason record, to tie Bart Starr from Green Bay's magical days for the most consecutive postseason wins by a quarterback. He is Mr. January. Mr. February. Mr. Super Bowl. At the age of 27.

    "It's a relief," he said. "It's been a long year."

    This time, the Patriots' defense turned the game with four turnovers, and had to stand its ground with kids, the injury-ravaged secondary down to two rookies and a second-year player in the second half.

    "We believe that someone is going to make the play," said safety Rodney Harrison, the veteran glue who had two interceptions.

    The Patriots withstood 357 passing yards and three touchdown passes from Donovan McNabb, and nine catches by Terrell Owens, who returned from his injury as he vowed he would.

    But they allowed McNabb few spectacular runs, sacked him four times with a pass rush intensified by changing from their usual 3-4 defense to 4-3, and intercepted him three times, the third to finish off Philadelphia's last gasp from its own 4.

    "We just had to keep guys coming at him at all times," linebacker Willie McGinest said. "They key was to confuse him."

    "I don't look at the touchdowns. I look at the interceptions," said McNabb, who put up 51 passes and completed 30. "This game could have been a blowout. You take away those three interceptions and we're probably ahead two or three touchdowns. It's woulda, coulda, shoulda."

    And so the Patriots pile more mystique upon their aura. The 34 wins in two seasons that would set one record. The nine straight postseason wins that would tie another. The three titles in four years, a glowing quadrennial matched only once before, by Dallas in the 1990s.

    The Super Bowl Roman numerals come and go and the Patriots supremacy remains the same. Three titles, all won by three points. Only the halftime shows change.

    It has been domination, somehow, without perception of many stars, but accomplished by attacking in waves. Overachievers, they were once called.

    "We're the most ring-fingered overachievers I've ever seen," said receiver Troy Brown.

    "We play Patriots ball," said cornerback Asante Samuel. "All we do is win."

    "It sounds almost cliche-ish after awhile," Brady said. "We're a team, we're a team. But after four years, I've never had a receiver complain about not getting a ball, I've never had a running back complain about not getting enough carries."

    They needed all their togetherness Sunday in a historically close fight. At 7-7, it was only the second halftime tie ever in the Super Bowl. At 14-14, it was the first Super Bowl to be tied after three quarters.

    It was also only the third game in 405 NFL postseason contests to be even at the end of all three periods.

    But the tie lasted barely a minute into the fourth quarter, when Corey Dillon's 2-yard touchdown run put the Patriots ahead, 21-14.

    The 66-yard drive, a direct response to the Eagles just scoring to tie, was an exhibition of New England purpose.

    The last big play on the drive came with Philadelphia's defenders clearly heard on television shouting "Watch out for the screen!"

    Brady threw a screen pass, anyway, to Kevin Faulk for 14 yards. The night was beginning to inexorably tilt New England's way after a shaky start. The Patriots did not have a first down their first four possessions.

    Moments later, the Patriots were back at the Philadelphia 4, and eventually kicked a field goal for a 24-14 lead.

    By the time McNabb threw a 30-yard touchdown pass to Greg Lewis to make it 24-21, there was only 1:48 left. The 79-yard march had taken 13 plays and 3:52. A splendid drive. But not for a team 10 points behind.

But the Eagles are right there with them in what is sure to be a :

    Philly has most of its best players signed to long-term contracts, including Donovan McNabb, Terrell Owens, Jevon Kearse, Brian Dawkins, Lito Sheppard, Michael Lewis and Sheldon Brown. Kearse was signed as a free agent last year and Owens was acquired in a trade.

    Also, the NFC is a mess, with the Eagles far superior to any other contenders. The Patriots don't have that luxury in the stacked AFC.

    Eagles owner Jeffrey Lurie styled his organization after such past dynasties as the Cowboys and 49ers. Minus the championships, his franchise is very similar to Kraft's.

    "We are the two winningest teams this decade," Lurie said. "Both invested well over $300 million in new stadiums. We each hired coaches in an unorthodox fashion — us a non-coordinator, and Bob trading for Bill.

    "Both teams are built around franchise quarterbacks. Both are high-character teams. There are a lot of similar value systems for each team. We each place a high value on the quality of people in our organization. And it's not just high character, but high intelligence — people who like to think outside the box and people willing to make controversial and unpopular decisions. We both understand that decisions need to be made that sustain the long-term excellence of the franchise."

I still wish the Eagles could've pulled it off - after all, they did knock out the Packers - but against a team that believes it will win, that sort of confidence is hard to overcome.

- Arik

Posted by Arik Johnson at February 6, 2005 11:17 PM