Eagles stun Patriots for first Super Bowl title
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[February 05, 2018]
By Frank Pingue
MINNEAPOLIS (Reuters) - For a city that
produced one of Hollywood's ultimate underdog stories, the
Philadelphia Eagles delivered an equally inspiring script by
upsetting the New England Patriots on Sunday for their first Super
Bowl title.
The Eagles were underdogs throughout the NFL playoffs, and just as
most expected little from fictional Philadelphia boxer Rocky Balboa,
few onlookers outside the City of Brotherly Love expected them to
beat the defending Super Bowl champions.
But Philadelphia, who embraced their lowly status with some players
wearing dog masks throughout the playoffs, stunned New England with
a 41-33 victory to cap a remarkable turnaround after finishing last
in their division a year ago.
"We've been doubted since Day One," said Eagles tight end Zach Ertz,
who caught what proved to be the game-winning touchdown. "This team,
no one picked us. We come out here and we're World Champions."
The victory set off a wild celebration among the team's many
green-clad supporters who made the trek to chilly Minneapolis, while
uplifting music from "Rocky" blared through the speakers above a
field covered in silver and green confetti.
The Eagles limped into the post-season with an offense handicapped
by a seemingly hopeless backup quarterback following an injury to
Carson Wentz in December, but Nick Foles proved more than ready to
shine on the game's biggest stage.
Foles, who nearly retired after an underwhelming 2015 season with
the St Louis Rams, showed no nerves playing in his first Super Bowl
and went toe-to-toe with Patriots counterpart Tom Brady, a five-time
Super Bowl champion.
"I felt calm," said Foles, who was named the game's Most Valuable
Player after throwing three touchdowns. "We felt confident coming in
and we just went out there and played football."
The Eagles, who won three championships in the pre-Super Bowl era,
had long been a tormented franchise and lost in their only two
previous Super Bowl appearances, including to the Patriots in 2005,
but dug deep to bring home a championship.
Trailing by a point late in the fourth quarter, the Eagles moved
ahead for good when Foles connected with Ertz on a 11-yard touchdown
to put his team ahead 38-33.
BRADY FUMBLE
Philadelphia missed a subsequent two-point conversion attempt to
leave the door open for the Patriots with a little less than
two-and-a-half minutes to play.
But in a game when both offenses moved up and down the field
effortlessly and combined for a Super Bowl record 1,151 yards, Brady
had the ball swatted from his grasp and it was recovered by
Philadelphia to all but seal New England's fate.
The Eagles went on to kick a field goal to extend their lead to
eight points and prevented the Patriots from engineering a
last-minute, game-tying drive.
Up 15-6, the Eagles had a chance to build a comfortable lead towards
the end of the first half but intended receiver Alshon Jeffrey
deflected a Foles pass that was intercepted by Patriots defensive
back Duron Harmon steps from the end zone.
The turnover proved costly as the Patriots marched 90 yards back
down the field in less than three minutes, in a drive that was
capped by a James White touchdown to pull within 15-12.
However, the Eagles replied with an impressive drive of their own
that resulted in a touchdown on a gutsy trick play on fourth down
from the Patriots one-yard line.
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Philadelphia Eagles defensive end Derek Barnett (96) and cornerback
Patrick Robinson (21) celebrate after his recovered fumble during
the fourth quarter in Super Bowl LII at U.S. Bank Stadium. Brad
Rempel-USA TODAY Sports
The Eagles, opting not to kick a field goal, snapped the ball to
rookie running back Corey Clement, who flipped the ball to tight end
Trey Burton, who then threw to a wide-open Foles for a walk-in
touchdown and a 22-12 halftime lead.
It marked the end of a wild opening half that included missed extra
points, a missed field goal and a botched Patriots attempt at a
trick play of their own when a wide-open Brady failed to haul in an
intended pass.
The Patriots looked poised to collect a record-tying sixth Super
Bowl in 17 seasons when Brady threw his third touchdown -- this one
a short pass to Rob Gronkowski with about nine minutes to play -- to
give his team their first lead of the game, 33-32.
But the Patriots had no answer for the Foles-led Eagles.
'LOSING SUCKS'
Patriots coach Bill Belichick took the blame for the loss while
Gronkowski, who was playing in his first game since suffering a
concussion two weeks ago, said he knew his team were going to be in
for a battle.
"You just knew that it was going to be a shootout the whole game and
it was going to take all 60 minutes," said Gronkowski.
"Unfortunately, we just didn't come up with the most opportunities
to make to win the game."
Brady finished with a Super Bowl record 505 passing yards and three
touchdowns but could not deliver when it mattered most, his
desperate pass falling to the ground in the end zone as time
expired.
"Losing sucks. That's part of it," said Brady. "You try to win and
sometimes you lose. That's the way it goes."
The Patriots now enter an off-season some feel could mark the
beginning of the end for their dynasty after ESPN reported in
January about a rift between Brady, Belichick and owner Robert
Kraft.
The trio have denied reports of any off-field tension but there will
be no shortage of attention paid to their every move between now and
next season.
The game, played under a translucent U.S. Bank Stadium roof while
temperatures outside plummeted, capped a season during which NFL
ratings dropped after many players kneeled during the national
anthem to protest racial inequality and as the league's concussion
protocol entered the spotlight.
But no players protested while Grammy Award-winning pop singer Pink
performed "The Star-Spangled Banner" ahead of the year's
most-watched U.S. television broadcast, attracting an audience of
more than 100 million viewers.
(Reporting by Frank Pingue; Editing by John O'Brien and Sudipto
Ganguly)
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