Brady leads Buccaneers to Super Bowl win on home field
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[February 08, 2021]
By Amy Tennery
TAMPA, Fla. (Reuters) - Tom Brady threw
three touchdowns as the Tampa Bay Buccaneers thumped the Kansas City
Chiefs 31-9 to win the Super Bowl on Sunday, giving the evergreen
43-year-old quarterback a record-extending seventh championship
ring.
Brady's age-defying performance, which earned him the Most Valuable
Player award, brought the curtain down on what was perhaps the most
challenging season the NFL has had to navigate because of the
COVID-19 pandemic.
The pandemic kept stadiums mostly empty throughout the season and
restrictions limited Super Bowl attendance to 25,000 spectators,
including 7,500 healthcare workers, sprinkled among 30,000
happy-faced cardboard cutouts.
While the pandemic reined in America's biggest sporting party, the
show went on as scheduled and once again Brady, who joined the Bucs
last March after 20 seasons with the New England Patriots, rose to
the occasion in his 10th Super Bowl.
"My father had an expression," Bucs co-owner Joel Glazer said while
he accepted the Vince Lombardi Trophy as confetti showered the
on-field stage. "If you want to know the road ahead, ask the person
who's been there. Well we found that person ... Tom Brady."
The NFL's championship game had been hyped as a battle between
Brady, widely recognised as the greatest quarterback of all-time,
and 25-year-old Chiefs counterpart Patrick Mahomes, considered the
best in the game today.
But in the end it was no contest as the Bucs' rampaging defense
harassed Mahomes, who threw a pair of interceptions, the entire
night to bring the Chiefs' Super Bowl title defense to a jarring
end.
"I'm not making any comparisons," Brady said when asked if this
Super Bowl win was the sweetest. "Being down here and experiencing
this with this group of guys, every year is amazing.
"This team is world champions forever, you can't take it away from
us ... We're coming back."
FAST START
The only team to play a Super Bowl on their home field, the
Buccaneers made the most of the opportunity as they were crowned
champions for the first time since January 2003.
Brady got the Bucs off to fast start as he found former Patriots
teammate Rob Gronkowski, who came out of retirement to join the Bucs
this season, for a pair of touchdown strikes to build a 14-3 lead.
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Tampa Bay
Buccaneers fans celebrate after Super Bowl LV at Raymond James
Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Kim Klement-USA TODAY Sports
He then made the Chiefs pay dearly for some undisciplined penalties
that set up a one-yard scoring pass to Antonio Brown with six
seconds left in the half to build a 21-6 cushion.
Meanwhile, Mahomes and the Chiefs' explosive attack could not get in
gear with first-half scoring limited to a pair of Harrison Butker
field goals.
The Chiefs struck first in the second half as Butker booted another
field goal but the Buccaneers hit back with a Leonard Fournette
27-yard touchdown run and a Ryan Succop field goal to cruise into
the fourth quarter with a 31-9 lead.
"Obviously I didn't play the way I wanted to play," said Mahomes.
"What else can you say? All you can do is leave everything you have
on the field and I feel like the guys did that.
"They were the better team today. They beat us pretty good. The
worst I think I've been beaten in a long time."
DIRE WARNINGS
The game unfolded amid dire warnings from public health officials
for fans inside the stadium and across the country to observe basic
health and safety precautions, on what is widely considered an
unofficial holiday for millions of Americans.
Buccaneers fans dressed as pirates shuffled in between stadium staff
who reminded all to stand six feet (1.8m) apart and keep their faces
covered.
While fans largely observed mandates to keep masks on while inside
the stadium, social distancing deteriorated as kickoff neared, with
clusters of attendees building up in various parts of the stadium,
including concession stands and souvenir shops.
Justin Hagel, 35, a registered nurse and one of the vaccinated
healthcare workers who snagged a free ticket to the game, said at
halftime he felt the crowds were observing the rules "for the most
part."
"Most people have masks on, I'm not that worried about it," said
Hagel, who works in nearby Brandon, Florida. "We're outdoors, you're
not too close to the guy next to you. Feeling good."
(Reporting by Amy Tennery; Writing by Steve Keating; Editing by
Frank Pingue)
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