Tom Brady once again celebrates the 28-3 Patriots’ Super Bowl comeback on 3/28

Tom Brady tends to blend trolling with celebrating.

Tom Brady isn’t going to miss a chance to celebrate his win in Super Bowl LI. The Tampa Bay Buccaneers quarterback, fresh off his seventh Super Bowl win, took to Instagram on Sunday to post about his win over the Atlanta Falcons. Why Sunday? Well, it was 3/28, so Brady apparently figured it would be a good day to remember the Super Bowl in which he overcame a 28-3 deficit, the largest in Super Bowl history.

Brady might be making an annual routine of celebrating Super Bowl LI on March 28. Brady went so far as to rewatch the game on March 28 in 2020. Who can blame the guy? It was an absolutely insane comeback. Here’s what he posted.

Surely, Julian Edelman will love getting featured in Brady’s instagram story.

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Tom Brady hilariously celebrates ‘holiday’ as he trolls Falcons on Instagram

Tom Brady remains undefeated on the internet.

Tom Brady remains undefeated on the internet.

The Tampa Bay Buccaneers quarterback rarely misses an opportunity to crack a joke on social media, even if it’s about himself. So of course the seven-time Super Bowl champion couldn’t miss the opportunity to troll the Atlanta Falcons on Sunday, (3/28).

Brady and the New England Patriots infamously came back from a 28-3 deficit in Super Bowl LI to defeat the Falcons — making Atlanta the butt of a joke for years now. He’s made jokes about the comeback victory in the past on social media and his Instagram story on Sunday was just another example — and probably not the last.

This joke may take a while before it’s lived down.

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Matt Ryan, Julio Jones and the greatest play in Super Bowl history that time forgot

Fans remember Tom Brady’s heroics and Julian Edelman’s catch. But there was a better play in Super Bowl LI, one that should have been epic.

Sports fans love nostalgia.

Today is February 5th, and if your social media timelines are anything like mine then you are seeing images of Super Bowl LI over and over and over again. That’s because on this night four years ago, the New England Patriots defeated the Atlanta Falcons in the Super Bowl, coming back from a 28-3 deficit.

So you’re seeing countless images of Julian Edelman’s catch, James White’s touchdown to win the game, and Tom Brady’s heroics in the second half.

But you probably are not seeing what should have been the most memorable moment of that game, and perhaps the best catch in Super Bowl history.

Here’s a look at Matt Ryan, Julio Jones and the greatest play in Super Bowl history that time forgot.

With just under six minutes remaining in the game, Patriots kicker Stephen Gostkowski put his foot to the football and lofted a kickoff to Falcons returner Justin Hardy. Hardy fielded the football at his own three-yard line, returning it to the ten. The Patriots, after trailing by 25, had cut the Atlanta lead down to eight. But the Falcons had the football, and the clock was their friend. While New England still had their full compliment of time outs, points on this drive – any points – probably put the game out of reach.

The drive began with exactly what you want to see, if you are a Falcons fan:

After carrying out a play-action fake to Devonta Freeman, Ryan retreats into the pocket. Atlanta sends its receivers deep, clearing out space underneath for Freeman to leak into the flat. Ryan simply checks the football down to his running back, who then makes Duron Harmon miss in the open field. 39 yards later, the Falcons are at midfield.

There are just over five minutes remaining in Super Bowl LI, and Atlanta is almost in scoring position holding an eight-point lead.

The Patriots decline to take a timeout, and on the ensuing 1st-and-10 Freeman tests the right side for a gain of two. With under five minutes left, the Falcons face a 2nd-and-8, on the Patriots’ 49-yard line.

On this snap, the Patriots decide to bring pressure. Linebackers Kyle Van Noy and Dont’a Hightower come after Ryan, but the quarterback is able to climb the pocket and elude the defenders, sliding to his right. He has some grass in front of him, although a defender is lurking near the line of scrimmage.

Yet Ryan has other ideas:

The game should have been over.

Patriots cornerback Eric Rowe is in ideal position here, blanketing Jones and putting himself between receiver and quarterback. But Ryan, showing supreme confidence in his receiver, puts this throw over the head of Rowe where only Jones can get the football. The receiver does just that, snatching the football from the sky and twisting his body back to the turf, managing to tap his right toes down in-bounds to complete the catch.

Here is the play from the end zone angle:

To this day I do not know why Ryan made this throw, and how Jones came down with the football.

Two men who had perhaps the best view of this play were the FOX broadcast team of Troy Aikman and Joe Buck, from high above the field at NRG Stadium. Remember, they had seen Edelman’s catch from earlier in the game, but were rendered almost speechless by this play from Ryan and Jones:

“Anything short of perfect ball placement, and it’s intercepted.”

“The biggest catch of this second half.”

“As good as it gets.”

What could have been. What should have been, was not.

Because we know how this story ends. The Falcons, whose aggression on offense got them to the Super Bowl, remained aggressive after this play. Facing a 1st-and-10 at the New England 22 they were in control of this game. They tried to run Freeman to the left side, but that lost a yard. Ryan then dropped to throw on second down, but he was sacked by Trey Flowers for a loss of 12. Then on third down a holding penalty cost the Falcons ten more yards, and by the time the drive was over, Atlanta was back near midfield, and punting the football back to Brady.

Setting the stage for yet more heroics from Brady’s storied career.

But that is not how this story should have ended. Yet football is a cruel mistress, with a way of ripping your heart out just when you feel it is safe to believe. It has a way of testing your emotions, pushing you to the brink of ecstasy, and then jerking you back again into reality. In the process, plays that should have been legendary – as this one – are rendered afterthoughts. Lost in the dustbin of football lore behind Edelman’s catch, Brady’s throws in overtime, and White’s plunge into the end zone to finish the first Super Bowl that went to an extra frame.

In one moment Matt Ryan trusted his teammate to make the ultimate play on one of the biggest stages in sports, and Julio Jones did just that, leaping into the Houston sky over a perfectly-placed defender and snatching what should have been victory for a city, and a team.

Minutes later the play was rendered moot.

The suddenness and cruelty of sport.

In a way it is painful to think about how paths diverged from there. The Patriots would go on to win, yes, and then appeared in the next two Super Bowls, losing to the Philadelphia Eagles in Super Bowl LII, but winning in Super Bowl LIII over the Los Angeles Rams. Now Brady is back in the big game, albeit with a different team. He plays for the Tampa Bay Buccaneers now, and what team did he and the Buccaneers beat twice down the stretch to complete their run to the playoffs and salvage their postseason chances?

The Falcons.

As for Atlanta, the fallout from losing that game was not immediate, but could be felt into this season. The Falcons would make the playoffs the next season as a Wild-Card team, but would lose in the Divisional Round to the Eagles on their run to a title. After that came three-straight losing seasons, including a 4-12 finish this past year that began with some brutal blown leads. Losses that ended Dan Quinn and Thomas Dimitroff’s tenure with the team, that perhaps spell the end of Ryan and Jones with the Falcons.

Losses that conjured up visions of Super Bowl LI, and what should have been.

But what was not.

Josh Allen, Bills overcome 28-3 jinx to beat Rams in final moments

28-3. You never want to do it. But the Bills did, and somehow survived.

Never go up 28-3, kids. You know what I’m talking about, right? Yes, Super Bowl LI on February 5, 2017, when the Atlanta Falcons had that lead against the Patriots and blew it in a 34-28 loss. Ever since then, everyone has known to avoid that score like the clear jinx it is.

Except for the Bills on Sunday when they played the Rams, and had to finagle some last-minute heroics from quarterback Josh Allen to avoid the same fate.

I don’t care if it’s in PeeWee League, high school, college, or professional football in any country, DO NOT GO UP 28-3. It’s never worth it. If you score your fourth touchdown of the game, and you’ve only allowed a field goal to your opponent, direct your kicker to shank the fourth extra point at a Mike Vanderjagt level, and go on to the big 27-3 win.

If you need instructions, here they are.

Because it’s clear that if you hold a 28-3 score, some evil celestial tumbler tumbles, and some sort of 12th century Estonian curse will befall you. Or something like that.

Want proof? At the exact moment I was typing the response to my original “Never go up 28-3” tweet earlier today, the Rams scored the go-ahead touchdown to take the lead against the Bills.

The score was then 32-28 against a Buffalo team that had opened up a lead of… what?

Yeah, you guessed it. The Bills upset the football gods, and all hell broke loose. What went wrong for the Bills after that score? What didn’t? Buffalo allowed four touchdowns in a little more than 15 clock minutes of football between the third and fourth quarters. Aaron Donald turned back in to Aaron Donald.

There was a really bad fumble call that went against Bills tight end Tyler Kroft (remember that name for later) that helped to swing things in the Rams’ favor…

…and all looked lost. But then, the Bills got the ball back with 4:30 left in the game, overcame a third-and-22 at one point, overcame a fourth-and-9 after Allen hit Stefon Diggs for a 17-yard catch to the Los Angeles 13-yard line, and were set up at the Los Angeles three-yard line with 21 seconds left in the game after Rams cornerback Darious Williams was called for a highly disputable pass interference penalty that put the ball three yards away from the winning score.

And then, Allen broke the 28-3 curse with this touchdown pass to that Tyler Kroft guy. Sometimes, things just work out the right way, the gods are somehow appeased, and you’re able to move on with your life.

The 35-32 win keeps the Bills undefeated and on top of the AFC East with a 3-0 record. The Rams fall to 2-1 on the season.

 

Report: Jaguars expected to sign former Eagles DT Timmy Jernigan

The Jags have been looking for help along their defensive line on the free-agent market and plans to sign former Eagles DT Timmy Jernigan.

The Jacksonville Jaguars have been looking for help off the free-agent market to bolster their defensive line and that has seemingly sent them in the direction of a star player who grew up just outside of the city. Per NFL insider Mike Garafolo, the team plans to sign former Philadelphia Eagles defensive tackle Timmy Jernigan after the veteran recently had a visit with them.

Jernigan, 27, is a native of Lake City, Fla., which is about 70 miles out of Jacksonville. Before being drafted by the Baltimore Ravens in the second-round of the 2014 NFL Draft, he played collegiately at Florida State University where he was a standout and a BCS National Champion (2014).

After three seasons with the Ravens, he was traded to the Eagles in April of 2017 and remained there for three seasons. Of course, while there he helped the team win Super Bowl LII.

The Jags interest in Jernigan comes after defensive tackle Al Woods opted out of the 2020 season due to concerns for the coronavirus and both Brian Price and Dontavius Russell had to be placed on injured reserve this past weekend. That said, the Jags have reached out to Jernigan who seemingly doesn’t mind playing close to home.

Jernigan will enter 2020 with 51 starts, 132 tackles, and 17.5 sacks on his career. He was also able to register a Pro Football Focus grade of 65.9 in 2019. If/when the Jags make his signing official, he’ll join a unit that consists of Pro Bowler Josh Allen, longtime veteran Abry Jones, first-round pick K’Lavon Chaisson, and maybe Yannick Ngakoue if he decides to return.

Robert Kraft had an incredible reason for choosing Super Bowl LI ring to auction

“That was was pretty special.”

New England Patriots owner Robert Kraft auctioned off his Super Bowl LI ring in support of COVID-19 relief.

Kraft joined the All-In Challenge and sold the ring to a fan for $1.025 million. New England’s most recent championship win was against the Los Angeles Rams in Super Bowl LIII — but, Kraft had a special reason to auction off the Super Bowl LI ring.

“That was was pretty special,” Kraft said on FOX News’ Hannity. “I have a good friend, Michael Rubin, who started the All-In Challenge. He said try and come up with something special that could garner a lot of support. I thought about our fifth Super Bowl and we were down 28-3 with two minutes to go in the third period and had a .04 chance of winning the game and 99.6 (percent) chance to lose. We came back and it was a great, great victory.

“In some ways I feel the mood of our country is a little down and we’re still the greatest country in the world. We’re going to come back. I thought our ring epitomized that.”

The Patriots made the greatest comeback in Super Bowl history and it’s a comeback the entire world will have to make after this pandemic.

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Robert Kraft’s Super Bowl LI ring sells for more than $1 million

Patriots owner Robert Kraft auctioned his Super Bowl LI ring for the All In Challenge.

One New England Patriots fan left Thursday night extremely happy.

Patriots owner Robert Kraft auctioned his Super Bowl LI ring for the All In Challenge — giving all proceeds to COVID-19 relief. The ring sold to the highest bidder for $1.025 million. The ring is from New England’s Super Bowl victory against the Atlanta Falcons, where the team infamously came back from a 28-3 lead.

In commemoration of the win — the ring has 283 diamonds and is made with 10-karat white gold. Celebrities are teaming together to support the All In Challenge, including Tom Brady. The Tampa Bay Buccaneers quarterback is auctioning off an exclusive game-day experience — including a private dinner or postgame workout.

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Tom Brady can’t help but laugh at this perfect 28-3 meme on Twitter

Nicely done.

Tampa Bay Buccaneers quarterback Tom Brady seemed amused at being the subject of an ESPN Twitter meme.

ESPN joined in on a funny bit going around Twitter which showed photos for “My plans” and “2020” to show just how radically everyone’s world has been disrupted by the coronavirus pandemic. In the meme, the “plans” are a far cry from what they use to depict “2020.” Naturally, ESPN went the route of making a 28-3 joke, and posted images from Super Bowl LI when Brady and the New England came back from a 28-3 deficit to win the game against the Atlanta Falcons. The first image showed a Devonta Freeman touchdown, and the second one showed Brady holding up the Lombardi trophy.

Falcons fans surely don’t love it. But Brady, apparently, couldn’t help but giggle.

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Patriots’ owner Robert Kraft’s Super Bowl LI ring skyrockets in All-In Challenge auction

How high is the bidding for Robert Kraft’s Super Bowl LI ring?

Robert Kraft is auctioning off his ring from the New England Patriots’ victory over the Atlanta Falcons in Super Bowl LI. You know the one that saw the owner’s team rally from a 28-3 deficit to post an overtime victory.

The ring features 283 diamonds surrounding the Patriots logo and five Lombardi trophies. The 5.1 carat-weight ring was crafted with 10-karat white gold.

Kraft on Sunday announced he’s offering up his ring for the ALL IN Challenge. All of the money raised will go directly to Feeding America, Meals On Wheels, World Central Kitchen, and No Kid Hungry.

The bidding started at $75k and at this writing is up to $650K with 10 days left in the auction. It is heading toward topping the Tom Brady Tampa Bay Bucs’ package that closed at $800K.

Kirby Lee-USA TODAY Sports

Kraft said in a video:

“I’ve been giving a lot of thought to the front-line health care workers — the doctors, the nurses, the support staff, the EMS people, the intensive care people, and my heart goes out to them all because they’re putting their lives on the line every day

“And I thought about what’s going on at this time and wanted to give something of extreme value in support of our health care workers.

“It (the ring) showed how we came back. We’re the greatest country in the world, with the greatest people who feel a sense of team and work together in the toughest times. So I want to give this ring to someone who will feel worthy enough to bid it up so that we can get meals to all these people who are hurting badly at this time.”

Tom Brady trolls the Atlanta Falcons in the best way possible on Instagram

New Buccaneers QB Tom Brady may have thrown a little shade at his new division rival the Atlanta Falcons.

Tom Brady is new to the NFC South, but that doesn’t mean the Buccaneers quarterback isn’t ready to troll his division foes.

Brady, the six-time Super Bowl champion with the New England Patriots who signed with Tampa Bay recently, took to Instagram today while stuck indoors (like most of us) to provide a little live commentary as Fox and FS1 re-aired the Patriots’ Super Bowl LI win over Matt Ryan and the Atlanta Falcons.

Brady and the Patriots infamously mounted the greatest comeback in Super Bowl history after trailing 28-3 in the third quarter. The Pats eventually won in overtime to seal a 34-28 victory that gave Brady his fifth Super Bowl title.

Take a look now at some of the screenshots from Brady’s Instagram story. Best of all is him asking, “Why am I nervous?”

How you like them apples, Atlanta? (Oh, wait, Brady isn’t in Boston any more.)

Brady will get his shot at Ryan and the Falcons twice next year. I’m sure Matty Ice and company are itching for a little revenge against Brady.

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