Patriots and Giants Will Meet Again In The Super Bowl
January 23, 2012 7 CommentsA Super Sequel.
Four years after New York stunned previously undefeated New England in the Arizona desert, the Patriots and Giants are going at it again at the Super Bowl – this time in Indianapolis.
Brady and Belichick. Eli and Coughlin. Both teams rolling through the playoffs.
Yep, here we go again.
New England, which lost to New York 24-20 in early November, opens as a 3-point favorite for the Feb. 5 game. The Patriots have won 10 straight, with their last loss being to – you guessed it – the Giants.
“We know they’re a great team,” Giants quarterback Eli Manning said. “We played them already this year. They’ve been playing great football recently. Celebrate tonight, have fun, then start getting prepared and go to Indy and play our best football.”
It’s familiar territory for Tom Brady and the Patriots (15-3), who are playing in the Super Bowl for the fifth time in 11 years.
“Being in this situation is a great moment,” Patriots nose tackle Vince Wilfork said. “You have to cherish this moment.”
It’s the Patriots’ first appearance since Manning and the Giants (12-7) upset New England’s pursuit of perfection in 2008. Back then, New England was a 12-point favorite, but New York’s defense battered Brady, and Manning connected with Plaxico Burress on a late touchdown to win the Giants’ third Super Bowl.
That TD came, of course, a few moments after one of the biggest plays in playoff history: Manning escaped the grasp of a few Patriots defenders and found David Tyree, who put New York in scoring position by pinning the football against his helmet for a jaw-dropping catch.
New England hopes to avoid that sort of drama this time around. Unless it goes in the Patriots’ favor, as it did in the AFC title game.
Brady was unusually subpar in the Patriots’ 23-20 victory over Baltimore, throwing for 239 yards with two interceptions and, for the first time in 36 games, no TD passes. But he got some help from the Patriots’ much-maligned defense, which made some crucial stops down the stretch.
A few mistakes by the Ravens helped greatly, too, as Billy Cundiff shanked a 32-yard field goal attempt with 11 seconds left – a few minutes after Lee Evans had a potential winning touchdown catch ripped out of his hands in the end zone.
New England last won the Super Bowl in 2005, a long drought after the Patriots took home Lombardi trophies three times in four years. There are only a handful of players left from that team, with guys like Corey Dillon, Tedy Bruschi and Rodney Harrison replaced by young up-and-comers such as Rob Gronkowski, Aaron Hernandez and Jerod Mayo.
The constants, though, are Brady and Bill Belichick. And that’s been a winning combination for New England.
Belichick did perhaps his finest coaching job, piecing together a defense that ranked second-to-last in the league during the regular season. That led to plenty of shootouts, and Brady was more than up to the task, throwing for a career-high 5,235 yards while tossing 39 touchdown passes.
“They’re an amazing team,” Patriots owner Robert Kraft said. “They’re a great brotherhood; they’re a family.”
The Giants appeared on the verge of collapsing with Tom Coughlin’s job status in jeopardy just a month ago, when they fell to 7-7 with an embarrassing loss to the Washington Redskins on Dec. 19.
“We’ve been here before,” linebacker Mathias Kiwanuka said at the time, “and we’ll get back.”
Boy, was he right.
The Giants were facing elimination the following week in a game against the rival Jets and Rex Ryan, who boldly declared that his group was king of New York. Well, Coughlin’s crew silenced Ryan with a 29-14 victory. The Giants followed that with a 31-14 win over Dallas in the regular-season finale to clinch the NFC East and get to the playoffs for the first time since 2008.
New York dominated Atlanta at home in the opening round. Then came another stunner: a 37-20 victory at Green Bay – knocking out the defending Super Bowl champions.
Manning extended the best season of his career with one more solid performance. Specials teams proved the difference in overtime, as Jacquian Williams forced a fumble on a punt return and Lawrence Tynes kicked the Giants past the San Francisco 49ers 20-17 for the NFC title.
“Hats off to Eli, offense, defense,” Tynes said. “Great win.”
Congrats to all the teams that played yesterday. Those were a couple of good, good games!
may the cutest one win..Brady 🙂
Both games were close i loved watching it yesterday but two people are now fleeing their respected cities and are on the run from angry fans lol
The powers that be got the superbowl they wanted .
It should be a good game regardless.
Patriots 34 Giants 24
If Eli beats Brady twice in the Super Bowl doesn’t that make him the better QB over Brady and his own brother?
Pats are about to run thru the Giants..won’t be a repeat of the other SB. Which NY won by luck with the helmet catch on 4th down and Burress last second catch #trash
Pats all day and night. I’m just glad the bum ass 49ers didn’t make it. Was getting tired of the bandwagon that was going on