- Associated Press - Monday, January 21, 2019

SCOREBOARD

Sunday, Jan. 27

AFC vs. NFC in Pro Bowl, 3 p.m. EST. The NFL’s all-star game will be played in Orlando, Florida, with Patrick Mahomes, Drew Brees, Todd Gurley and J.J. Watt all among those voted as starters.

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Sunday, Feb. 3

New England vs. Los Angeles Rams in Super Bowl, 6:30 p.m. EST. Tom Brady and the Patriots (13-5) head to Atlanta to play for the Lombardi Trophy for the third straight season and fourth time in five years. Jared Goff and the Rams (15-3) will be appearing in the franchise’s first Super Bowl since the 2001 season, when the “Greatest Show on Turf” was still in St. Louis.

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STARS

Passing

- Tom Brady, Patriots, threw for 348 yards and a touchdown and led New England on the winning drive in overtime to send the franchise to its third straight Super Bowl appearance with a 37-31 victory over the Kansas City Chiefs.

- Jared Goff, Rams, was 25 of 40 for 297 yards and a TD to help Los Angeles beat New Orleans 26-23 in overtime for the franchise’s first Super Bowl berth since the 2001 season.

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Rushing

- Sony Michel, Patriots, ran for 113 yards and two touchdowns on 29 carries in New England’s 37-31 overtime win at Kansas City.

- Rex Burkhead, Patriots, had two TD runs, including the winning 2-yard scamper in OT, to help New England top Kansas City 37-31.

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Receiving

- Brandin Cooks, Rams, had seven catches for 107 yards in Los Angeles’ 26-23 overtime win at New Orleans.

- Damien Williams, Chiefs, caught two touchdown passes and finished with five catches for 66 yards, and also ran for a score in Kansas City’s 37-31 overtime loss to New England.

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Special Teams

- Greg Zuerlein, Rams, kicked a 57-yard field goal in overtime for a 26-23 victory over New Orleans in the NFC championship game.

- Harrison Butker, Chiefs, booted a 39-yarder with 8 seconds left in regulation to force overtime in Kansas City’s 37-31 loss to New England.

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Defense

- Ndamukong Suh and Dante Fowler Jr., Rams. Suh had 1½ sacks and Fowler had a half-sack and also hit Drew Brees’ arm to cause an interception that sent Los Angeles to a 26-23 overtime win over New Orleans.

- Kyle Van Noy, Patriots, had two sacks in New England’s 37-31 overtime victory at Kansas City.

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SUPER SHOWDOWN

New England (13-5) advanced to the Super Bowl for the third straight year with a 37-31 overtime victory at Kansas City. Awaiting them in Atlanta will be the Los Angeles Rams, who won 26-23 in overtime in New Orleans for the NFC championship. The Rams (15-3) last made the Super Bowl in 2002 while based in St. Louis, losing to the Patriots. It will be 17 years to the day since New England won that game 20-17.

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STREAKS & STATS

Both AFC and NFC championship games went to overtime for the first time. The only AFC conference title game that previously went to OT in the Super Bowl era was in the 1986 season, when Denver beat Cleveland 23-20. … New England edged Kansas City 37-31 in overtime in the AFC championship game after the teams met in Week 6, when the Patriots beat the Chiefs 43-40 in a game featuring 946 yards. This one had 814. … New England has played in eight straight AFC title games, but this is its first road playoff win since the 2006 season vs. San Diego. … Kansas City’s defense tied for first in the NFL with 52 sacks, but had none Sunday. New England had four. … New Orleans’ 26-23 overtime loss to the Los Angeles Rams was the first home playoff loss for the Saints with quarterback Drew Brees and coach Sean Payton, who had been 6-0 in those games since their pairing began in 2006.

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MILESTONES

New England quarterback Tom Brady matched former Patriots kicker Adam Vinatieri, now with Indianapolis, for the most wins in NFL history with 236. … Greg Zuerlein’s 57-yard field goal in Los Angeles’ 26-23 overtime victory over New Orleans was the longest winning kick in NFL postseason history.

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OLD AND YOUNG

New England’s Tom Brady (41 years old) and Los Angeles’ Jared Goff (24) will combine for the largest age gap between opposing starting QBs in Super Bowl history: 17 years, 72 days on Feb. 3, the day of the game.

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NO CALL

Saints coach Sean Payton said the NFL told him officials botched a crucial pass interference call late in the fourth quarter of the NFC championship game in which New Orleans was eliminated by the Los Angeles Rams 26-23 in overtime.

The Saints faced third-and-10 from the Rams 13 in the final two minutes when Los Angeles defensive back Nickell Robey-Coleman slammed into Tommylee Lewis, connecting helmet-to-helmet, while Drew Brees’ pass was still in the air. Payton and the Saints were livid when no flag was thrown. The missed call started a sequence that pushed the game to overtime.

Payton says officials on the field told him Robey-Coleman “arrived at the same time that the ball did.” Payton got on the phone with the league to discuss the call immediately after the game.

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FLIPPIN’ OUT

Kansas City coach Andy Reid’s decision to defer after winning the opening coin toss proved unwise as New England had 22 plays in the opening period, and Kansas City had seven. Then, the Chiefs lost the more important toss before overtime. Less than five minutes later, they were headed to the offseason with a 37-31 loss.

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BREES’ FUTURE

Saints 40-year-old quarterback Drew Brees made it clear after New Orleans’ 26-23 loss to Los Angeles that he has no thoughts of retiring.

“I plan on being here next year and making another run at it,” said Brees, who was denied a shot at adding to the Super Bowl title he won during the 2009 season.

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SPEAKING

“There’s just too much at stake, and listen, it’s a hard job for those guys. It’s happening fast. But I don’t know if there was ever a more obvious pass interference. - New Orleans coach Sean Payton after NFL executives he spoke with by phone after a 26-23 overtime loss to the Los Angeles Rams agreed with him that officials on the field missed two obvious penalties on one late, game-turning play that might have prevented the Saints from advancing to the Super Bowl.

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“Overtime, on the road against a great team. They had no quit. Neither did we. We played our best football at the end. I don’t know, man, I’m tired. That was a hell of a game.” - Patriots quarterback Tom Brady after New England advanced to the Super Bowl with a 37-31 overtime victory at Kansas City.

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For more AP NFL: https://apnews.com/NFL and https://twitter.com/AP_NFL

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