HOUSTON – Tom Brady and the New England Patriots couldn't be deflated by the almighty Roger Goodell or defeated by an underdog Atlanta Falcons team that led by 21 points after an 82-yard pick-six, by 25 points midway through the third quarter and by 19 points entering the fourth quarter of Super Bowl LI.
So the season that began with the Patriots quarterback surrendering to the NFL commissioner's four-game "Deflategate" suspension ended with Goodell awarding Brady and coach Bill Belichick their record-breaking fifth Lombardi Trophy after New England's shocking 34-28 overtime victory Sunday night at NRG Stadium.
"It was a hell of a football game," Brady said after the first OT in Super Bowl history.
Presumed dead after Brady's first career postseason pick-six in the second quarter, or certainly when league MVP Matt Ryan orchestrated an 85-yard touchdown drive to give the Falcons a 28-3 lead midway through the third, the Patriots posted a historic second-half run in shattering the record for largest comeback in Super Bowl history (25 points).
"Coach Belichick never changed; he just kept telling us that we could come back if we just did our jobs," New England receiver Chris Hogan said. "We knew this was going to be one heck of a comeback. A story people would be talking about for the rest of history."
Brady completed a record 43 of 62 passes for a record 466 yards, two touchdowns and an interception. On his last two drives, he completed 11 of 14 passes for 140 yards. He was 6-for-9 for 90 yards leading up to James White's 1-yard touchdown run and a two-point conversion toss to Danny Amendola with 57 seconds left in regulation that tied the score at 28-28.
After New England won the overtime coin toss, Brady went 5-for-6 for 50 yards to set up White's winning 2-yard run. A 13-yard pass interference penalty on former Gophers linebacker De'Vondre Campbell gave the Patriots the ball at the 2.
"I can't say enough about our players," Belichick said. "They give it everything they have for 60 minutes, and sometimes a little longer."