FOXBOROUGH, Mass. — Tom Brady got all the help he needed to get the New England Patriots into the Super Bowl.

Thank you, Billy Cundiff.

The Baltimore Ravens kicker shanked a 32-yard field goal with 11 seconds left and the Patriots escaped with a 23-20 victory in the AFC championship game on Sunday.

Usually, vintage Brady doesn’t need much assistance in championship settings, but the Patriots much-maligned defense came through, and Brady’s 1-yard touchdown dive with 11:29 left proved to be the winning points.

“Well, I sucked pretty bad today, but our defense saved us,” Brady said after throwing for 239 yards, with two interceptions and, for the first time in 36 games, no TD passes. “I’m going to try to go out and do a better job in a couple of weeks, but I’m proud of this team, my teammates.”

Brady waited out the final tense minutes on the sideline, and then celebrated with the rest of his team when Cundiff’s attempt went wide left. The Ravens looked on in stunned horror.

Cundiff had no excuse.

“It’s a kick I’ve kicked probably a thousand times in my career,” Cundiff said. “I went out there and didn’t convert. That’s the way things go.”

Next up as the Patriots (15-3) chase their fourth Super Bowl trophy in Brady’s and coach Bill Belichick’s tenure in New England are the New York Giants, who beat the San Francisco 49ers 20-17 in overtime in the NFC final. The Super Bowl is Feb. 5 in Indianapolis.

In their last trip to the big game, the Patriots had an 18-0 record when they were stunned by the Giants four years ago. They won the NFL championship for the 2001, 2003 and 2004 seasons. This time, they head to the Super Bowl with a 10-game winning streak.

Before Cundiff missed, the Ravens had a chance to go ahead two plays earlier, but wide receiver Lee Evans was stripped of the ball in the end zone by backup cornerback Sterling Moore, who earlier was victimized for a touchdown that gave Baltimore (13-5) the lead 17-16.

On his touchdown, Brady took a huge hit from Ravens star linebacker Ray Lewis, then emphatically spiked the ball as he walked away. Earlier, Brady showed his fire by barking at Lewis following a hard tackle on a 4-yard run.

“It’s a pretty mentally tough team,” said Brady, whose fifth trip to the Super Bowl will equal John Elway’s achievement with Denver. “There’s really some resiliency. We’ve shown that all season. Even in the games we’ve lost, the three games we lost, we fought until the end. We’re always going to fight to the end. It’s great to be a part of a team like this.”

Baltimore had the touted defense in this matchup, but New England’s unit, ranked 31st overall, was just as powerful.

“We stepped up,” Pro Bowl nose tackle Vince Wilfork said. “We all stepped up big time. Being in this situation is a great moment. You have to cherish this moment.”

The Patriots shut down Ray Rice, the league’s total yardage leader, who was limited to 78 yards. Brandon Spikes made a fourth-quarter interception of Joe Flacco, who played well before that and threw for two touchdowns. And when the Ravens were threatening to score a late touchdown to win their first conference title in 11 years, New England clamped down.

With Rice a nonfactor, Baltimore had to rely on Flacco, and he delivered one of his best performances. Flacco has led the Ravens into the playoffs in all four of his pro seasons, but not to the Super Bowl. He was 22 for 36 for 306 yards and touchdowns of 6 yards to Dennis Pitta and 29 to rookie Torrey Smith.

The loss hardly could be blamed on Flacco.

“I don’t know if I ever will prove anything,” he said. “I just play the same way. We lost; someone has to. But we laid it all out on the field.”

Operating against a porous secondary missing its top cornerback, Kyle Arrington, who left in the second quarter with an eye injury, Flacco gave Baltimore its first lead. His short pass on third down to explosive receiver Smith turned into a 29-yard scamper down the right sideline after Moore completely whiffed on the tackle.

Danny Woodhead’s fumble on the ensuing kickoff set up Baltimore at the Patriots 28, but a third-down sack forced Cundiff to kick a 39-yard field goal, making it 20-16.

New England didn’t flinch.

Brady took the Patriots 63 yards in 11 plays, and seemed to score on a 1-yard run. The call was overruled by replay, though, and on fourth-down, he dived just high enough over the line for the winning points.

“Every inch counts in this game and every foot counts in this game,” said 12-year veteran guard Brian Waters, who joined the Patriots this year and is headed to his first Super Bowl.

Defense was particularly dominant early on. The Patriots held Baltimore to minus-4 yards on its first three first-down runs and forced the Ravens to go three-and-out each time. Meanwhile, the Patriots put together a methodical 13-play, 50-yard drive helped greatly by an illegal contact penalty on Lardarius Webb that negated a tipped interception by Bernard Pollard.

But Brady was sacked for the first time by Paul Kruger and Stephen Gostkowski kicked a 29-yard field goal.

Late in the first quarter, the Ravens changed tactics after Webb picked off a pass intended for Julian Edelman at the Baltimore 30. Flacco rolled right on first down and threw deep down the sideline to a wide-open Smith. Had the pass not been short, Smith likely would have sprinted into the end zone. Instead, it was a 42-yard gain, not bad at all given Baltimore’s previous ineptitude with the ball.

Cundiff’s 20-yard field goal momentarily tied it.

Brady, perhaps peeved by his poor throw that Webb picked off, hit two passes for 29 yards on a 75-yard drive to make it 10-3. BenJarvus Green-Ellis rushed for 36 yards on that series, and also drew a personal foul against Webb, who ripped off the running back’s helmet on a short rush. Green-Ellis surged into the end zone from the 7, then pointed to the patch on his jersey honoring Myra Kraft, the late wife of Patriots owner Robert Kraft.

In the locker room afterward, Kraft was asked about the motivation the team got from dedicating the season to his wife of 48 years. Kraft tapped an MHK pin on his left lapel and kissed his fingers before pointing upward.

“They’re an amazing team, they’re a great brotherhood, they’re a family,” Kraft said.

Going back to the pass, the Ravens tied it on a 6-yard throw to Pitta — yes, Baltimore has some dangerous tight ends, too — that concluded an 80-yard march. Flacco opened the drive with a 20-yard completion to Evans and then Anquan Boldin escaped Arrington’s attempted tackle to gain 37 more yards on a reception. Flacco was finding holes in New England’s coverage, particularly when he moved out of the pocket.

New England’s All-Pro tight end Rob Gronkowski made an error at the end of a 63-yard drive, failing to keep two feet in bounds on a catch. Gostkowski’s 35-yard field goal made it 13-10.

Gronkowski left for a while with a left leg problem, but soon returned.

“It doesn’t even feel right, especially playing with the veterans here,” Gronkowski said. “I watched them go to the Super Bowl as I was growing up and now I’m part of it? It is an unreal moment.”

Notes: Brady won his 16th career postseason game to tie Joe Montana for most in NFL history. … New England’s seventh Super Bowl appearance puts it one behind Pittsburgh and Dallas. … The Patriots are 7-1 in AFC title games, 4-0 at home. … Brady and Belichick are the first QB-coach combination to win five conference championships in the Super Bowl era. … Baltimore was 7-0 against playoff teams this season before Sunday’s loss. … The Ravens finished 4-5 on the road. … In three career games against the Patriots, Rice averaged 145.7 yards, nearly double what he managed Sunday.

Join the Conversation

29 Comments

    1. I wouldn’t say it was luck, but the game definitely could have gone either way.  But, if it was as you say, “Lucky”, sometimes it’s better to be lucky than good.

    2. Luck indeed it was and stupidity on the Ravens part not able to control the touchdown catch then missing a field goal and the shot is not even “that close” another team that makes you think “How the heck did they make it this far?”, can’t wait to watch the Pats loose at the Superbowl, bet the BDN wouldn’t publish this front page if the Ravens won, and bet if the Pats loose the Superbowl BDN won’t pay someone to log in and make that front page news either….

  1. I don’t think Billy Cundiff split a cab with Ray Lewis after the game…unless Cundiff was chopped up into little pieces in the trunk.

  2. “I sucked pretty bad today but our defense saved us.” Tom Brady

    When Tom has a good game in Superbowl 46, it won’t fare well for the opponent, either SF or NY!

  3. For all the haters who want to make excuses for the Ravens, all I have to say is, “if ifs and buts were candy and nuts, every day would be Christmas.”

    Actually, that’s not all I have to say.  What if Belichick had asked for a review of the 1st half long pass play down the left sideline to Gronk that was waived out of bounds, but when shown from another angle  was obvious that it should have been ruled a catch?

    1. there is no way that play was a catch.  he only had one foot in bounds.  I was rooting for the Pats to win and I still couldn’t make a case for that being a good catch. 

      1. I thought the same thing on the first two replays, but when the showed the third angle in slow-mo, I thought there was enough evidence to challenge it.  One of the announcers thought the same thing.  Knowing Belichick though, I’m sure he would have thrown the bean bag if he thought otherwise.  Either way, we won.  That’s good enough for me.

  4. YES!!!! Another NE/NY Super Bowl! Excellent! I moved here from NJ one and a half years ago and I love living here but I’m still a Giants fan and always will be. I must say admit that the Pats played one heckuva game. I hope this will be another thrilling Superbowl.

  5. The Giants shouldn’t even suit up. Them getting beat and blowing the perfect season in 2008 was a total fluke. Brady was the QB then and he is now, revenge. See ya NY.

  6. Brady was definitely OFF yesterday.  Still hoarse over the bomb he through in the second half that was picked.  Why, why, WHY? I understand delivering the knockout punch, but that was just STOOPID.  Vince Wilfork played the game of a warrior and we’re darned lucky he was one of the stalwarts of the secondary.  Had we not shut down Ray Rice on the ground there might have been some grumpy Pats fans this morning.  All things aside, bring on NY…you know what they say about payback!

    1. Although he did have two amazing interceptions this year, Vince is not part of the secondary.  I will agree with you though that he came up HUGE yesterday.

    1. Hmmm….didn’t know there WERE any high-end hotels in Baltimore…Quoth Tom Brady:  NEVERMORE!!!

  7. I watched this game as a Patriot fan and decided that it was like a pro wrestling match, it was unreal. There is no real way that the Ravens kicker would misssss a 32 yard chip shot  with 11 second to go in the game, he was wonderful all year long.  What a con job, but the people enjoy it.  The control of the money is with the sponsors, they dicide, they win and everyone gets paid.  They difinitely have a good Union, we should all have one like this.

  8. It was a “W” but it wasn’t pretty….but……..We will take it !!! Going to the Superbowl Baby !!!!

  9. those of us with any substance knows, the best of us comes out when the worst happens!!to our next years superbowl champions,”THE BATIMORE RAVENS”.!!!I love you and love the way you love each other. Eunice Smuck

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