Patriots find themselves huge favorites this time

Published: Thursday, Jan. 22 2004 12:00 a.m. MST

New England players reach out to touch the Vince Lombardi Trophy after they upset St. Louis 20-17 to win Super Bowl XXXVI in New Orleans in 2002. This time, the Patriots are favored over the Carolina Panthers.

David J. Phillip, Associated Press

Enlarge photo»

FOXBORO, Mass. — Two years after their only Super Bowl victory, the New England Patriots are heavy favorites with an established quarterback and little controversy.

How things have changed.

The Patriots engineered one of the game's biggest upsets in 2002, beating the St. Louis Rams and an offense known as the "Greatest Show on Turf" 20-17 on Adam Vinatieri's 48-yard field goal as time expired.

Tom Brady led New England on a methodical drive to set up the game-winner and earn Super Bowl MVP honors, capping a season that he started as the backup to Drew Bledsoe.

"That first year, that first Super Bowl, I don't know what the heck was going on," Brady said this week after the Patriots won their second AFC title in three years and earned the right to play the Carolina Panthers in Houston on Feb. 1.

"I mean, from the first game I started right on through, so much had changed. And to really realize and put things in perspective is hard to do because I was figuring, 'Oh, yeah, this is kind of what I expected to happen.' "

If Brady expected it, he was the only one.

After going 5-11 in 2000, the Patriots had a rough start to the next season.

Quarterbacks coach Dick Rehbein, 45, died of heart failure in training camp. Wide receiver Terry Glenn missed most of the season because of injuries and suspensions. The Patriots lost their first two games; Bledsoe was knocked out of the second one with a hit that filled his chest with blood.

Brady, a sixth-round draft pick who jumped from No. 4 to No. 2 on the depth chart in training camp, came in and helped New England improve to 5-5 by the time Bledsoe was ready to return. Coach Bill Belichick went against conventional wisdom and kept Brady as his starter.

And when the Patriots won the last six games of the regular season, Belichick was rewarded.

In their first playoff game, a sloppy, snowy affair that was the finale for the old Foxboro Stadium, Brady appeared to doom New England's chances when he coughed the ball up late against the Oakland Raiders. But referee Walt Coleman invoked the now-infamous "Tuck Rule" and declared the play an incomplete pass instead of a fumble.

Brady led the Patriots into position for Vinatieri's 45-yarder that sent the game into overtime. Once there, Vinatieri kicked a 23-yarder to win it.

Get The Deseret News Everywhere

Subscribe

Mobile

RSS