Patriots have Falcons' number again

New England Patriots quarterback Tom Brady leaves a foggy field at Gillette Stadium after a 23-7 victory over the Atlanta Falcons on Sunday night.
New England Patriots quarterback Tom Brady leaves a foggy field at Gillette Stadium after a 23-7 victory over the Atlanta Falcons on Sunday night.

FOXBOROUGH, Mass. -- Tom Brady threw two touchdown passes and the New England Patriots toyed with the Atlanta Falcons for a 23-7 victory in a fog-filled Super Bowl rematch Sunday night that wasn't particularly super.

New England scored the final 31 points to win the NFL championship in February. Placards and shirts reading 28-3 were ever-present in and around Gillette Stadium as the Patriots (5-2) scored the first 23 points in this prime-time mismatch. The Falcons (3-3), who led New England by that 25-point margin in the third quarter of the Super Bowl before folding 34-28 in overtime, were outplayed throughout this one.

While Atlanta looked tentative, if not intimidated, Brady and his offense clinically tore apart the Falcons. Mixing runs and passes, New England controlled the clock and field position. And its defense, ranked at the bottom of the entire league through six weeks, stymied the NFL's fifth-ranked offense.

"Every game takes a little different turn and I think we did a great job staying balanced," Brady said after the Patriots gained 162 yards on the ground and 241 through the air. "It was great to hand it off, see those guys rushing the way they did, and the linemen blocking. It was a great win."

Brady threw a shovel pass to Brandin Cooks that traveled perhaps a foot, and the receiver used his speed to get into the left corner of the end zone. The other TD was a 2-yarder to James White, who had three touchdowns, including the winner, in the Super Bowl.

It got so bad for Atlanta that the usually reliable Matt Bryant had a field goal blocked and then put a 36-yarder off the left upright. That Super Bowl losers' malaise that gets talked about looks apparent this year in Atlanta.

Stephen Gostkowski had no trouble sending field goals of 29, 21 and 38 yards through the fog for New England.

"That fog was pretty crazy," Rob Gronkowski said. "I mean I have never seen anything like that or played in any fog. A deep ball up in there was definitely tougher than with no fog."

The Falcons seemed ready to end the string of points allowed to the Patriots at 51 when they got to the 1 early in the fourth quarter. But Matt Ryan, who struggled all night, was off-target to Julio Jones in the end zone. Then receiver Taylor Gabriel lost 4 yards on a fourth-down run.

Even the fans in the upper deck who could barely see through the haze at that point let out a huge cheer, then Gostkowski added his third field goal to extend New England's mastery of Atlanta to 54 consecutive points dating back to the Super Bowl.

Jones' 1-yard touchdown reception with 4:09 to go ended the schneid, and he hurled the football high into the mist as if to say "at last."

Sports on 10/23/2017

Upcoming Events