New England Patriots
Interception allows Dolphins to pull off a stunner
10:16 AM EST on Tuesday, December 21, 2004
MIAMI -- Tom Brady did last night what Tom Brady never does --
made a boneheaded play that lost the New England Patriots a football
game. Brady -- in a deathgrip applied by Miami's Jason Taylor, flung a
pass that was intercepted by Miami's Brendon Ayanbadejo at the New
England 21 with 1:45 left.
Four plays later, A.J. Feeley hit Derrius Thompson on fourth-and-10 from
21 yards away (over the head of Troy Brown) to make it 29-28.
And that's how it ended as the Patriots' last-gasp drive ended when
Brady threw his fourth pick of the night to Arturo Freeman.
The loss -- and the interceptioon -- likely cost New England more than
just the game. It likely cost the 12-2 Patriots a chance at securing
home field advantage in the AFC playoffs since the 13-1 Steelers not
only have the edge in record but also in head-to-head competition with
just two games left.
"It comes back to my decision-making. I made a terrible decision," Brady
lamented. "You can't expect anything good to happen from that.
Especially losing an 11-point lead there. It's just not what our
football team is all about."
For Brady, a player who's made his reputation in the NFL by being its
most prudent decision-maker under center, his throw was stunningly out
of character. And the Dolphins made him pay.
"Tonight, we found a way to win. Two touchdowns in the last four minutes
. . . just a tremendous, tremendous effort," said Miami coach Jim Bates.
The Patriots still had a chance to escape Brady's blunder, to save him
as he's saved them many times, but Feeley simply exploited the height
mismatch between Thompson and Brown.
"We wanted to get some matchups on Troy," said Bates. "It's tough to go
over there and play defensive back, but Derrius made a great catch."
Said Brown: "I didn't make the play. I just didn't make the play. The
guy scored, and I didn't do what I was supposed to do, which is stop him
from catching it. I didn't do my job. I felt like I had great position,
but I just didn't finish the play and he made a great catch. He was a
better player than I was at that time."
The Patriots had won six straight and appeared on their way to winning
their 28th in 29 games until it all came undone.
The Patriots were up 28-17 after Brady hit Daniel Graham with a 2-yard
toss with 4:06 left.
But a frenetic Miami drive closed the gap to 28-23 (the two-point
conversion failed) with 2:13 left.
"I thought scoring that touchdown with four minutes left was a big drive
for us," said Brady. "But they scored the touchdown there, we turned it
over and they scored another touchdown. Just some bad plays. And it
starts with me and I'll go out there and do my best to correct it."
All the Pats really needed from there was get one first down. But not
only did they not get it, they gave the ball to Miami deep in their end.
The Dolphins, now 3-11, had long since entered "playing for pride" mode,
but they said last week that this game was an opportunity to save face
in an ugly season.
They did that.
The Patriots came out of halftime leading 14-10 and looked to get some
separation after rookie Vince Wilfork recovered a Dolphins fumble near
midfield on a botched double-reverse. But after moving crisply inside
the Miami 30, Brady, under pressure from Miami's Morlon Greenwood,
short-armed a throw to Patrick Pass. The pass went right to Miami's
Sammy Knight, who returned the ball to the Dolphins' 42. A penalty on
Matt Light for unnecessary roughness put the ball at the Patriots' 43
and turned the tide.
Miami got into the end zone on a 1-yard Morris run that punctuated a
nine-play drive.
The Patriots fired back quickly, moving downfield in 10 plays that
covered 71 yards. Brady faked into the line on third-and-goal from the
2, surveyed the field for a seeming eternity, then whipped it to Corey
Dillon, who backed into the end zone to give the Pats the lead back.
The night didn't start out looking so complicated for New England. The
Patriots scored on their opening drive for the 19th straight
regular-season game. The touchdown came just five minutes in as Brady (8
for 14 for 82 yards, 1 touchdown and one pick in the first half) found
Kevin Faulk running down the seam behind linebacker Derrick Pope, who
was playing for the injured Zach Thomas. Faulk made a great adjustment
on the softly thrown pass and scored from 31 yards out.
After a couple of three-and-outs, New England punted to Welker, who
gathered the ball at the Miami 27 and burst from the pack down the
sideline. Je'Rod Cherry saved the touchdown for the Patriots, forcing
his blocker into Welker at the Patriots' 2, but Morris scored on the
next play to tie it.
The Patriots were forced to punt on their next two possessions, but did
a nice job winning the field position battle by holding down Miami's
non-existent running game (7 carries 12 yards in the first half). They
took over at midfield with a minute gone in the second quarter and moved
methodically downfield until Dillon busted in on a counter play from the
Dolphins' 3 to make it 14-7. Guard Stephen Neal threw a devastating seal
block on the play to allow Dillon to virtually walk in.
A 30-yard field goal by Olindo Mare just after the two-minute warning
made it 14-10 but it also gave New England the ball back in a spot it
excels - the two minute offense.
But this time, Brady was off. He threw incomplete on first and second
down then got picked off by Knight on a deep throw to David Patten.
Miami did nothing with that however and the half ended with the Pats
holding a 14-10 lead.
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