Tom Brady most dominant player in AFC championship game history

New England Patriots quarterback Tom Brady signals to a teammate before a wild-card playoff against the Tennessee Titans on Jan. 4. The Titans won in what was possibly Brady's final game of his long career with the Patriots. / AP photo by Charles Krupa
New England Patriots quarterback Tom Brady signals to a teammate before a wild-card playoff against the Tennessee Titans on Jan. 4. The Titans won in what was possibly Brady's final game of his long career with the Patriots. / AP photo by Charles Krupa

Tom Brady has been synonymous with the AFC championship game for the past two decades.

Thirteen times the New England Patriots quarterback played for the Lamar Hunt Trophy and nine times he won it, beating Kansas City Chiefs counterpart Patrick Mahomes in overtime last season - when Mahomes was named MVP of the NFL - upending the Jacksonville Jaguars' Blake Bortles in a classic comeback, denying Andrew Luck of the Indianapolis Colts and Philip Rivers of the San Diego Chargers trips to the Super Bowl, foiling the Pittsburgh Steelers' Ben Roethlisberger twice and Kordell Stewart once and splitting two games with Joe Flacco of the Baltimore Ravens.

Peyton Manning he beat only once, losing three times to his old rival in the conference title game.

Sunday's showdown between the throwback Tennessee Titans (11-7) and the top-seeded Chiefs (13-4) marks the first AFC title game since 2010 without Brady barking under center and Patriots coach Bill Belichick scowling on the sideline.

It's also the first time since 2002 the AFC title game doesn't include Brady, Manning or Roethlisberger.

The star attractions this time are the Titans' bulldozing running back Derrick Henry, the man most responsible for putting an end to New England's preeminence and for trampling the high hopes in Baltimore after All-Pro quarterback Lamar Jackson played his position in 2019 unlike any other in the league's first 100 years.

Mahomes produced an astonishing 51-7 response to the 24-0 hole the Chiefs found themselves in against the Houston Texans in the divisional round last week. So consummate was Kansas City's comeback that the Chiefs ran out of fireworks they shoot off to celebrate their touchdowns at Arrowhead Stadium.

Before Brady made the AFC title game his personal playground, quarterbacks John Elway of the Denver Broncos, Bob Griese of the Miami Dolphins and Terry Bradshaw of the Steelers built their reputations in the big games that secured Super Bowl appearances for the eventual Hall of Famers.

Two decades before winning two AFC titles from the Broncos' front office with Manning as his quarterback, Elway engineered five victories, including classics such as " The Drive " and "The Fumble" against the Cleveland Browns.

He won Super Bowls after his last two conference championship games appearances as a quarterback and another with Manning, who toppled Brady 20-18 in the 2016 AFC title game in the 17th and final meeting between the two greatest quarterbacks - so far - of the 21st century.

Griese led Miami to three consecutive AFC trophies in the years after the 1970 merger, including a win over Pittsburgh and Bradshaw during the only undefeated season in league history.

Bradshaw bounced back to win four AFC titles in six seasons, parlaying each of them into a Super Bowl ring.

Jim Kelly won a record four consecutive AFC championships in the 1990s, but heartbreaking Super Bowl losses followed each of them during a streak of 13 consecutive victories by the NFC representative.

Elway snapped the streak with an upset of Brett Favre and the Green Bay Packers in Super Bowl XXII after beating the Steelers 24-21 for the AFC title, providing the first ring for the celebrated QB class of 1983, which had gone 0-9 in Super Bowls.

photo Kansas City Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes, left, and Tennessee Titans running back Derrick Henry lead their teams into Sunday's AFC title game in Kansas City. / AP file photos

THE DRIVE & THE FUMBLE

After Bernie Kosar put the Browns ahead 20-13 with a 48-yard touchdown pass with 5:43 left in the AFC title game in Cleveland on Jan. 11, 1987, Broncos returner Ken Bell couldn't handle a knuckleball of a kickoff that teammate Gene Lang recovered at the Denver 2.

Broncos coach Dan Reeves was resolute.

"Whenever you have John Elway as your quarterback, you've got a chance," Reeves said.

Elway poked his head into the huddle and hollered, "Let's go!" above the din of 79,915 roaring fans.

Fifteen plays and 98 yards later, Mark Jackson dived into the end zone to catch Elway's touchdown pass with 37 seconds left, and Rick Karlis' extra point tied it.

Then, 41 seconds into overtime, Elway and the Broncos took over again and, with two passes covering 50 yards, they marched to the Cleveland 15 before Karlis kicked the winning field goal.

"The day before a big game, you dream of doing things like that," Elway said after beating both the heavily favored Browns and the longest of odds.

"That drive probably is something I might be able to do again."

A year later, it wasn't "The Drive" that broke Cleveland hearts but "The Fumble."

The Browns trailed 38-31 at Mile High Stadium when Cleveland running back Earnest Byner fumbled at the Denver 2 with a minute remaining and Denver cornerback Jeremiah Castille recovered. Denver punter Mike Horan ran out of the end zone for a safety with eight seconds to play.

"Last year, I felt elated. This year, I feel numb," Reeves said afterward. "I know the Cleveland Browns feel terrible."

photo New England Patriots quarterback Tom Brady, left, and Denver Broncos counterpart Peyton Manning speak after the AFC title game between the Denver Broncos and the New England Patriots on Jan. 24, 2016, in Denver. / AP photo by David Zalubowski

BRADY VS. MANNING XVII

In the AFC championship matchup in Denver on Jan. 24, 2016, Brady and Manning met for the 17th and final time.

"I don't know that there'll ever be another rivalry - or has been a rivalry - like it" in football, said Elway, who faced fellow Hall of Famer Dan Marino of the Dolphins just twice in his playing career.

Brady had won 11 of their meetings but had split four playoff games, with Manning beating him in the conference title game with the Colts and the Broncos.

"This is Jesse James and Wyatt Earp standing out in the street at high noon for the last showdown," analyst Joe Theismann, the former Washington Redskins quarterback, said before the game.

Manning was the last man standing this time when Bradley Roby's interception of Brady's 2-point pass in the closing seconds sealed Denver's 20-18 win in a game in which the Broncos walloped Brady 23 times, more than he'd ever been hit in his career.

"He was rattled," said Broncos cornerback and former Brady teammate Aqib Talib. "I don't think I've ever seen anybody put that much pressure on Tom - ever."

photo Helmets for the Kansas City Chiefs, left, and the Tennessee Titans are displayed during a news conference Thursday in advance of Sunday's AFC title game at Arrowhead Stadium in Kansas City, Mo. / AP photo by Charlie Riedel

CLASSIC COMEBACK

The first time Brady and Manning squared off with the AFC championship on the line was Jan. 18, 2004, and Brady built a 15-0 lead on Manning's Colts on the way to a 24-14 victory at home.

They met again three years later at the RCA Dome in Indianapolis, and Brady again built a big lead, this time putting the Patriots up 21-3 early in the second quarter only to watch Manning engineer the biggest comeback in NFC title game history for a 38-34 Colts victory that sent him and coach Tony Dungy to their first Super Bowl.

Joseph Addai's 3-yard run with one minute left gave the Colts their first lead in the game.

Manning couldn't bear to watch Brady's desperation drive, looking up from the sideline only after hearing the crowd at the RCA Dome go wild after Marlin Jackson's interception.

"I said a little prayer on that last drive," Manning said. "I don't know if you're supposed to pray for stuff like that, but I said a little prayer."

photo Cincinnati Bengals quarterback Ken Anderson throws during the AFC championship game against the San Diego Chargers on Jan. 10, 1982, in Cincinnati. Bengals coach Forrest Gregg called the Freezer Bowl — a 27-7 win over the San Diego Chargers on Jan. 2, 1982 — worse than the Ice Bowl on Dec. 31, 1967, when he was an offensive lineman for Vince Lombardi's Green Bay Packers taking on the Dallas Cowboys in the most famous cold-weather game in NFL history. / AP photo

CHILLY CHARGERS

Cincinnati Bengals coach Forrest Gregg called the Freezer Bowl - a 27-7 win over the Chargers on Jan. 2, 1982 - worse than the Ice Bowl on Dec. 31, 1967, when he was a Packers offensive lineman in the most famous cold-weather game in NFL history.

The Ice Bowl was colder - minus-13 degrees at kickoff with a wind chill of minus-48 - but the 35 mph wind gusts in Cincinnati 15 years later made minus-9 degrees feel like minus-59.

"The ball is frozen, the laces are razor sharp - the passes are cutting the receivers' hands, but they're not bleeding because it's so cold," recalled Hank Bauer, then a Chargers special teams star and later a team broadcaster. "It was just too cold to play football."

The Chargers were depleted after playing the NFL's most-remembered warm-weather game only the week before, a 41-38 overtime win in Miami. Chargers tight end Kellen Winslow was helped off the field several times in the high-80s heat and humidity, yet caught 13 passes and blocked a field-goal try.

"I've never felt so close to death before," Winslow said.

A week later, Winslow caught the only touchdown pass thrown by Dan Fouts, who had icicles hanging from his beard a week after sweating it out in Florida.

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