Welker, Pats let one slip away
February 6, 2012 - 2:01 am
INDIANAPOLIS — The eyes that watched Tom Brady’s pass sail to him were red. The hands that couldn’t catch it were clasped in his lap. The heart that helped make Wes Welker a star was broken.
Blame me, he said. Blame me for letting a ball I always catch fall to the ground.
“It comes to the biggest moment of my life, and (I) don’t come up with it,” the New England Patriots wide receiver said. “Most critical situation, and I let the team down.”
One of the NFL’s smallest receivers at 5 feet 9 inches and its leading receiver with 122 catches wasn’t the only one who missed an opportunity that ruined the chances of coach Bill Belichick’s usually disciplined players winning their fourth Super Bowl.
They lost to the New York Giants 21-17 on Sunday.
There was a safety on the Patriots’ first offensive play. There were three fumbles by the Giants, but they kept the ball after each one against a team that led the AFC with a plus-17 turnover differential.
And there was a desperation heave by Brady on the final play into the end zone — a pass covering more than half the field that bounced off several players in the end zone. After it bounced off the last set of fingertips and fell to the ground, the game was over.
So was the Patriots’ last, long-shot hope.
“The ball’s just floating in the air,” Patriots guard Logan Mankins said. “I think everybody’s holding their breath — the crowd, the coaches, the players.”
The Patriots’ other two star receivers, Rob Gronkowski and Aaron Hernandez, were there with three defenders. The ball was tipped out of reach of a lunging Gronkowski, who was hampered by a high left ankle sprain suffered in the AFC Championship Game.
“We’ve completed a Hail Mary this year,” said Giants quarterback Eli Manning, who won his second Super Bowl Most Valuable Player award. “I was hoping there wasn’t going to be another one completed, for them.”
It nearly was.
“I felt like I was close,” Gronkowski said. “But close isn’t there.”
Added Brady: “We got to the 50, and ran out of time.”
The Patriots missed plenty of opportunities when there was plenty of time left, including those three fumbles. The Giants recovered two. And the one New England’s Brandon Spikes came up with was nullified because the Patriots had 12 men on the field.
Two plays later, Manning hit Victor Cruz for a 2-yard touchdown and a 9-0 lead late in the first quarter.
Then Brady got hot, completing a Super Bowl-record 16 straight passes, and the Patriots surged to a 17-15 lead.
“I thought we played very competitive, had our moments where we moved the ball and stopped them,” Belichick said. “We were in the lead for a good part of the game. We just came up a couple of plays short.”
The Patriots had a chance to make it a two-possession game when a mix-up in the Giants’ defense left Welker alone.
On a second-and-11 at the Patriots 44, the sure-handed receiver had a chance to score. All he had to do was catch the ball and, perhaps, make it to the end zone. Amazingly, the ball went off his hands.
“It’s one of those plays I’ve made 1,000 times,” he said.
Brady and Deion Branch failed to connect on the next play on a pass just behind the receiver, and the Patriots punted.
“We had opportunities to put this team away and we didn’t,” Branch said. “All the plays were big. Every play is important. Had I made the catch that was behind me, that could have been a key third down, but we didn’t connect on it.”
After the punt, Manning started the winning 88-yard drive capped by Ahmad Bradshaw’s 6-yard touchdown run with 57 seconds to go.
Had Welker made the catch and the Patriots scored, that touchdown might have been insignificant.
“The ball is right there,” Welker said. “I’ve just got to make the play. It’s a play I’ve made 1,000 times in practice and everything else.”
But Welker is a big reason the Patriots reached the Super Bowl. And just one reason they lost it.
“He’s a hell of a player,” Brady said. “I’ll keep throwing the ball to him for as long as I possibly can. He’s a phenomenal player and teammate. I love that guy.”
When Welker was done with his stint at the postgame podium, he walked slowly to the team bus with a backpack over his left shoulder. At one point, he passed a group of cheering fans dressed in Giants shirts. He kept walking, looking blankly straight ahead.
PATRIOTS COME UP SHORT AT END FOR ‘MISS MYRA’INDIANAPOLIS — Robert Kraft stared at the scoreboard, to see if time really had run out. It had.
In a game that means so much, his New England Patriots had come up a fingertip or two short.
“It’s for Miss Myra,” receiver Deion Branch said after the Giants beat the Patriots 21-17 on Sunday, “and we feel like we didn’t get the job done.”
Kraft’s beloved wife, Myra, died days before the lockout ended last July, and football became an escape for his grief. He played a critical role in the negotiations that ended the lockout, with Indianapolis Colts center Jeff Saturday going so far as to call him “a man who helped us save football.”
The Patriot players have always been close to the Krafts, with many seeing Myra like another mother. Football is only a game, but it was the best way they had to show Kraft their love and ease the burden of his grief, if only for a bit. They wore patches with “MHK” above their hearts, and a painting in the middle of the locker room showed a huddle of Patriots, their fingers pointed skyward beneath her initials “MHK.”
When Tom Brady threw his second touchdown pass, he tapped the patch above his heart twice and looked skyward.
“They saved me,” Kraft said earlier in the week. “This horrible cancer came and it’s wrecked my life. Having this team has been a savior for me.”
A Super Bowl trophy would have been the perfect ending to their story, the ultimate joy to balance the ultimate pain.
“It would have been sensational,” tackle Sebastian Vollmer said, shaking his head.
Instead, Kraft stood alone on the sideline, watching as New England’s season came to an end. Kraft spoke to a few players in the locker room before making a quick exit.
“It’s tough for all of us,” Brady said.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS