In 2017, Tom Brady drove down the field in the first ever Super Bowl overtime, handed the ball off to James White, and walked off the field a winner.
Meanwhile, Matt Ryan watched glumly from the sideline as the Atlanta Falcons’ halftime collapse came full circle.
Fast-forward two years, and unsurprisingly the NFL found itself in the same situation.
After a thrilling four quarters of football, the AFC Championship went to OT, an NFL fan’s dream. Mahomes vs. Brady. The hotshot vs. the veteran. The underdog vs. the dynasty.
And once again, it was Brady’s team finding the end zone first, Brady’s team on top, Brady with the glory.