February 2, 2004 -- HOUSTON — Over the first 26:55 of Super Bowl XXXVIII, you figured the team that had its defense on the field last would win the game. This one resembled the '85 Bears against the 2000 Ravens. Tom Brady's Patriots and Jake Delhomme's Panthers fought for every last inch in the midst of a savage turf war that threatened to tick past midnight before one side would surrender its end zone to the other.
And then a Gunfight at the OK Corral erupted between Brady and Delhomme.
No one could have liked Delhomme's chances.
No one except Delhomme.
Apparently stricken with Belichickitis during a 1-for-9, 1-yard start, Delhomme magically became a Ragin' Cajun and transformed the Panthers into Cardiac Cats. They would be Comeback Kids today against most quarterbacks.
"Jake Delhomme threw the [heck] out of it against our defense, which you don't see very much," Brady said.
But Brady, the 32-29 winner, is not most quarterbacks.
With the Lombardi Trophy for the taking, Brady, the MVP, threw the heck out of the ball against the Carolina defense, which you don't see very much.
"They got the ball last," John Fox said.
Only once did Brady lose his Montana cool, when he threw off his back foot with Al Wallace in his face from the 10 and Reggie Howard intercepted in the end zone.
So now Delhomme, down 21-16, had 7:38 to cover 90 yards.
He covered 85 of them with a lightning touchdown pass to Muhsin Muhammad, and it was 22-21.
Brady had 6:47 to march his team into position for Adam Vinatieri to win another Super Bowl with his right foot.
He marched them 68 yards into the end zone instead.
He hit David Givens for 25 yards and Givens again for 18 and finally Mike Vrabel, the linebacker, for the one-yard TD pass that made it 29-22 with 2:51 left.
Delhomme had 2:51 to cover 80 yards.
He covered them in seven plays, one a 31-yard dart to Ricky Proehl, and 1:43, and tied it with a 12-yard TD pass to Proehl.
Brady had 1:08 and the ball at his 40 because, heavens to Jim Fassel and Matt Bryant, John Kasay kicked one out of bounds.
He did it with a 17-yard pass to Deion Branch (10-143-1 TD) and here came Vinatieri for the 41-yard game-winner with four seconds left. "He's The Iceman," Ted Johnson said.
So is Brady.
"Who would you rather have running the two-minute offense in today's age of football than Tom Brady?" Charlie Weis said.
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New York Post
Steve Serby