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DENVER -- The issues that plagued the New England Patriots all season came back to haunt them in their AFC Championship Game loss.
The offensive line was clearly the Patriots' weakest link all season, and they showed off all their warts against the Denver Broncos in the 20-12 loss. Offensive tackles Sebastian Vollmer and Marcus Cannon couldn't protect quarterback Tom Brady from Broncos pass rushers Von Miller and Demarcus Ware, and their interior offensive line couldn't open a two-inch crease for their running backs to slip through.
To make matters worse, center Bryan Stork was flagged for a dumb- and costly-as-hell personal foul when he head-butted Broncos defensive lineman Vance Walker late in the first quarter. Guard Josh Kline and offensive tackle Marcus Cannon also were hit with false starts.
And in the end, acting out Patriots fans' worst fears, Broncos Peyton Manning outplayed Brady, though both players looked years removed from their prime.
Brady was 27 of 56 for 310 yards with a touchdown and two interceptions. Manning was 17 of 31 for 176 yards with two touchdowns.
Brady came on late, nearly tying the game on an epic fourth-quarter drive, but then he threw an interception on the two-point conversion attempt, and the game was over.
Looming large at the end of the game was Stephen Gostkowski's missed extra point. If he had made the kick, the Patriots wouldn't have been forced to go for two with the game on the line.
The Patriots also passed up field goals twice. They elected to go for it on fourth and 6 at the Broncos' 14-yard line with 2:25 left in the game, when they could have kicked a field goal and hoped to drive back down the field for the win. They didn't convert, passed up the points, and it cost them later. They also could have kicked the field goal on fourth and 1 at the Broncos' 16-yard line.
This is a case where one play or one decision didn't define the entire game, however. The porous offensive line play loomed much larger.
Thumbnail photo via Mark J. Rebilas/USA TODAY Sports Images
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