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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

NFL playoff picture clearer

Barry Wilner Associated Press
New England and Dallas are back in the playoffs. The New York Giants are out. And both AFC wild-card spots are still up for grabs. Tom Brady and the Patriots returned to the postseason with a performance worthy of the team of the decade, a 35-7 rout of Jacksonville on Sunday. Also back after a one-year absence is Green Bay, which secured an NFC wild-card berth with a 48-10 victory over Seattle. Cincinnati clinched the AFC North with its 17-10 win over Kansas City, and the Cowboys grabbed the final NFC playoff spot by beating Washington 17-0 on Sunday night. That eliminated the Giants, who were routed by Carolina 41-9 and missed the postseason after starting 5-0. Following their 30-27 victory over Denver, the playoff-bound Philadelphia Eagles (11-4) will play at Dallas (10-5) for the NFC East title next Sunday. The AFC wild-card scramble got even more complicated with Baltimore’s 23-20 loss at Pittsburgh. When the Jets spoiled the Colts’ unbeaten season 29-15, it pushed New York into the driver’s seat for a wild card, along with the Ravens. Both are 8-7 and with wins next week over Cincinnati and Oakland, respectively, they will go to the postseason. Tennessee (7-8) was eliminated Sunday. New Orleans was stunned 20-17 in overtime by Tampa Bay, preventing the NFC South champion Saints from clinching home-field advantage throughout the conference playoffs. But the Saints still could get that by winning at Carolina next weekend. Already into the postseason were Arizona, winner of the NFC West; Minnesota, which owns the NFC North title; Philadelphia, assured at least a wild card; San Diego, champion of the AFC West; and Indianapolis, winner of the AFC South. Brady threw four touchdown passes, three to Randy Moss, and the young defense put together its third straight solid game for New England (10-5). The Patriots clinched the AFC East title after missing the playoffs last season for the first time since 2002 despite an 11-5 record. “It’s been a long journey for us,” Brady said. “You start out in the beginning of January last year not making the playoffs. … We put a lot into it over the course of these 12 months and it really pays off when it goes the way you hope it does.” Green Bay (10-5) has surged after a 4-4 start. Several Packers players, including Charles Woodson and Greg Jennings, acknowledged fans during a lap around the stadium after the game. “I don’t think you could ask for a better day,” Ryan Grant said. Carson Palmer’s touchdown pass to Chad Ochocinco completed a 98-yard drive in the closing minutes for Cincinnati to conclude a rough week. The Bengals (10-5) moved into the playoffs for only the second time in the past 19 years after dealing with the death of receiver Chris Henry.