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Saturday, Nov. 23
The Indiana Daily Student

sports

Patriots defeat Bears in turnover-ridden game

New England picks up 17-13 home win versus Chicago

FOXBOROUGH, Mass. -- The New England Patriots finally quit stopping themselves.\nAfter New England turned the ball over three times inside the Chicago 20-yard line, tight end Benjamin Watson hung onto Tom Brady's 2-yard pass in the end zone, giving the Patriots a 17-13 win Sunday against the NFL leader in takeaways.\nThen Patriots cornerback Asante Samuel put an abrupt end to the Bears' comeback hopes with his third interception with 1:46 to play.\nPlaying on their new artificial turf, the Patriots (8-3) persevered against the Bears (9-2), who had allowed 120 points this season, the fewest in the league. But New England's was the second stingiest defense coming into the game, having given up just 131.\nThe Bears capitalized on the fourth of their five takeaways -- and Charles Tillman's second interception -- and tied the game 10-10 just seven seconds into the fourth quarter on Cedric Benson's 2-yard run.\nThe Patriots then moved 73 yards after the kickoff and went ahead with 8:22 left. Brady provided the dramatics with a scrambling 40-yard completion to Watson and an 11-yard run for a first down that ended with him jumping up and making an emphatic first-down signal.\nThat put the ball at the Chicago 14, and Watson scored five plays later.\nThe Bears began the day with a chance to clinch the NFC North title. But Minnesota's win against Arizona earlier Sunday ended that.\nTheir loss would have kept them from clinching anyway, but they had a chance to win after Alex Brown recovered Corey Dillon's fumble at the Bears 22-yard line with 1:52 remaining. Fittingly for a game with nine turnovers, Chicago committed the final one on the very next play when Samuel intercepted Rex Grossman's 40-yard pass intended for Rashied Davis.\nBrady then knelt with the ball for three straight plays -- and made sure he grasped it tightly on every one.\nThe Patriots had failed to score on only five of their 39 trips inside the opponents' 20-yard line this season, but came up short time after time against Chicago, which had allowed the fewest yards in the NFL.\nWith both teams coming off shutout wins, the game shaped up as a defensive struggle and that's the way it turned out.\nNot even the new FieldTurf, installed after season-long problems with the natural grass caused players to slip, made much difference for running backs trying to plant their cleats and shake loose for big gains.\nThe first half ended with a bizarre set of plays. Two passes by Brady that were ruled completions on the field were overturned on video review. The last negated a potential 27-yard pass to Watson that would have put the ball at the Bears 7-yard line with six seconds left.\nThat left rookie Stephen Gostkowski with a 52-yard field goal attempt that went wide to the right. But Chicago had called a timeout just before the kick and Gostkowski's second try barely made it over the crossbar. His longest kick of the season gave New England a 10-3 halftime lead.\nBoth teams had trouble holding onto the ball early. On their first three possessions, each team lost a fumble and an interception. On Chicago's other series in that stretch, Robbie Gould missed a field goal attempt for the first time in 25 tries this year when defensive end Richard Seymour deflected the 45-yard try.\nThe Patriots took a 7-0 lead on Laurence Maroney's 1-yard run with 5:53 gone in the second quarter, ending a 92-yard march after Seymour recovered a snap that Grossman fumbled.\nOn the next possession, Gould made it 7-3 with a 46-yard field goal.\nAt a more critical moment, the Bears chose to go for a field goal on fourth-and-6 at the Patriots 14 with 3:36 remaining. Gould came through from 32 yards, cutting the lead to 17-13, but their final possession ended with Samuel's game-clinching interception.

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