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SportsJanuary 16, 2005

FOXBORO, Mass. -- Super Bowl MVP Tom Brady and the champion New England Patriots are on a roll. So are league MVP Peyton Manning and the Indianapolis Colts. For one side, all that success will vanish into the chilly night air. For the loser, one single game will overshadow months of domination. Today's winner will keep rolling into the AFC championship game with a chance to play for the NFL title...

Howard Ulman ~ The Associated Press

FOXBORO, Mass. -- Super Bowl MVP Tom Brady and the champion New England Patriots are on a roll. So are league MVP Peyton Manning and the Indianapolis Colts.

For one side, all that success will vanish into the chilly night air. For the loser, one single game will overshadow months of domination. Today's winner will keep rolling into the AFC championship game with a chance to play for the NFL title.

"That's the reality of playing this time of year," Brady said. "You have these great goals and these great aspirations for your team, and you prepare like it's going to continue to go on.

"If you lose that game, bam, your season's over and you go figure out what to do for the next five or six months."

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Brady, unbeaten in six playoff games, led the Patriots to their second consecutive 14-2 record after winning his second Super Bowl MVP in three seasons. Manning had one of the greatest seasons by a quarterback in NFL history with a league-record 49 touchdown passes.

That's a nice line in the history books, but other numbers are far less pleasant to him -- a 2-9 record against the Patriots, an 0-6 mark in Foxboro and four interceptions there in a 24-14 loss in last year's AFC championship game.

"I can't argue with what's happened in the past, but I really don't dwell on it a whole lot," Manning said.

For now, the only game that matters is today's.

Playing at home should help the Patriots. A full house of screaming fans and temperatures in the 20s will assault the Colts after they played eight home games in the 72-degree warmth of the RCA Dome.

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