4. 2018 Patriots
Opponents' combined record: 37-11 (.771)
Quarterbacks faced: Philip Rivers, Patrick Mahomes, Jared Goff
Road games: 1
Super Bowl result: Win, 13-3
The first meeting between Mahomes and Brady in the playoffs was a classic. With the Chiefs hosting the AFC Championship Game at Arrowhead Stadium, the Patriots got up 14-0 early and led 17-7 at the start of the fourth quarter before Mahomes settled down and got going. The lead changed four times in the final stanza. The Chiefs took control with 2:03 left and intercepted Brady with 1:01 to go, only for Dee Ford to be flagged for offside. Rex Burkhead scored with 39 seconds left, only for Mahomes to hit two passes and get the Chiefs into field goal range. Harrison Butker's kick sent the game into overtime, but Brady led a 13-play drive in overtime to score a touchdown without giving Mahomes the ball back.
Goff was more highly regarded two years ago than he is now, but the Patriots stifled the opposing passer and the rest of Sean McVay's offense. The Patriots ran the same pass concept three times in a row to set up their only touchdown of the game. Every one of the Super Bowl runs before this one had an obvious weak point (or multiple weak points) at quarterback, but this was a group with three above-average (or better) signal-callers.
3. 2003 Patriots
Opponents' combined record: 35-13 (.729)
Quarterbacks faced: Steve McNair, Peyton Manning, Jake Delhomme
Road games: 0
Super Bowl result: Win, 32-29
Brady was a bigger part of the offense in his second Super Bowl run, but the defense really carried the team through the AFC playoffs. The Pats beat McNair's Titans 17-14 and then intercepted Peyton Manning four times in a brutal AFC Championship Game. Belichick's Patriots won 24-14, which led to Bill Polian's Colts complaining to the league about the clutching and grabbing done by New England's defensive backs. The league responded by making illegal contact a point of emphasis, which opened up the passing game for Brady in the years to come. Oops.
Delhomme might stick out on this list, but the Panthers were a run-heavy team that year, with Delhomme mostly hitting shots off of play-action. That held up in the Super Bowl, as he completed just 48.5% of his passes but averaged nearly 10 yards per attempt and threw for three touchdowns. The Pats needed Brady in the Super Bowl, and he responded with what was his best playoff game up to that point, throwing for 354 yards and three touchdowns before leading another game-winning drive to set up Vinatieri.
2. 2004 Patriots
Opponents' combined record: 40-8 (.833)
Quarterbacks faced: Peyton Manning, Ben Roethlisberger, Donovan McNabb
Road games: 1
Super Bowl result: Win, 24-21
This could have been No. 1; it's comfortably the most difficult slate Brady had to run through with the Patriots. Their divisional round game was against a 12-4 Colts team that scored nearly 33 points per contest; Belichick's defense held them to three points. Despite going 14-2 in the regular season, the Patriots were the second seed in the AFC and had to travel to Pittsburgh to play the Steelers, who had broken their 21-game winning streak earlier in the season and gone 15-1 with a rookie Roethlisberger. The defense forced four takeaways, scored once and set up several short fields for the offense in a 41-27 rout.
The Eagles team the Patriots faced in the Super Bowl was the best Philly team of the Andy Reid era, a 13-3 juggernaut that comfortably ran through the NFC playoffs. The final score was closer than the game, given that the Eagles scored a touchdown with 1:55 to go. McNabb is not a Hall of Famer, but the other two opposing quarterbacks are, and McNabb was an above-average starter for a long time. This is a pretty rough slate of opposing quarterbacks.
1. 2020 Buccaneers
Opponents' combined record: 46-18 (.719)
Quarterbacks faced: Taylor Heinicke, Drew Brees, Aaron Rodgers, Patrick Mahomes
Road games: 3
Super Bowl result: ???
That slate of quarterbacks, however, doesn't compare to what Brady has faced and will face this season. Put Heinicke and Washington aside and Brady will have faced three no-doubt Hall of Famers. (Mahomes could retire tomorrow and get in.) Brees was a shell of his usual self in the Superdome, but the rookie version of Roethlisberger whom Brady faced in 2004 wasn't at his peak, either. All three of the Bucs' playoff games were also on the road, matching Brady's combined total from his first nine Super Bowl runs.
Washington drags down that combined record, too; throw it out (since the Pats didn't play a wild-card round game in their nine trips with Brady) and the three teams the Bucs will have to beat to win a Super Bowl posted a combined record of 39-9, good for an .813 win percentage. It's an incredible accomplishment for the Bucs to get as far as they have, even if they come up short at home against the Chiefs in two weeks.
Is the Bucs' run the toughest slate ever?
Brady might be facing the toughest test of his postseason powers ever, but I don't think it would qualify as the most difficult path we've ever seen. Depending on which measure we use, Tampa Bay's 2020 playoff schedule would rank around 10th for the most difficult postseason schedule. (This only includes teams who needed to win four games to win a Super Bowl, because it's almost always going to be tougher than any three-game schedule.)
In the end, with apologies to the 1985 Patriots and 1999 Titans, there are two teams whose playoff schedules stand out as the most difficult since the merger. Like this year's Bucs, they needed to win three road games to make it to the Super Bowl. And, in what will be exciting news for Tampa Bay fans, both of those teams were sharpened by their experiences and won in the Super Bowl. Here are the top two and how they got there:
2005 Steelers
Opponents' combined record: 51-13 (.797)
Quarterbacks faced: Carson Palmer/Jon Kitna, Peyton Manning, Jake Plummer, Matt Hasselbeck
Road games: 3
Super Bowl result: Win, 21-10
I put Palmer and Kitna together on that ledger because of what happened in the wild-card round. Palmer found Chris Henry for a 66-yard completion on his first pass attempt of the game, only to be hit by Kimo von Oelhoffen and suffer a multi-ligament knee injury. Kitna played the rest of the way in a 31-17 defeat.
The next week, Bill Cowher's defense upset the Colts as 8.5-point underdogs in Indianapolis, although it wasn't without drama. Jerome Bettis fumbled on the 2-yard line as the Steelers were trying to seal the game with 1:20 to go, and Roethlisberger had to make a game-saving tackle on the return. Manning drove the Colts into field goal range, but Mike Vanderjagt -- who had gone 23-of-25 that season -- missed a 46-yard field goal that would have forced overtime.
Plummer and Hasselbeck weren't on Manning's level, but both the Broncos and Seahawks sported fearsome rushing attacks. The Pittsburgh defense forced four turnovers from Plummer in a 34-17 rout at Mile High, a place where Denver had previously gone 12-2 in the postseason. Shaun Alexander ran the ball 20 times for 95 yards in the Super Bowl, and Roethlisberger posted a passer rating of 22.6, but the Steelers forced the Seahawks to go 5-of-17 on third down and got a 75-yard touchdown run from Willie Parker before Antwaan Randle El threw a touchdown pass to Super Bowl MVP Hines Ward. This wasn't the prettiest Super Bowl run, but the Steelers got the job done.
2007 Giants
Opponents' combined record: 51-13 (.797)
Quarterbacks faced: Jeff Garcia, Tony Romo, Brett Favre, Tom Brady
Road games: 3
Super Bowl result: Win, 17-14
The Giants faced two Hall of Famers during their run, and while Favre was 38, he had thrown for 4,155 yards that season. (Rodgers was on the bench.) The 2007 version of Romo threw for 4,211 yards and 36 touchdowns, and Garcia made it to the Pro Bowl. Tom Coughlin's team beat two 13-3 teams (the Cowboys and the Packers) and the 16-0 Patriots to win a Super Bowl, winning three road games along the way. They won in the heat of Tampa and in sub-zero temperatures at Lambeau.
They did it by looking like a totally different team from the one that limped through the regular season. They posted a turnover differential of minus-9 during the regular season and somehow bumped that up to plus-5 across a four-game playoff run against the league's toughest competition. They held the Cowboys, the best offense in the NFC, to 17 points on nine possessions. Three weeks later, the same Patriots who dropped 38 on the Giants in Week 17 scored 14 points on nine drives. It took a miraculous catch and some well-timed takeaways, but the Giants ran off an improbable four-game winning streak and won the Super Bowl.
The 2007 Giants were not always -- or even often -- a great team. They lost 41-17 to a Vikings team with Tarvaris Jackson starting at quarterback in a game where Eli Manning threw three pick-sixes. They lost to Washington in a game where opposing starter Todd Collins went 8-of-25. They nearly lost to a 1-15 Dolphins team quarterbacked by Cleo Lemon in a game where Manning was 8-of-22 for 59 yards. Things weren't often pretty.
The Bucs can take heart in that. They've been great over the past few weeks, but these are the same Buccaneers that lost to the Bears and Nick Foles in Week 5. They needed a fourth-quarter comeback and a failed two-pointer to beat the Giants and a huge second-half comeback to beat the Chargers. History has a way of forgetting about those rough edges and disappointing performances. Tampa ended the regular season playing great football against bad competition, but after their win over Heinicke and Washington, they've beaten two of the best teams in football. They're now one win away from immortality, and if Brady does get his seventh ring, nobody will be able to say that the Buccaneers have coasted to a title.
Opponents' combined record: 37-11 (.771)
Quarterbacks faced: Philip Rivers, Patrick Mahomes, Jared Goff
Road games: 1
Super Bowl result: Win, 13-3
The first meeting between Mahomes and Brady in the playoffs was a classic. With the Chiefs hosting the AFC Championship Game at Arrowhead Stadium, the Patriots got up 14-0 early and led 17-7 at the start of the fourth quarter before Mahomes settled down and got going. The lead changed four times in the final stanza. The Chiefs took control with 2:03 left and intercepted Brady with 1:01 to go, only for Dee Ford to be flagged for offside. Rex Burkhead scored with 39 seconds left, only for Mahomes to hit two passes and get the Chiefs into field goal range. Harrison Butker's kick sent the game into overtime, but Brady led a 13-play drive in overtime to score a touchdown without giving Mahomes the ball back.
Goff was more highly regarded two years ago than he is now, but the Patriots stifled the opposing passer and the rest of Sean McVay's offense. The Patriots ran the same pass concept three times in a row to set up their only touchdown of the game. Every one of the Super Bowl runs before this one had an obvious weak point (or multiple weak points) at quarterback, but this was a group with three above-average (or better) signal-callers.
3. 2003 Patriots
Opponents' combined record: 35-13 (.729)
Quarterbacks faced: Steve McNair, Peyton Manning, Jake Delhomme
Road games: 0
Super Bowl result: Win, 32-29
Brady was a bigger part of the offense in his second Super Bowl run, but the defense really carried the team through the AFC playoffs. The Pats beat McNair's Titans 17-14 and then intercepted Peyton Manning four times in a brutal AFC Championship Game. Belichick's Patriots won 24-14, which led to Bill Polian's Colts complaining to the league about the clutching and grabbing done by New England's defensive backs. The league responded by making illegal contact a point of emphasis, which opened up the passing game for Brady in the years to come. Oops.
Delhomme might stick out on this list, but the Panthers were a run-heavy team that year, with Delhomme mostly hitting shots off of play-action. That held up in the Super Bowl, as he completed just 48.5% of his passes but averaged nearly 10 yards per attempt and threw for three touchdowns. The Pats needed Brady in the Super Bowl, and he responded with what was his best playoff game up to that point, throwing for 354 yards and three touchdowns before leading another game-winning drive to set up Vinatieri.
2. 2004 Patriots
Opponents' combined record: 40-8 (.833)
Quarterbacks faced: Peyton Manning, Ben Roethlisberger, Donovan McNabb
Road games: 1
Super Bowl result: Win, 24-21
This could have been No. 1; it's comfortably the most difficult slate Brady had to run through with the Patriots. Their divisional round game was against a 12-4 Colts team that scored nearly 33 points per contest; Belichick's defense held them to three points. Despite going 14-2 in the regular season, the Patriots were the second seed in the AFC and had to travel to Pittsburgh to play the Steelers, who had broken their 21-game winning streak earlier in the season and gone 15-1 with a rookie Roethlisberger. The defense forced four takeaways, scored once and set up several short fields for the offense in a 41-27 rout.
The Eagles team the Patriots faced in the Super Bowl was the best Philly team of the Andy Reid era, a 13-3 juggernaut that comfortably ran through the NFC playoffs. The final score was closer than the game, given that the Eagles scored a touchdown with 1:55 to go. McNabb is not a Hall of Famer, but the other two opposing quarterbacks are, and McNabb was an above-average starter for a long time. This is a pretty rough slate of opposing quarterbacks.
1. 2020 Buccaneers
Opponents' combined record: 46-18 (.719)
Quarterbacks faced: Taylor Heinicke, Drew Brees, Aaron Rodgers, Patrick Mahomes
Road games: 3
Super Bowl result: ???
That slate of quarterbacks, however, doesn't compare to what Brady has faced and will face this season. Put Heinicke and Washington aside and Brady will have faced three no-doubt Hall of Famers. (Mahomes could retire tomorrow and get in.) Brees was a shell of his usual self in the Superdome, but the rookie version of Roethlisberger whom Brady faced in 2004 wasn't at his peak, either. All three of the Bucs' playoff games were also on the road, matching Brady's combined total from his first nine Super Bowl runs.
Washington drags down that combined record, too; throw it out (since the Pats didn't play a wild-card round game in their nine trips with Brady) and the three teams the Bucs will have to beat to win a Super Bowl posted a combined record of 39-9, good for an .813 win percentage. It's an incredible accomplishment for the Bucs to get as far as they have, even if they come up short at home against the Chiefs in two weeks.
Is the Bucs' run the toughest slate ever?
Brady might be facing the toughest test of his postseason powers ever, but I don't think it would qualify as the most difficult path we've ever seen. Depending on which measure we use, Tampa Bay's 2020 playoff schedule would rank around 10th for the most difficult postseason schedule. (This only includes teams who needed to win four games to win a Super Bowl, because it's almost always going to be tougher than any three-game schedule.)
In the end, with apologies to the 1985 Patriots and 1999 Titans, there are two teams whose playoff schedules stand out as the most difficult since the merger. Like this year's Bucs, they needed to win three road games to make it to the Super Bowl. And, in what will be exciting news for Tampa Bay fans, both of those teams were sharpened by their experiences and won in the Super Bowl. Here are the top two and how they got there:
2005 Steelers
Opponents' combined record: 51-13 (.797)
Quarterbacks faced: Carson Palmer/Jon Kitna, Peyton Manning, Jake Plummer, Matt Hasselbeck
Road games: 3
Super Bowl result: Win, 21-10
I put Palmer and Kitna together on that ledger because of what happened in the wild-card round. Palmer found Chris Henry for a 66-yard completion on his first pass attempt of the game, only to be hit by Kimo von Oelhoffen and suffer a multi-ligament knee injury. Kitna played the rest of the way in a 31-17 defeat.
The next week, Bill Cowher's defense upset the Colts as 8.5-point underdogs in Indianapolis, although it wasn't without drama. Jerome Bettis fumbled on the 2-yard line as the Steelers were trying to seal the game with 1:20 to go, and Roethlisberger had to make a game-saving tackle on the return. Manning drove the Colts into field goal range, but Mike Vanderjagt -- who had gone 23-of-25 that season -- missed a 46-yard field goal that would have forced overtime.
Plummer and Hasselbeck weren't on Manning's level, but both the Broncos and Seahawks sported fearsome rushing attacks. The Pittsburgh defense forced four turnovers from Plummer in a 34-17 rout at Mile High, a place where Denver had previously gone 12-2 in the postseason. Shaun Alexander ran the ball 20 times for 95 yards in the Super Bowl, and Roethlisberger posted a passer rating of 22.6, but the Steelers forced the Seahawks to go 5-of-17 on third down and got a 75-yard touchdown run from Willie Parker before Antwaan Randle El threw a touchdown pass to Super Bowl MVP Hines Ward. This wasn't the prettiest Super Bowl run, but the Steelers got the job done.
2007 Giants
Opponents' combined record: 51-13 (.797)
Quarterbacks faced: Jeff Garcia, Tony Romo, Brett Favre, Tom Brady
Road games: 3
Super Bowl result: Win, 17-14
The Giants faced two Hall of Famers during their run, and while Favre was 38, he had thrown for 4,155 yards that season. (Rodgers was on the bench.) The 2007 version of Romo threw for 4,211 yards and 36 touchdowns, and Garcia made it to the Pro Bowl. Tom Coughlin's team beat two 13-3 teams (the Cowboys and the Packers) and the 16-0 Patriots to win a Super Bowl, winning three road games along the way. They won in the heat of Tampa and in sub-zero temperatures at Lambeau.
They did it by looking like a totally different team from the one that limped through the regular season. They posted a turnover differential of minus-9 during the regular season and somehow bumped that up to plus-5 across a four-game playoff run against the league's toughest competition. They held the Cowboys, the best offense in the NFC, to 17 points on nine possessions. Three weeks later, the same Patriots who dropped 38 on the Giants in Week 17 scored 14 points on nine drives. It took a miraculous catch and some well-timed takeaways, but the Giants ran off an improbable four-game winning streak and won the Super Bowl.
The 2007 Giants were not always -- or even often -- a great team. They lost 41-17 to a Vikings team with Tarvaris Jackson starting at quarterback in a game where Eli Manning threw three pick-sixes. They lost to Washington in a game where opposing starter Todd Collins went 8-of-25. They nearly lost to a 1-15 Dolphins team quarterbacked by Cleo Lemon in a game where Manning was 8-of-22 for 59 yards. Things weren't often pretty.
The Bucs can take heart in that. They've been great over the past few weeks, but these are the same Buccaneers that lost to the Bears and Nick Foles in Week 5. They needed a fourth-quarter comeback and a failed two-pointer to beat the Giants and a huge second-half comeback to beat the Chargers. History has a way of forgetting about those rough edges and disappointing performances. Tampa ended the regular season playing great football against bad competition, but after their win over Heinicke and Washington, they've beaten two of the best teams in football. They're now one win away from immortality, and if Brady does get his seventh ring, nobody will be able to say that the Buccaneers have coasted to a title.