Bailey’s big return boosts Denver

? It took a Champ to knock off the champs, a crazy 100-yard sprint by Denver’s standout cornerback that helped the Broncos stop their long streak of playoff futility and bring the New England dynasty to an end.

Huffing, puffing, dashing down the sideline, Champ Bailey got caught and knocked down at the one-yard line Saturday night. But his interception of Tom Brady did the damage, setting up the game-changing touchdown in Denver’s 27-13 victory over the defending Super Bowl champions.

“It was a great play by me,” Bailey said. “I made the play, but it was something we’d talked about the whole game.”

The first playoff game in the history of Invesco Field resulted in Denver’s first postseason victory since the 1998 Super Bowl, John Elway’s last game.

Next week in the AFC championship game, the Broncos will play the winner of today’s meeting between Indianapolis and Pittsburgh.

This game also marked the end of the Patriots’ shot at history.

Denver cornerback Champ Bailey, right, intercepts a pass in the end zone intended for New England's Troy Brown. Bailey returned the pick 100 yards to the Patriots' one-yard line to set up a Denver touchdown in the Broncos' 27-13 victory over the Patriots on Saturday in Denver.

Trying to become the first team to win three straight Super Bowls, the Patriots (11-7) simply didn’t have enough to overcome Denver’s steady play, a few bad breaks or their five turnovers. That was one fewer than they had during their entire, record-setting 10-game playoff winning streak that ended at the hands of the Broncos (14-3).

“Obviously, we’re disappointed,” Patriots coach Bill Belichick said. “We weren’t able to make the plays we needed to make to win, that’s why we didn’t win.”

And when it counted the most, the Patriots also couldn’t match Bailey.

The Patriots were moving the ball well in the third quarter. They cut a 10-3 deficit to four points on a field goal and had moved easily to the Denver five for what could have been the go-ahead score.

But on third down from the five, Bailey stepped in front of Brady’s pass in the end zone for the pick. He sprinted down the sideline, and when he felt Kevin Faulk swipe at him helplessly about 70 yards into the trek, he thought he had it cinched.

Champions don’t go down easily, though, and tight end Ben Watson wasn’t quitting. Watson took an angle, and with Bailey slowing and bringing the ball down to his hip, Watson got there, knocked Bailey down and sent the ball flying out of bounds at the one.

Or maybe through the end zone.

With Bailey lying on his back, grimacing and gasping for air, Belichick challenged the call, saying the ball flew out of the end zone, which would have given them the ball back on a touchback.

“It definitely went out,” Belichick said. “It went out of his hands. They reviewed the play. Go ask them.”

It was the kind of call a championship team might have gotten. With no decisive TV angle, though, the Pats didn’t, and on the next play, Mike Anderson scored his second one-yard touchdown of the night and gave Denver a 17-6 lead.

“I never saw the guy coming, but I was going as hard as I could,” Bailey said of the longest non-scoring interception return in NFL playoff history.