It’s almost impossible for a football team to come back from a result like this. The hole can be way too deep, the outlook too dark.

We’re talking about the Falcons, not the Patriots.

How did Atlanta blow a 25-point lead when no team had ever lost a Super Bowl when ahead by more than 10? The historic collapse may have an impact on the organization for years.

Tom Brady is the best NFL quarterback of all time. The debate ended Sunday night when he led the biggest comeback in the biggest game, beating the Falcons 34-28 in overtime to win his fifth Lombardi Trophy in Super Bowl LI.

“This is a hard one for us,” Falcons coach Dan Quinn said after watching the devastation that comes with arguably the biggest choke in sports history. “There’s not a place to put that one.”

For nearly three quarters, the Falcons looked younger. They played faster. Their offence was explosive. Their defence was quick and relentless, sacking Brady five times. They led 21-0 and 28-3 and then gave it all back.

Not only did Falcons owner Arthur Blank think the game was over, he went down on the field at NRG Stadium in the fourth quarter expecting to dance.

That was before the Patriots went touchdown, field goal, touchdown, overtime touchdown. Atlanta’s defence was on the field for 93 plays. Defenders were gassed.

The Falcons were undone by the G.O.A.T. Not the greatest of all time. The goats of the game: offensive co-ordinator Kyle Shanahan and Quinn.

For most of the game, the Patriots didn’t look like they could stop Shanahan’s offence. The Falcons ran the ball at will in the first half, with Devonta Freeman (six carries for 71 yards) and Tevin Coleman (three carries for 15 yards) averaging 9.6 yards per carry. But in the second half, they combined for 18 yards on only nine carries.

Even so, when superstar receiver Julio Jones made a remarkable catch while tightroping the sideline at the New England 22 with Atlanta leading 28-20, the game should have been strangled away by the Falcons.

If Shanahan orders nothing but for Matt Ryan to take a knee three times, they force the Patriots to use their final two timeouts before bringing on kicker Matt Bryant for a makeable field goal and an 11-point lead with likely less than three minutes to play. Bryant was perfect in nine field-goal attempts this season from between 40 and 49 yards.

The Falcons did run Freeman on first down and he lost one yard. But on second down, Ryan took a deep drop and was sacked for a 12-yard loss by defensive end Trey Flowers, who beat centre Alex Mack.

“We thought we had a good look for the personnel that was in the game,” Quinn said. “We trust our guys. When it doesn’t work, it’s easy to question it.”

Even after the sack, the Falcons were probably within Bryant’s range, about 52 yards. He was 6-of-8 from 50 yards or longer this season. Shanahan seemed confused where the football was after the game.

“The thought is to get as many yards as you can. We’re right on the fringe. It was not an easy field goal,” he said.

So Shanahan called another pass that was completed for 9 yards to Mohamed Sanu. But tackle Jake Matthews was called for holding, pushing the Falcons back to the New England 45, and Ryan fired incomplete to Taylor Gabriel, allowing the Patriots to keep both timeouts.

“Too aggressive? No,” Ryan said. “I thought Kyle did a good job. I thought we played the way we play. We always play aggressive and play to win.”

The Falcons’ possessions in the fourth quarter went punt, fumble, punt, punt. The fumble was lost by Ryan when he was sacked on third and 1 by Dont’a Hightower, and the ball was recovered by Alan Branch with the Falcons leading 28-12 and 8:24 remaining.

There’s no question this will be remembered as Brady’s great escape. He still needed to drive 91 yards for a touchdown and two-point conversion to send the game into overtime.

Quinn was the Seahawks’ defensive co-ordinator when the Patriots’ Malcolm Butler intercepted the pass at the 1-yard line to clinch Super Bowl XLIX. He should know what happens when you get too aggressive with the game in hand.

The Warriors lost the NBA Finals leading three games to one. The Cleveland Indians blew a 3-1 lead to the Chicago Cubs in the World Series.

This was much, much worse. Maybe the worst collapse of all time. How do you recover from that?

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