Falcons Beat Bucs, 45-24, Clinch NFC’s No. 5 Seed

Julio Jones caught two touchdown passes in a span of 26 seconds, Michael Turner ran for two scores and the Falcons used a team-record 42 first-half points to cruise to a 45-24 win over the Tampa Bay Buccaneers on Sunday to clinch the No. 5 seed in the NFC playoffs.

The Falcons (10-6) and Detroit (10-6) are the NFC wild cards. Atlanta, which beat Detroit on Oct. 23, won the tiebreaker with the Lions for the more favorable seeding. The Falcons will play at the winner of Sunday night’s Dallas-New York Giants game in the first round of the playoffs.

“We wanted to play our final regular-season game with a lot of intensity and energy, and I think we did that in all three phases,” Falcons coach Mike Smith said.

Josh Freeman threw two interceptions and lost a fumble in the first half as the Buccaneers (4-12) closed their season with their 10th straight loss, leaving the status of coach Raheem Morris in doubt.

The Falcons led 42-0 when it began resting some of its starters, including quarterback Matt Ryan and Turner, late in the first half.

Tampa Bay, which finished 10-6 last season and started 4-2 this season, is left with its longest losing streak in one season in 34 years. The Buccaneers also lost 10 straight in 1977. They lost 11 straight between the 2008 and ’09 seasons.

Turnovers were a problem for the Buccaneers all season. Freeman began the day tied for the league lead with 19 interceptions before adding three to the dismal total, including one with 1:39 remaining.

Freeman completed 31 of 45 passes for 274 yards with two touchdowns and three interceptions.

With Atlanta leading 42-0, Freeman threw a 2-yard touchdown pass to Dezmon Briscoe with about 2 minutes remaining in the first half. Freeman threw a 5-yard TD pass to Briscoe in the fourth quarter.

Tampa Bay’s other touchdown came on Elbert Mack’s 40-yard interception return against Falcons’ backup Chris Redman in the third quarter.

Turner ran for 172 yards and two touchdowns, including an 81-yard scoring run late in the first half. The score capped the Falcons’ run of six unanswered touchdowns.

The Falcons led 21-0 after the first quarter and then put the game away with three more touchdowns in the second quarter.

The strong showing was important for the Falcons, who were coming off a 45-16 loss at New Orleans that was the worst loss in four seasons with Smith.

“We had some things we needed to get fixed from the previous game and I’m really proud of the way the guys bounced back,” Smith said.

Ryan was 6 of 9 for 106 yards, including touchdown passes of 17 and 48 yards to Jones in the first quarter.

Rookie Jacquizz Rodgers scored on a 1-yard run for his first career touchdown to start the Falcons’ scoring. Rodgers lost a fumble at the Tampa Bay 2 in the fourth quarter.

After Ryan’s first TD pass to Jones, Dominique Franks’ interception on Tampa Bay’s first down gave the ball back to Atlanta.

On first down from the Buccaneers 48, Ryan again threw to Jones, who fought off safety Tanard Jackson for the catch. Jones then jumped up from the turf, hit cornerback E.J. Biggers with a stiff-arm and then dragged Biggers into the end zone.

Turner had two touchdown runs and Curtis Lofton returned an interception 26 yards for a touchdown in the second quarter.

Matt Bryant kicked a 20-yard field goal late in the fourth quarter after the Buccaneers were stopped on fourth down at their 10.

Turner’s two touchdowns gave him a team-record 50 rushing scores with the Falcons, passing Gerald Riggs’ record of 48.

Roddy White also celebrated a milestone, passing Terance Mathis for the most yards receiving with the Falcons. Mathis had 7,349 yards from 1994-2001. White began Sunday 44 yards behind Mathis and set the mark in the third quarter.

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Bar Is Set At Top For Packers And Falcons

Packers (7-3) at Falcons (8-2)Sunday, 1 p.m.Line: Falcons by 2 1/2

Labeling a game as a preview of the N.F.C. championship is like calling a young singer-songwriter the ”next Bob Dylan.” It sets the bar too high: you expect Cowboys versus 49ers circa 1992, but instead you get welterweight-caliber matchups. The season opener between the Vikings and Saints, both a conference championship preview and a rematch, devolved into a sloppy punter’s duel. Sunday night’s Eagles-Giants game, while close, was marred by dropped passes and inexcusable turnovers. The latest would-be championship preview pits the Packers, who have spent three seasons on the brink of breaking out, against the Other Leading Brand.

The Packers have become coach killers: both Wade Phillips and Brad Childress were fired after the Packers blew out their respective teams. Think of Clay Matthews and Aaron Rodgers as a bracing splash of ice water on the face of an indecisive owner. ”Your quarterback is 40 years old! We’re crushing him!” the Packers announce, ”Your coach has no idea how to turn things around! Pull the plug before it’s too late!”

Mike Smith’s job is in no jeopardy, but the Falcons must prove they bring more to the table than chain restaurant consistency. Their weekly box scores are so unwavering that it’s almost spooky, like realizing that every chicken Caesar salad served at T.J. McHappyhour’s contains exactly 8.5 croutons. Does Michael Jenkins have to catch exactly five passes each week? Does Matt Ryan get a bonus for completing between 24 and 26 passes per game? The Falcons sometimes appear to value a low standard deviation to a high point total. They need more flair.

The same Falcons performance level that produced easy wins against the Rams and Buccaneers resulted in tough losses against the Steelers and Eagles, and it could sink them against the Packers or a playoff foe. Without that extra spark of brilliance, the Falcons will always sound more like Jackrabbit Slim than ”Blonde on Blonde.” Pick: Packers

Chargers (5-5) at Colts (6-4)Sunday, 8:20 p.m.Line: Colts by 3

All is right with the Chargers now that the team has embraced 240-pound Mike Tolbert (25 carries, 111 yards on Monday Night) as a featured back. The Chargers just aren’t the Chargers without a roly-poly wrecking ball like Marion Butts, Natrone Means or Tolbert crashing into the line 25 times per game. Rookie Ryan Mathews will get some carries when his ankle heals, but Tolbert appears to be a better fit for the offense. He’s also much more fun to watch.

Back when the Colts appeared invincible, the Chargers routinely beat them. The Chargers are 4-1 in their last five meetings with the Colts, including playoff victories in 2007 and 2008. By shifting defensive linemen and linebackers into different formations before the snap, the Chargers were able to prevent Peyton Manning from calling the plays he wanted at the line of scrimmage. Manning has thrown 14 interceptions in eight games against the Chargers, and his passer rating is lower against the Chargers (74.8) than against any other team but the Browns. Factor in Tolbert’s battering ram potential and the Chargers’ tendency to charge from the rear late in the season, and this game has heavy upset potential. Pick: Chargers

Jaguars (6-4) at Giants (6-4)Sunday, 1 p.m.Line: Giants by 7

While you wrap your brain around the fact that the Jaguars are in first place, reflect for a moment upon the Giants’ short-lived reign as the best team in the N.F.C. Back-to-back divisional losses exposed major weaknesses: a secondary that allows receivers to get open over the middle too easily and an offense that thinks it needs to commit a minimum of three turnovers to have its parking validated. It’s a good thing the Giants’ defense is stingy on third down (opponents are 7 of 43 on conversions in the last four games) and in the red zone (allowing just two touchdowns in the last 10 trips); otherwise, they would give up over 30 points per game. An injury rash at wide receiver had the team kicking tires on every irregulars-rack wideout from Michael Clayton (signed midweek) to Kevin Curtis. Phil McConkey was seen running extra hard on a treadmill recently, but that may just have been a coincidence.

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