McHenry native Robert Tonyan catches TD during Packers’ NFC championship loss to Tampa Bay

Tom Brady and the Tampa Bay Buccaneers’ road magic have them heading home to the Super Bowl, the first team to play in one on their home field

GREEN BAY, Wis. (AP) — Tom Brady and the Tampa Bay Buccaneers’ road magic have them heading home to the Super Bowl, the first team to play in one on their home field.

Brady owns six Super Bowl rings with New England and now heads to his 10th NFL championship game with his new team. With help from a stifling pass rush led by Shaquil Barrett and Jason Pierre-Paul combining for five sacks, and a curious late call by the Packers, Brady and the Bucs beat top-seeded Green Bay 31-26 for the NFC title Sunday.

The Bucs (14-5) earned their franchise-record eighth consecutive road victory to reach the Super Bowl for the first time since their 2002 championship season.

They were helped by a strange decision by Packers coach Matt LaFleur with just over two minutes remaining and down by five points. On fourth-and-goal, he elected to kick a field goal. Tampa Bay then ran out the clock on the Packers (14-4).

The Bucs (14-5) will face either the Kansas City Chiefs or Buffalo Bills at Tampa’s Raymond James Stadium on Feb. 7.

Packers tight end Robert Tonyan, a McHenry native, capped his breakout season with an 8-yard touchdown reception in the third quarter. He finished Sunday’s game with four catches for 22 yards and the score.

Tonyan, in his third NFL season, hauled in 52 catches for 11 touchdowns during the regular season after having only 14 total catches and two TDs during his first two professional seasons.

“Some of these stats I have this year surpassed a lot of my goals and expectations,” Tonyan said before the NFC Divisional Round. “As the season went on and the team kept going it kind of happened with the production of the whole offense.