Drew Bledsoe, Tony Romo, Tom Brady, and Super Bowl 60

Sports

Tom Brady replaced #11, Drew Bledsoe, in New England in 2001.

#9, Tony Romo, replaced Drew Bledsoe in Dallas in 2006.

Tom Brady once beat the Seahawks at the goal line in Super Bowl 49.

Tony Romo once lost to the Seahawks at the goal line in the NFC Wild Card.

It’s funny they wore #11 & #9, because the Seahawks come into Super Bowl 60 vs. the Patriots, holding an edge of 11-9 in the series.

As for the 19 part… Drew McQueen Bledsoe=190 (19th triangular number). Keep in mind Drew Bledsoe is from Washington State.

Notice that Seattle, the 19 city, won the game with 1:19 on the clock, after a botch 19 yard field goal due to Tony Romo’s fumble. Keep in mind that the game was in January of 2007, 19 years ago. That was the year of Super Bowl 41, where the Colts beat the Chicago Bears (the Pope is from Chicago), and the Baltimore Colts were once the Miami Seahawks.

The Patriots are on 40 postseason wins all-time heading into the Super Bowl (Super Bowl=41).

Don’t forget Jim Irsay, the owner of the Colts, died 106 days before the 106th NFL season began, only for the Seattle Seahawks to end up in the big game (Indianapolis=60, *Seattle, WA=106). It goes with his Indiana Pacers, eventually losing to the Oklahoma City Thunder in the NBA Finals, because OKC’s basketball team came from Seattle (they were the Seattle Supersonics).

Back on the topic of 19, in the case of Super Bowl 60, the Seahawks advanced to the big game by improving to 19-19 in the NFL postseason, exactly 19 weeks after the Pope’s birthday (the Seahawks have gone to the last three Super Bowls in the season of the world getting a new Pope).

In the recent NFC Championship, #19 of the Rams, helped Seattle win.

Jake Bobo, #19 for Seattle, also scored in the NFC Championship vs. the Rams.

For another interesting point, Super Bowl 60 will be played 359 days after Drew Bledsoe’s birthday (359 is the 72nd prime number). Bledsoe was also born in ’72.

Drew McQueen Bledsoe=82, New England Patriots=82, Seattle=82 (Super Bowl 60 on 8/2)
Bledsoe is currently 53 (Brady won Super Bowl 53 — Patriots=53)

The Super Bowl will also be played 72 days before Tony Romo’s birthday.

Jesuit Order=72 (72 is a BIG number)

Romo’s birthday is the day Pope Francis died, which is also Rome’s birthday. Romo, Rome?

Natale di Roma=113, Dallas=113

In 1972, the Dallas Cowboys (NFC) beat the Miami Dolphins (AFC), 24-3. They won by 21 points, and now the Patriots and Seahawks (The Seahawks franchise originally began in Miami) will meet for the 21st time, going with Brady winning Super Bowl 49, with the Patriots, over the Seahawks, in his 21st postseason game (that is the one that ended with Russell Wilson’s 21st pass being intercepted by #21, on the down 2nd and 1, on the date 2/1, or February 1).

FYI, the ’72 Super Bowl was 54 Super Bowls ago (Jesuit Order=54 & 72).

That Super Bowl was in New Orleans (New Orleans=54).

Tom Brady played his last NFL game vs. the Cowboys

For more Jesuit fingerprints, Tony Romo turned 45 the day that Pope Francis died, the first Jesuit Pope, (IHS=45, New England=45, Tony Romo=45).

Super Bowl 45 was won by the Green Bay Packers over the Pittsburgh Steelers, the same Packers team that beat the Patriots in Super Bowl 31, where Drew Bledsoe lost, as the Patriots’ QB, dropping the franchise to 0-2 in Super Bowls. Keep in mind the Seahawks got Marshawn Lynch, who infamously did not get the ball at the goal line in Super Bowl 49, only because the Packers didn’t pick him up off of waivers. Also, the Seahawks lost Super Bowl 40 to the Steelers, the year that Pope Benedict was installed in Rome.

There were 31 points in Super Bowl 40 (Steelers=31)
That Super Bowl was on 2/5, or 5/2 *Pope=25 & 52
Pope Benedict=60 (de ja vu in Supe Bowl 60?)

The other Seahawks “Pope Bowl” was Super Bowl 48, where they beat the Denver Broncos 43-8. Keep in mind Tom Brady is currently 48 years old (Tom=48).

I’ll do some more thinking on this information, and have a further discussion on Patreon.

Leave a Comment

You must be logged in to post a comment.