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Jared Goff of the Los Angeles Rams celebrates a pass against the New Orleans Saints during the third quarter in the NFC Championship game at the Mercedes-Benz Superdome on January 20, 2019 in New Orleans, Louisiana.
 Jonathan Bachman/Getty Images
Jared Goff of the Los Angeles Rams celebrates a pass against the New Orleans Saints during the third quarter in the NFC Championship game at the Mercedes-Benz Superdome on January 20, 2019 in New Orleans, Louisiana.  (Jonathan Bachman/Getty Images)

The Los Angeles Rams Will Face Off Against the New England Patriots at This Year's Super Bowl

The Los Angeles Rams Will Face Off Against the New England Patriots at This Year's Super Bowl

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Former University of California, Berkeley football quarterback Jared Goff is headed to the Super Bowl.

The Novato native led the Los Angeles Rams to a thrilling 26 to 23, come-from-behind, overtime victory over the New Orleans Saints on Sunday.

Goff, 24, was the number one overall pick in the 2016 NFL Draft and is now the youngest quarterback to win an NFC championship.

Goff is also the fifth starting quarterback for the Super Bowl from Cal — the university has sent more starting quarterbacks to the Super Bowl than any other school.

But controversy overshadowed the victory — referees missed a blatant penalty call against the Rams in the closing minutes of the game.

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Still, the Ram's rallied from an early 13-0 deficit, kicked in a game-tying field goal, came up with a key interception during overtime and finally closed the game with Greg Zuerlein's 57-yard field goal — the longest kick ever to win a playoff game.

“We get to play in the Super Bowl,” Goff said. “We deserve it.”

Just three seasons after moving back to Southern California from St. Louis, the Rams completed a remarkable rise to prominence, led by their 32-year-old wunderkind of a coach, Sean McVay.

"We were coming in here not to just compete with [the Saints] but to win the football game,” McVay said. “We knew it was going to be a great challenge, but the guys stayed the course."

The game will long be remembered for the call that wasn’t on Drew Brees’ pass to Tommylee Lewis inside the 5-yard line.

Beaten badly on the play, Rams cornerback Nickell Robey-Coleman leveled Lewis long before the ball arrived — with a helmet-to-helmet hit. Everyone at the Superdome knew it was a penalty. Everyone, that is, except two officials who were staring right at it.

Their flags stayed tucked in their pockets, forcing the Saints to settle for Wil Lutz’s 31-yard field goal that made it 23-20 with 1:41 left in regulation.

“Came to the sideline, looked at the football gods and was like, ‘Thank you,’” Robey-Coleman said. “I got away with one tonight.”

After the no-call, Goff had enough time to get the Rams in position for Zuerlein’s tying field goal, a 48-yarder with 15 seconds remaining.

New Orleans won the coin toss and got the ball first in overtime. But, with Dante Fowler Jr. in his face and striking his arm, Brees fluttered up a pass that was picked off by John Johnson III, who was able to hang on to the interception while stumbling backward. Johnson hopped up and celebrated by doing the “Choppa Style” dance popularized by New Orleans rapper Choppa, whose namesake song had become a Saints’ rallying cry.

The Rams weren’t able to do much offensively, but it didn’t matter. Zuerlein booted through the winning field goal from just inside midfield with plenty of room to spare.

“Whether we go through some adversity or we experience some success, we do not let that change us or affect us,” Zuerlein said “We just keep on keeping on.”

It was the first home playoff loss for the Saints with Brees and coach Sean Payton, who had been 6-0 at the Superdome since their pairing began in 2006.

This one really hurt.

If the pass interference penalty had been called, the Saints could’ve run most of the time off the clock to set up a winning field goal from chip-shot range. A replay was shown over and over on the Superdome’s giant video monitors, prompting some fans to toss trash on the field.

“Being that it happened right there in front of the person who would be the one to make the call, and everyone in the stands saw it, everyone watching at home on TV saw it, that makes it even more difficult to take,” Brees said. “Because of this, I’m sure there will be a lot of talk about reviewing penalties, perhaps game-changing penalties.”

The Rams (15-3) will be appearing in its first Super Bowl since the 2001 season, when the “Greatest Show on Turf” was still in St. Louis. The team hasn’t won an NFL title in Los Angeles since 1951, well before the Super Bowl era. The team moved to St. Louis in 1995, only to return to L.A. two decades later.

It was another bitter end for the Saints, who lost the previous season in the divisional round on the “Minnesota Miracle” — the Vikings’ long touchdown pass on the final play of the game.

This time, New Orleans (14-4) couldn’t hang on to the lead or overcome that brutal officiating mistake.

Payton said he talked to the NFL office after the game and was told that Robey-Coleman should have been flagged.

“Not only was it interference, it was helmet to helmet,” the coach said. “I don’t know if there was ever a more obvious pass interference.”

Goff and the Rams will take on the New England Patriots on Feb. 3 in Atlanta.

Goff and Patriot's quarterback, Tom Brady both attended high schools in the Bay Area. Goff hails from Marin Catholic High
School in unincorporated Kentfield in Marin County.

Brady, a five-time Super Bowl champion, went to Junipero Serra High School in San Mateo. Brady was far from a top pick like Goff, famously going in the sixth round and 199th overall pick in the 2000 draft after going to school at the University of Michigan.

The Patriots also went to overtime Sunday before beating the Kansas City Chiefs 37-31 in the AFC Championship game.

Social media accounts for both schools lauded their NFL alumni following the championship games Sunday.

The Serra Athletics Twitter account @PadreAthletics wrote "Congrats to Tom Brady '95 on his ninth Super Bowl appearance!"

Marin Catholic's Twitter account @MarinCatholic wrote, "Congrats Jared on heading to the Super Bowl. Get it done. #BeatSerra."

The Associated Press and Bay City News contributed to this report.

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