Eric Berry returned an interception for a touchdown, and then brought back another pick for a two-point conversion that gave the Kansas City Chiefs an improbable 29-28 victory over the Atlanta Falcons on Sunday.

The Falcons, rallying from a 27-16 deficit, went ahead 28-27 on Matt Ryan’s five-yard touchdown pass to Aldrick Robinson with 4:32 remaining.

Atlanta decided to go for two, looking to stretch the margin to a field goal. But Berry stepped in front of Ryan’s pass and ran 99 yards the other way to give the Chiefs (9-3) their winning margin. It came after Denver won a game in similar fashion last month, returning a blocked PAT for the winning points at New Orleans.

1) ATL scores TD, takes lead

2) ATL goes for 2

3) Berry PICKS IT OFF, goes the distance



KC takes the lead. UNREAL! https://t.co/FCrLGtx4Ki — NFL (@NFL) December 4, 2016

Berry had another huge play with less than a minute to go in the first half, picking off Ryan’s pass over the middle and bringing it back 37 yards for a touchdown. After reaching the end zone, the suburban Atlanta native handed the ball to his mother sitting in the stands at the Georgia Dome.

Those weren’t the only big plays for the Chiefs. On fourth-and-two from their own 45, Kansas City faked a punt and snapped the ball directly to Albert Wilson , who played his college ball in the same stadium for Georgia State. Wilson burst up the middle for a 55-yard touchdown that extended Kansas City’s lead in the third quarter.

Los Angeles Rams 10-26 New England Patriots

Tom Brady became the NFL’s career leader in victories by a quarterback, earning his 201st by throwing for 269 yards and a touchdown to lead the New England Patriots past the struggling Los Angeles Rams 26-10.

Brady, who was 33 of 46, had tied Peyton Manning last week in a win over the New York Jets.

His lone touchdown pass came on a 14-yard pass to Chris Hogan in the first quarter. LeGarrette Blount scored the game’s first touchdown , rumbling for a 43-yard, ankle-breaking score in the first quarter while spinning around safety Maurice Alexander in the process. He finished with 88 yards on 18 carries.

The Patriots (10-2) have won seven of their last eight as they prepare for a tough stretch against three teams with winning records over their final four regular-season games.

San Francisco 49ers 6-26 Chicago Bears

Jordan Howard ran for 117 yards and a career-high three touchdowns and the Chicago Bears handed San Francisco its 11th straight loss, beating the 49ers 26-6.

The 49ers (1-11) extended their franchise-record losing streak and set a club low with six yards net passing on a day when Colin Kaepernick got lifted for Blaine Gabbert. The Bears (3-9) finished with a season high in points and picked up a rare win in a matchup between two of the NFL’s worst teams.

Matt Barkley, making his second start with Jay Cutler sidelined by a season-ending shoulder injury, went nearly the entire first half without a completion. But he led a touchdown drive near the end of the second quarter and finished 11 of 18 for 192 yards.

Howard, who came in with two rushing touchdowns, scored on a one-yard run near the end of the first half. A fifth-round draft pick from Indiana, he added a two-yard touchdown on the opening drive of the third and a five-yard run midway through the quarter. Howard’s three rush TDs are tied for the second-most by a Bears rookie in a game.

Kaepernick completed just one of five passes for four yards and was sacked five times. He also ran for 20 yards on six attempts before Gabbert replaced him in the fourth quarter. Gabbert was four of 10 for 35 yards and sacked for a safety near the end of the game.

Houston Texans 13-21 Green Bay Packers

Aaron Rodgers threw for 209 yards and two touchdowns, and the Green Bay Packerspulled away from the Houston Texans with two fourth-quarter touchdowns for a 21-13 win to get back to .500.

The Packers (6-6) weathered snowy conditions at Lambeau Field, making just enough plays on the cold turf to even their record for the first time since they were 4-4 after losing to Indianapolis on 6 November.

Brock Osweiler connected with DeAndre Hopkins for a 44-yard touchdown pass with 1:51 left to get within eight for Houston. Nick Novak missed the extra point, with footing slippery at Lambeau.

The Texans (6-6) had one last shot after the Packers failed to run out the clock. But Osweiler’s last-ditch pass-and-lateral play from Houston’s 12 with four seconds left failed, handing Houston its third straight loss.

Elsewhere, Joe Flacco threw four touchdowns in the Ravens’ 38-6 victory over the Dolphins; the Broncos beat the Jaguars 20-10; the Eagles’ slide continued as they lost to the Bengals 14-32 and Matt Stafford led the Lions past the Saints 28-13.