
Global reach —
Fans flocked to England's national soccer stadium on Sunday for the NFL's sixth International Series match at Wembley.

Brady's bunch —
Tom Brady leads the New England Patriots onto the field for the match against the St. Louis Rams.

Famous faces —
The quarterback towers over Patriots owner Robert Kraft and rock star Jon Bon Jovi, who was one of the celebrity guests.

Pia's pride —
Former American Idol contestant Pia Toscano sang the U.S. national anthem, while Welsh singer Katherine Jenkins performed "God Save The Queen."

Training ground —
San Francisco rock band Train also provided pre-match entertainment.

Pom pom girls —
The St. Louis Rams' cheerleaders brought some American razzamatazz to the UK.

Rams raid —
St. Louis' Chris Givens celebrates scoring the match's opening touchdown from Sam Bradford's 50-yard pass, but Rams fans had little to cheer about after that.

Blown away —
Givens went off injured soon after, and three-time Super Bowl winner Brady orchestrated a 45-7 romp for the Patriots. The 35-year-old completed his first eight passes and finished with 304 yards and four touchdown passes.

No way through —
Justin Francis (94) and Patriots teammate Chandler Jones (95) celebrate after sacking the Rams' quarterback.

Something the cheer about —
The St.Louis cheerleaders, however, were proving a big hit with the sellout crowd of 84,000 fans on a cold, wet day in London.

Patriots love London —
The Patriots led 28-7 at halftime and went on to repeat the team's 2009 success against Tampa Bay in the UK capital.

Record breakers —
The Patriots surpassed 350 yards of total offense for the 17th consecutive game, breaking an NFL record set by St. Louis in 1999 and 2000. New England lead the AFC East division with five wins and three losses, while the Rams have the reverse record in NFC West.


