Posts Tagged ‘Superbowl’

Mardi Gras Who Dat Nation just wants to say: Thanks, Drew

February 14th, 2010 | Posted in Local Issues, Sports by bloom | No Comments »

By Mark Lorando, The Times-Picayune
February 13, 2010, 11:38PM
st saints parade 0182Scott Threlkeld / The Times-PicayuneThe Saints Super Bowl parade last week was just a warm-up for Saints quarterback Drew Brees, who will reign Sunday night as Bacchus.

This is what he will hear:

“DREWWWWWW!!! OHMYGOD!!! OHMYGOD!!! RIGHT HERE, DREW!!! I’M OPEN!!! THROW ME SOMETHING, DREW!!! I LOVE YOU, DREWWWWWW!!! WHO DAT, BABY!!! WILL YOU MARRY ME, DREW?!?!?!? I KNOW YOU’RE MARRIED, SO AM I, WE CAN WORK THAT OUT!!! REALLY!!! MY HUSBAND WON’T MIND, HE’S GOT A CRUSH ON YOU, TOO!!! DREWWWWWW!!! DREWWWWWW!!! OHMYGOD, DID YOU SEE THAT?!?!?!? HE THREW IT RIGHT TO ME!!! YOU DA MAN, DREWWWWWW!!!” Continue Reading »

Orleans Parish inmate who scaled fence shortly before Super Bowl is recaptured

February 11th, 2010 | Posted in Local Issues, NOPD by bloom | No Comments »


By Times-Picayune Staff
February 08, 2010, 6:43PM

An inmate who escaped from the Orleans Parish jail just hours before the Super Bowl on Sunday was recaptured Monday afternoon, a spokesman for Criminal Sheriff Marlin Gusman said.

opp_inmate.JPG

The sheriff’s office released very limited information about Reginald Knight’s escape, saying only that he was able to scale the “perimeter fence” in the 700 block of South White Street outside the facility’s Intake and Processing Center. The escape occurred about 3 p.m. Sunday.

“The reason for the escape seems to be human error for not following established procedures in place at the Sheriff’s Office,” a news release stated.

Knight was recaptured on Monday, said Marc Ehrhardt, a spokesman for the Sheriff’s Office. Ehrhardt would not release information about how Knight was apprehended, saying it would compromise the office’s investigation.

Knight, 40, was arrested on suspicion of theft of goods worth $500 and criminal trespassing, according to the Sheriff’s Office.

Super Bowl victory has Who Dat Nation feeling the love

February 9th, 2010 | Posted in Local Issues, Sports by bloom | No Comments »


By Bruce Nolan, The Times-Picayune
February 09, 2010, 7:13AM

John Pope and Bruce Nolan wrote this story.

saints-fans-reggie-bush.JPGTed Jackson / The Times-PicayuneNew Orleans Saint Reggie Bush jumps into the stands at Sun life Stadium in Miami after the Saints beat the Indianapolis Colts 31-17 in the Super Bowl.

Sixteen hours after the New Orleans Saints’ victory in Super Bowl XLIV, the crowd at Domilise’s Po-Boys was still in Who Dat heaven. Everyone who was assembling the Uptown restaurant’s iconic shrimp, oyster and roast-beef sandwiches was wearing a Saints-related T-shirt or cap, as were many of the customers, and everyone was smiling.

Into this jam-packed eatery came Joy Favor, who had made a beeline for Domilise’s after getting off a flight from Miami, where she had seen the game. Wearing a black T-shirt and carrying a golden tote bag on her left shoulder, she said two words when she crossed the threshold: “Who Dat!”

Favor said she had had no sleep, but she was clearly excited about the game and what she had seen and heard Monday morning on the way back home.

“It’s unbelievable,” Favor said. “The pilot got on the microphone and said, ‘Who Dat!’ Even the Colts fans I saw in Miami were saying, ‘You deserve that.’”

saints-fans-confetti.JPGMatthew Hinton / The Times-PicayuneBrynn Comeaux, left, and Jourdin Shockley dance as the confetti falls on Bourbon Street the New Orleans Saints defeated the Indianapolis Colts for their first Super Bowl victory Sunday.

What might have seemed surprising was that this outpouring of Saints support was occurring in what is not only a favorite restaurant of the Manning family but also a virtual shrine to its members. Among the photographs behind the bar are pictures of Peyton Manning, the Indianapolis Colts’ quarterback, and his brother, Eli, the New York Giants quarterback, holding the Vince Lombardi Trophy the year their respective teams won the Super Bowl.

Despite that strong bond, Patti Domilise, the restaurant’s manager, made her allegiance clear. Wearing a T-shirt proclaiming “Hey Shockey Way,” in honor of Saints tight end Jeremy Shockey, Domilise said there was no question about whom she and her colleagues would root for Sunday.

“When it was their turn, we were pulling for them,” she said. “It was our turn this time.”

If Sunday was a day of game-related tension, Monday was a time for afterglow.

saints-fans-kiss.JPGJohn McCusker / The Times-PicayuneSaints fans Tarak Anado and Jamie Walter share a kiss in celebration of the New Orleans Saints’ 31-17 win in Super Bowl XLIV in Miami, Fla.

It was not business as usual. Traffic in and around the city was lighter than normal; many schools were closed. Businesses seemed to run at a little less than full speed; restaurants were not so crowded.

All over town, people seemed to have no intention of making Monday a regular day. It was not. Monday was a day full of camaraderie and good cheer, a day in which the electronic sign above the northbound entrance to the Lake Pontchartrain Causeway bore a new name, Breesway, in honor of Saints quarterback Drew Brees.

Nobody was a stranger.

New Orleans was undergoing what Jim Murray called “a perfect storm” of good fortune: a New Orleans mayor’s race that, in Mitch Landrieu, produced an astonishing 66 percent consensus on the city’s next leader; a Super Bowl championship; and Mardi Gras, which, one wag suggested, could be renamed “Dat Tuesday.”

“Yeah, it’s a perfect storm. I told somebody, not since 9/11 have I felt anything like this,” said Murray, a process operator at the Dow Chemical plant in Norco. “All the divisions feel like they’re gone. It’s like for once we’re all on the same page, right?”

Lisa Smyth, an Uptowner, said the weekend’s events marked nothing less than “a sea change for the city. It’s huge.”

“Oh, this is way bigger than the Super Bowl, trust me,” said Eddie Sandifer, the community-outreach coordinator for Positive Living Treatment Center, a private mental health clinic near the corner of Canal Street and Jefferson Davis Parkway. “It’s the best day since — when? Since whenever, that’s when. This blurs all the lines: racial, income, social status, everything.

“We’re just in a holding pattern today, and it’s going to stay that way for a while, at least until the parade tomorrow.”

saints-fans-tear.JPGjohn McCusker / The Times-PicayuneKaren Licciardi of River Ridge wipes away a tear as she basks in the New Orleans Saints victory in Super Bowl XLIV in Miami.

During the warm and relaxed lunch hour, Sandifer and Darlene Jenkins, a counselor, supervised a group of a half-dozen or so clients passing a football back and forth on the broad Jeff Davis neutral ground. They are people living with depression, bipolar disorder, schizophrenia and other problems.

But perhaps they had caught the vibe, too. “The Saints are good for everybody,” Sandifer said. “They asked whether they could bring the football out here today.”

In addition to making people happy, the Saints’ 31-17 victory inspires people, said Dr. Adrianne Brennan, an assistant professor of clinical psychiatry at LSU Health Sciences Center.

Throughout the buildup to the Super Bowl, people kept talking about “believe, believe, believe,” she said. “This is what keeps people rebuilding their houses; the belief that the city will come back. The Saints are a symbol of this.”

Brennan, who described herself as “giddy and ecstatic and hopeful and in awe, watching dreams come true,” said the good feeling may well last through Mardi Gras.

“New Orleanians have this new identity now,” she said. “We’re not the underdogs. We’re on top.”

Staff writers Benjamin Alexander-Bloch and Chris Kirkham contributed to this article.

John Pope can be reached at jpope@timespicayune.com or 504.826.3317. Bruce Nolan can be reached at bnolan@timespicayune.com or 504.826.3344.

New Orleans Saints arrive at airport to shrieking crowds of fans

February 8th, 2010 | Posted in Local Issues, Sports by bloom | No Comments »


By Mary Sparacello, The Times-Picayune
February 08, 2010, 3:56PM

The Super Bowl champions New Orleans Saints flew home Monday afternoon to find a throng of shrieking fans at Louis Armstrong International Airport.

saints-fans-airport.JPGBrett Duke / The Times-PicayuneNew Orleans Saints fans await their team at Louis Armstrong International Airport on Monday afternoon. The team’s charter flight from Miami touched down about 3 p.m., and players, coaches and other personnel began pulling away from the general aviation terminal in their own vehicles.

But it was extremely slow going, as the motorcade inched through thick crowds that had began lining the route before 10 a.m. By the time the plane landed, the crowd stretched back 1-1/2 miles.

Driving alone, head coach Sean Payton hoisted the Vince Lombardi Trophy out of the sunroof of his Mercedes-Benz, eliciting screams.

One of the first recognizable players in the procession was linebacker Scott Fujita. Others spotted in the line of vehicles were offensive tackle Jon Stinchcomb, tight end Jeremy Shockey and wide receiver Devery Henderson.

Deuce McAllister, the former Saints running back whom the team brought back for inspiration before this year’s playoffs, also was in the motorcade. “Thanks, Deuce,” onlookers yelled.

Team owner Tom Benson and his wife, Gayle, and his granddaughter, executive vice president Rita Benson LeBlanc, also were popular with the crowd.

Earlier, an entourage of a half-dozen vehicles, one carrying Gov. Bobby Jindal, drove to the terminal to greet the team.

About a half-hour later at the Saints training facility on Airline Drive in Metairie, a crowd of a couple hundred people were gathered as six chartered buses pulled into the facility shortly after 3:30 p.m. The crowd, parked in the area between the Saints offices and the entrance into Zephyr Field, cheered as the buses pulled in, accompanied by Jefferson Parish Sheriff’s deputies.

Meanwhile, back in Kenner, loud music was blaring throughout the day, kids were throwing footballs and the mood was jubilant, with impromptu second lines breaking out periodically.

“I’m so happy that the New Orleans Saints are bringing the Vince Lombardi trophy to the city of New Orleans,” said Sam Granger, wearing a Reggie Bush jersey. “We have waited for so long.”

“We were coming today — win or lose,” said Stan Engolia of Metairie. He and his family are among the growing number of fans who greet the Saints outside the Kenner airport after every away game.

Karla Bordelon, of St. Rose, also greets the Saints after away games.

“I think it’s better than Mardi Gras,” she said.

John Bondio Jr., of Metairie, dressed up like the “Saints Hulk” wearing a gold and black mask. He looks forward to seeing the Saints after the Super Bowl win. “It’s unbelievable,” he said. “You can’t describe what happened last night.”

Kenner police set up barricades in anticipation of the crowds greeting the Saints’ private plane, Chief Steve Caraway said.

The Saints hire Kenner officers to work the team’s arrival from away games, and police have 35 to 40 officers on the route today. That’s compared to the 18 that worked the past few games.

“We’re expecting bigger crowds,” Caraway said.

Dee Duhe-Robichaux of New Orleans said she plans to attend the Saints parade Tuesday in New Orleans but wanted to greet the players at the airport today as she does after regular-season games. She showed up outside the airport at 8 a.m., despite celebrating the Saints’ Super Bowl victory most of the night.

“Right now I’m running on pure energy,” she said.

Drew Brees has everything but a Super Bowl ring

February 3rd, 2010 | Posted in Local Issues, Sports by bloom | No Comments »


By Nakia Hogan, The Times-Picayune
February 03, 2010, 6:00AM

MIAMI GARDENS, FLA. ­- On the surface, it appears New Orleans Saints quarterback Drew Brees has it all — a multi-million-dollar contract, a stately Uptown home, a beautiful wife, a 1-year-old son — and the national spotlight.

drew_brees90.jpgTed Jackson/The Times-PicayuneNew Orleans Saints quarterback Drew Brees was the man of the hour at Super Bowl XLIV media day Tuesday in Miami.But some guys never have enough.

There’s still that one thing that keeps Brees from feeling complete and keeps him throwing passes long after practice is over.

“For me as a quarterback and as a guy who is very competitive, I’m in this league to win championships, ” Brees said Tuesday at Super Bowl media day. “I don’t see any other reason why you would want to play this game. You play this game to be the best. You play this game to win championships, especially at the quarterback position you are measured by wins and losses, you are measured by championships. And we have no greater opportunity than this week to have that chance.”

Brees, a veteran of nine NFL seasons, finally gets his shot at fulfillment, as he has led the Saints to Super Bowl XLIV, the first title game appearance for both him and the Saints’ franchise.

Already an accomplished quarterback with four Pro Bowl selections, two NFL records and an NFL Comeback Player of the Year award, Brees is on the cusp of pushing himself into the next stratosphere of quarterbacks.

But it likely will take a Super Bowl ring to get him there.

“I think it is fair to say that, ” said Saints reserve quarterback Mark Brunell, a 17-year veteran who has played in three Pro Bowls. “For his legacy to play at the level that he has played and to get a Super Bowl (win) would be huge. It would take him into that upper echelon as far as coverage in the media is concerned and how people view him. So this game is big.”

At the moment, Brees is widely viewed by the national media as the NFL’s third-best quarterback. He’s typically placed on the list behind the Colts’ Peyton Manning and the New England Patriots’ Tom Brady, both of whom have Super Bowl titles.

Brees has often outplayed both, though, at least in a statistical sense.

Click to launch the graphic.

Since signing with the Saints in 2006, Brees has thrown for more yards than Manning, the gold standard of NFL quarterbacks, and Brady. In that span, Brees has passed for 18,298 yards, followed by Manning’s 16,939 and Brady’s 12,807.

Brees and Manning also have the same number of touchdowns passes (122) during that span, and Brady, who played in just one game in 2008, has 98.

Hall of Fame quarterback Dan Marino said Brees has a chance to cement his place in history Sunday.

Marino should know.

He continues to be haunted by never winning a Super Bowl in his remarkable career. Marino did get to one, guiding the Dolphins to Super Bowl XIX, a 38-16 loss to the 49ers in his second season. But he never returned to the title game.

“What (Brees) has shown the last four years and the way that he has been able to come back from injury, yeah, you have to consider Drew Brees a great quarterback, ” Marino said. “Sometimes he has been going under the radar, but this is the biggest stage. This is one of those things that if you get the opportunity you have to take advantage of it, because you never know when you’ll get back.

“And that’s what happened to me. I thought I’d be in a lot of Super Bowls, but I only went to one. But he has really played at a high level the last four years. It’s been fun to watch.”

Indeed, Brees’ passing heroics have caught the nation’s eye.

While Brees continues to chase his championship dreams, he’s become a TV/media darling, gracing the cover of Sports Illustrated last week, appearing on The Ellen Degeneres Show on Monday, The Jay Leno Show earlier this season and has an interview with CBS anchor Katie Couric slated to air Friday.

He’s also been an ambassador of the city, spreading the word and lending a helping hand in the Katrina recovery process.

“You just kind of take it in stride, ” Brees said. “The fact is I am the quarterback of this team, and that’s a tremendous responsibility. I do whatever I can to help us win not only in my preparation and performance but what I try to do as a leader, and the responsibility that I have and the platform. I have to really make a difference in the community and just to be a good person. I take all those things very seriously.”

He’s certainly made a difference with the Saints.

“Just hearing his words inspire you to go out there and do the best that you can, ” running back Pierre Thomas said. “You can see the passion. You can hear the passion in his voice when he speaks to you or just a one-on-one conversation. His passion is so heart-warming. It makes you want to go out there and do the best that you can and play all out for this guy.

“He really wants to be perfect. Nobody’s perfect but he really strives to be perfect. For a guy like that you really want to play hard for him.”

For a guy like Brees, the Saints want to help the quarterback, who seemingly has it all, get the one thing left in life he still desires. They want to help get him that coveted Super Bowl ring.

“We win this football game and his star is only going to get bigger and bigger, ” Brunell said. “That’s what we are hoping for. He’s a hard worker and a great guy. And I hope we win this football game, not only for the Saints but for Drew Brees because he deserves it.”

Nakia Hogan can be reached at nhogan@timespicayune.com or 504.826.3405.

Mardi Gras and Super Bowl: Does it get any better than this, New Orleans?

January 31st, 2010 | Posted in Local Issues, Sports by bloom | 1 Comment »

By Mark Waller, The Times-Picayune
January 31, 2010, 4:25AM
saints-fans-whistle.JPGMichael DeMocker / The Times-PicayuneNew Orleans Saints fans celebrate after a Pierre Thomas touchdown during the game between the Saints and Tampa Bay in December. span>mardi-gras-slidell.JPGGrant Therkildsen / The Times-PicayuneBeads fly as the Krewe of Slidellians present its parade Jan. 24.

Nobody has ever collected data to describe the convergence of events that is about to unfold in New Orleans.

No historical precedent exists to guide us.

The scientific instruments have yet to be invented to measure this reality: The New Orleans Saints are in the Super Bowl. The next week is Mardi Gras.

“I think it’s going to be insane,” said Ardley Hanemann, president of the Krewe of Orpheus, which will feature a float carrying coach Sean Payton. “I think it’s going to be over the top, the intensity, the energy and the jubilation, the spirit, the absolute abandon and love.”

And that’s before we know the outcome of the title game. Who knows what will happen if the team wins in Miami?

The Super Bowl has at times coincided with the last Sunday of Carnival season, the roll day of Bacchus, creating a party atmosphere befitting the Crescent City, and the 2002 Super Bowl held in New Orleans required some parade rescheduling. But the Saints’ first appearance in one of the world’s biggest sporting events in the middle of the Carnival season has rocketed the city’s mood into the stratosphere.

“The Saints have brought in a new altitude of fun,” said Dan Kelly, owner of the Mardi Gras outfitter Beads by the Dozen in Elmwood. “Everybody’s sky-high.”

On Thursday, Beads by the Dozen received 300 dozen generic black and gold beads with fleur de lis medallions. They sold out in four hours.

The store also can’t keep official Saints beads in stock. And next week, Kelly said, the stampede of Who Dats through his doors will surely resume when he receives the first shipment of official Super Bowl beads.

saints-fans-beads.JPGMichael DeMocker / The Times-PicayuneOutside the Superdome, New Orleans Saints fans throw beads to other Who Dats arriving for the NFC Championship game between the Saints and the Minnesota Vikings on Jan. 24. “Instead of being purple, green and gold, it’s going to be purple, green, black and gold,” said Kenner Mayor Ed Muniz, captain of the Krewe of Endymion.

Saints owners Tom Benson and his granddaughter Rita Benson-LeBlanc are riding in Endymion with an entourage from the team.

Muniz said Benson’s float will stock 1,000 custom-made, second-lining umbrellas to dispense to the crowd, printed with dancing caricatures of Benson and the Greek god Endymion. The float will also carry 20,000 Benson cups. Benson is bringing 70,000 coins that commemorate the 25th anniversary of his team ownership.

When Benson’s float rolls into the Louisiana Superdome for the Endymion Extravaganza mega-party that follows the parade, Muniz said he has instructed the band to play the team anthems “The Saints are Coming” and “Halftime (Stand Up and Get Crunk.)”

Muniz was in the Superdome for the NFC Championship game when the Saints beat the Minnesota Vikings in overtime to advance to their first Super Bowl.

The magnitude of the ensuing celebration was so great, with the Dome thundering, fireworks exploding in the streets, horns honking and Bourbon Street instantly filling with dancing, screaming revelers, that the only comparison Muniz could think of was the celebrations that erupted when World War II ended.

So it might be an understatement to say the football-inspired partying already has a Carnival intensity, regardless of the outcome of the Feb. 7 game, Muniz said.

“It’s going to go to another level for Mardi Gras,” he said. “It’s going to be a double-header. It’s going to be incredible.”

Star quarterback Drew Brees will reign as Bacchus, throwing signature doubloons. Other players will likely appear in various parades, including running back Reggie Bush in Orpheus, Carnival producer Barry Kern said. Sources also say 23-year-old Garrett Hartley, who kicked the 40-yard field goal to beat the Vikings, is suddenly in high demand.

A parade dedicated entirely to the Saints will roll on the Tuesday after the Super Bowl, win or lose. And plenty of Saints-inspired costumes are expected throughout the festive season.

st-aug-marching-band.JPGTimes-Picayune archiveThe St. Augustine High School Marching 100, one of the most iconic bands of Carnival.The St. Augustine High School Marching 100, among the most iconic bands of Carnival, will perform in 10 parades, including Rex on Mardi Gras, with a repertoire adjusted for the Saints.

The band will play a special arrangement of “Get Crunk,” a song that caught fire at games this season, opening with the bouncing, low-brass line that high school and college bands have played for years, band director Virgil Tiller said.

The Marching 100 also will make a point of playing “When the Saints Go Marching In.”

“When we start playing and marching, the crowd gets hyper off that energy,” Tiller said. “It’s going to be big. It’s going to be real, real big.”

Members of the Krewe of Muses, the all-female club known for its witty floats and clever throws, are applying black and gold to the hand-decorated, high-heeled shoes that serve as their signature party favors.

“I’ve gone from zero to Saints fever in weeks,” Muses rider Alexandra Mora, said. “I bought black and gold nail polish the other day.”

Mora and her fellow float riders are covering shoes with similarly colored glitter, beads and feathers, spelling out “Saints” and attaching fleur de lis bead medallions with glue guns.

“I think the crowd reaction will be extraordinary,” said Mora, a founding member of Muses. “People are going to be so excited … It’s just great energy for the city.”

The first Saintly Super Bowl also has inspired some logistical shuffling.

Metairie’s Krewe of Rhea, scheduled to roll Super Bowl Sunday, canceled its parade, expecting low participation. Jefferson Parish also cancelled its Family Gras festival the same weekend. The Metairie Krewe of Centurions, which normally would roll that Sunday, moved to 7 p.m., Friday, Feb. 12.

Hoping to provide a Carnival-style pre-game party, the New Orleans Krewe of Carrollton moved its ride up an hour, to 11 a.m., Super Bowl Sunday, followed by the Krewe of King Arthur at noon.

The West Bank’s Krewe of Alla, facing a steep drop in ridership for its parade on game day, will roll a day earlier, which also pushed the Krewe of Choctaw and the Krewe of Adonis to earlier time slots, starting at 10:15 a.m. Saturday.

Alla officials knew they were scheduled on the day of the Super Bowl long before they knew the Saints would be playing in it, so they planned a sports theme that now seems even more appropriate.

The parade will include a Saints float with a 12-foot figure of Bush in motion on its bow and a drawing of Brees on the side. Its 40 riders will wear team jerseys. Throws will include referee flags.

“I know the guys are loading up on all the footballs and all the sports throws that we have,” said Paul Leman, Alla president and assistant captain.

Kern, president of float builder and Carnival producer Blaine Kern Studios, said his company has been dusting off all of the football and Saints props it can find in its workshop, including a float depicting the classic Saints character with the jutting chin, wearing a team helmet and uniform, which will appear in several parades.

“A lot of organizations are paying homage to the Saints,” he said.

barkus.JPGTimes-Picayune archiveBarkus will roll, er, walk an hour earlier, at 1 p.m. on Super Bowl Sunday.

Even the dogs are getting into it. The Mystic Krewe of Barkus costumed canine parade, taking place on Super Bowl Sunday, will hold its parade one hour earlier, at 1 p.m., in anticipation of the game.

Barkus is marching through the French Quarter to the theme, “Barkus Goes Tailgating: When the Dogs Go Barking In.”

This year’s Barkus poster is a painting of dogs partying outside a stadium shaped like a giant dog water bowl. That’s right. It’s the “Super Bowl.”

New Orleans Saints defense hopes to keep Peyton Manning on run

January 29th, 2010 | Posted in Local Issues, Sports by bloom | No Comments »

By Mike Triplett, The Times-Picayune
January 29, 2010, 8:00AM

After doing their best to knock Kurt Warner and Brett Favre into early retirements in the past two weeks, the New Orleans Saints defense has earned a reputation as the big, bad bully heading into Super Bowl XLIV.

brett_favre6.jpgChris Granger/The Times-PicayuneThe New Orleans Saints were penalized 15 yards after Anthony Hargrove lifted Minnesota Vikings quarterback Brett Favre in the air and drove him into the turf after a throw.But they know it won’t be as easy to disrupt Indianapolis Colts quarterback Peyton Manning, who makes quick decisions and quick throws and avoids pressure as well as he does everything else.

“He’s the least frequently sacked quarterback in the league, and has been, and does a great job of that, ” Saints Coach Sean Payton said of the four-time NFL MVP, who was sacked only 10 times in the regular season and a combined four times in playoff victories over Baltimore and the New York Jets — two of the most menacing defenses in the NFL.

“The clock in his head and his decisiveness and where he wants to go, those are things that are part of what makes him a great player, ” Payton said. “So those are certainly challenges. With the way he gets rid of the football, if you look at his sack totals, it’s tough.”

Manning gets a lot of attention for all of his theatrics before the ball is snapped — when he’s diagnosing defensive alignments, identifying personnel and schemes, and adjusting the offensive play-calls as a result.

But he does just as much dissecting in those first one or two seconds after the snap, often firing the ball after three-step drops before the pressure can get to him.

“You know, I don’t think we can affect him psychologically, ” Saints safety Darren Sharper admitted, when asked if he thinks Manning might be flinching after watching game tape of the Saints’ defenders knocking Warner and Favre around. “He has seen it all. He has been hit before. He played against tough defenses his first two games. He knows what’s going to be coming.

“You know we’re going to try to get after him, but he has ways to try to avoid that. . . . That’s why he’s been sacked probably the least amount in the last eight to 10 years.”

That doesn’t mean the Saints will go easy on Manning, though, or sit back in coverage. As safety Roman Harper said, being aggressive and flying to the football is “the only way we play around here and our best chance of winning.”

They know the best way to disrupt any Hall of Fame quarterback is to make him as uncomfortable as possible — which means knocking him around even after he releases the ball, ideally with legal hits, and piling on as many shoves, swats, pokes and bumps as they can throughout the game.

That’s what they did against Warner and Favre. Both limped off the field at some point after particularly vicious hits.

Among defensive coordinator Gregg Williams’ favorite sayings are “kill the head, and the body will die, ” and “hit the quarterback, and the entire offense feels it.”

“It’s not always sacks, ” Harper said. “Sometimes it’s hits on the quarterback, and sometimes a little push or something, anything to throw off his timing. You just can’t let him sit back there. The quarterbacks in this league are too good. Especially the quarterbacks we’ve played the last two weeks, some of the best, Hall of Fame guys.”

“We always try to make it a nice physical experience . . . or a not-so-nice physical experience, ” Sharper said. “A lot of times you wear on someone physically and mentally, it affects them toward the end. Subconsciously you might say that you’re not thinking about the hits, but your body is feeling it.

“Brett can attest to that. He’s probably the toughest quarterback to ever play this game. Peyton’s tough, but I don’t know if he’s as tough as Brett physically.”

Favre was actually sacked only once, but he was hit about 20 times in one form or another by the Saints, and some of them were brutal. The Saints drew two flags for unnecessary roughness, one when end Bobby McCray plowed into him after a handoff, and one when tackle Anthony Hargrove lifted him in the air and drove him into the turf after a throw.

The Saints probably could have drawn another flag on the most effective hit of the day, when McCray hit Favre low and tackle Remi Ayodele hit him high. The hit resulted in an interception by linebacker Jonathan Vilma and an ankle injury that limited Favre for the rest of the way.

Some have even suggested the Saints played a little dirty against Favre, in particular, but the Saints have made no apologies, saying they’re just trying to be the most physical team in a violent game.

“Rough him up? No, there’s no such thing as roughing up, ” defensive end Will Smith said when asked if that was the Saints’ intention last week. “This is the NFL, everybody gets hit. After the game, everybody has black and blue somewhere. You just don’t hear about it as much as when the quarterbacks do. . . . Kickers get hit, too. They probably have a lot of bruises on their foot.”

Harper, who played quarterback in high school, said, “I’ve taken a couple of hits myself, so I don’t feel sorry for anybody. It is a violent game, and you understand that. And sometimes you’ve got to be able to get up and bounce back. And I think both those guys (Favre and Warner) did a really good job of that.”

McCray, in particular, has earned a reputation as a hitman in the past two weeks. He laid a hellacious block on Warner after he caught the quarterback off guard on an interception, and Warner temporarily left the game with a chest injury.

McCray said he was just playing within the defense, though, and, “Our strategy is just to try to make plays and be effective any way we can, which is batting the ball or getting hits on the quarterback or getting in his face. Because everything runs through him, no matter what team it is.”

Having played in Jacksonville for four years before coming to New Orleans in 2008, McCray has as much respect as anyone for Manning, his former NFC South nemesis.

“He’s a genius, ” said McCray, who has one career sack in eight games against the Colts. “He’s one of the difficult guys to get to because he’s so smart and brilliant and the way he runs his schemes. But you know, we got to the quarterback last week. We’ve just got to figure out a way to see how we can get to him.

“It won’t be easy . . . but that’s why they made it to the Super Bowl.”

Mike Triplett can be reached at mtriplett@timespicayune.com or 504.826.3405.

New Orleans ‘Saintsmania’ drives judge to delay trial

January 28th, 2010 | Posted in Courts, Local Issues, Sports by bloom | No Comments »

By Gwen Filosa, The Times-Picayune
January 27, 2010, 5:47PM

saints-fans-midfield.JPGBrett Duke / The Times-Picayune’The court takes judicial notice that Saintsmania permeates the city of New Orleans,’ Judge Michael Bagneris said.

This judge found in favor of the Who Dat Nation.

On Wednesday, Orleans Parish Civil District Court Judge Michael Bagneris ordered a Feb. 1 jury trial delayed in light of the New Orleans Saints’ historic trip to the 2010 Super Bowl.

“The court takes judicial notice that Saintsmania permeates the city of New Orleans,” Bagneris wrote in a one-paragraph ruling in an asbestos lawsuit, filed in 2005 by Dano Paul Becnel against Northrop Grumman Ship Systems, Inc., and about 20 others.

Becnel was the widower of Diane Rome Becnel, who died Dec. 25, 2004, of mesothelioma from exposure to asbestos, the lawsuit says. Her father had worked for 32 years at the Avondale Shipyard – now known as Northrop Grumman Ship Systema, and the lawsuit blames the company for exposing the Rome family to “dangerously high levels of asbestos” through contact with Victorin Rome’s clothes and other personal items.

After filing the suit, Becnel died in a 2006 motorcycle accident, but his relatives are maintaining the lawsuit.

Bagneris decided that the week before Drew Brees, Reggie Bush, Scott Fujita and teammates head for Miami for the biggest game in franchise history is not the best time to begin a trial that could last for two weeks.

“Many prospective jurors for the parish of Orleans, several attorneys involved in this litigation and court personnel plan on traveling to the promised land — the Super Bowl in Miami, Florida,” wrote Bagneris, a 17-year veteran of the Civil District Court on Loyola Avenue.

“The court recognizes that this pilgrimage enhances the chances of the Who Dat Nation to acquire the long sought-after Holy Grail: the Vince Lombardi trophy.”

The trial is expected to last at least ten days.

Bagneris ruled on his own. There was no hearing or motion made to continue the trial.

Reached at his office Wednesday afternoon, Bagneris said that he won’t hold any jury trials next week because of the Saints making their first-ever Super Bowl appearance.

“After the victory, everyone will be in a really good mood,” Bagneris said. Asked if he expects the Saints to beat the Indianapolis Colts on Feb. 7, the judge nearly scoffed.

“How could anyone doubt that, after watching such a divine intervention on Sunday,” he said, referring to the Saints’ win over the Minnesota Vikings.

Bagneris set a new trial date for Feb. 9, exactly one week before Mardi Gras.

New Orleans Saints tight end Jeremy Shockey relishes opportunity to play in Super Bowl

January 26th, 2010 | Posted in Local Issues, Sports by bloom | No Comments »

By John DeShazier, The Times-Picayune
January 26, 2010, 3:02AM

This whole Super Bowl thing isn’t completely foreign to New Orleans Saints tight end Jeremy Shockey. He already has been a member of a team that played for the NFL championship, a team that actually won Super Bowl XLII in an epic upset.

shock.jpgTed Jackson/The Times-PicayuneHobbled New Orleans Saints tight end Jeremy Shockey congratulates running back Pierre Thomas after he scored on a 38-yard pass from Drew Brees against the Vikings in the first quarter of the NFC championship game Sunday at the Superdome. But the similarities cease there.

Shockey’s team in 2007, the New York Giants, played in that game. Shockey, then an injured tight end, only attended the game. Reportedly, after a falling out with management, he flew to the game in Arizona on his own dime, wasn’t allowed to stay in the team hotel and watched from the press box because he wasn’t allowed on the Giants sideline.

His relationship with the Giants had deteriorated, and Shockey was traded to New Orleans in exchange for second- and fifth-round draft picks before the 2008 season, which is why he’s bordering on giddy in anticipation of battling the Indianapolis Colts in Super Bowl XLIV on Feb. 7 in Miami.

“It’s completely different,” Shockey said. “I’ll be playing in this game, unlike the last one. It’s a surreal feeling. It still hasn’t hit me. God works in mysterious ways, man. It’s a blessing to be a part of this organization and this team. A lot of hard work has paid off.

“Some things happened (with the Giants), but I’m not dwelling on that. I’m dwelling on the fact that we’ll be in Miami, my adopted city, and we’re all excited about that in this locker room.”

Few, of course, are as excitable as Shockey.

He is the peerless towel waver, willing smack talker (to opponents), excitable playmaker. The chance to do all of that, and more, for the Saints in Super Bowl XLIV — just two seasons after the four-time Pro Bowler was labeled a pariah in New York — well . . . there’s no way the thought can’t create a smile.

“I think it’s certainly a goal of his to get back in this game and to be a participant rather than to have to watch it, as tough as that is,” New Orleans Coach Sean Payton said. “But people forget how important he was to that team the year they won the Super Bowl.

“When you go back to look at the early two-thirds of the season that year before his injury, he had a lot of big plays. It’s just hard, I’m sure, for any player when you can’t finish the season — and then you see the team that you’ve played for having success, and you can’t be a part of that. I think that is difficult for any player.”

You have to figure that even if Shockey can’t play against the Colts (he has been slowed by a knee he injured against the Arizona Cardinals in an NFC divisional playoff game, and he didn’t do himself a favor while playing against the Minnesota Vikings in the NFC championship game), the Saints will welcome him on the team plane, in the team hotel and on the team’s sideline.

“We’ll see (with the injury),” he said. “We’ve got a lot of time. Two weeks in the NFL is like two years for a person. We’ll take it day by day and be smart about it, (and) get an early start on (looking at) our opponent. There’s no doubt in my mind that everyone in this locker room knows how much is at stake. We didn’t come this far just to make a trip to Miami to get a suntan.

“I felt like a pogo stick out there on one leg, but I have no doubt in my mind it’ll be a lot better in two weeks. It’s probably a three- or four-week injury, but there was no way I was going miss that game. There’s no way I’m going to miss the next one, either.”

No, you figure Shockey is going to do everything he can to be on the field this time.

That would benefit the Saints, whose offense isn’t quite the same when he isn’t on the field.

There’s a reason New Orleans acquired Shockey, who caught 48 passes for 569 yards and three touchdowns during the regular season. Simply, he was an upgrade and remains the preferred choice.

No one knows better what Shockey can do than Payton, who was an assistant with the Giants from 1999-2002, the last three years as offensive coordinator. Shockey was drafted by New York in 2002 and caught 74 passes for 894 yards and two touchdowns as a rookie.

No one appreciates more than Shockey what Payton offers as an offensive mind.

“I knew it would work (in New Orleans) because I’ve worked with Sean before,” Shockey said. “He believed in me and drafted me coming out of college. I’d seen the Saints on offense a number of times, and I’d seen (quarterback) Drew (Brees) play a number of years in this league.

“I knew it was going to work. It was just a matter of me staying healthy and being able to be on the field and help the team win. Sean taught me, when I came into the league, about mismatches and about the things that defenses have to think about. Just the personnel matchup. He’s the best at that. He instilled that in my brain at an early age in the league, and I’m just happy that he taught me that.”

Together, they’ll learn what it’s like to experience the Super Bowl, not just attend it.

“It’s going to be fun,” Shockey said about returning to Miami, where he played college ball. “But first and foremost, we’re going there to win the Super Bowl. I’m not going there to have a party. I’ve had plenty of those there.”

John DeShazier can be reached at jdeshazier@timespicayune.com or 504.826.3410.

Fox will use its playoff pre-game show to tell America about the unique bond between New Orleans and its Saints

January 16th, 2010 | Posted in Local Issues, Sports by bloom | No Comments »

By Dave Walker, The Times-Picayune
January 16, 2010, 5:00AM

Hollywood — The Arizona Cardinals had made it a runaway against the Green Bay Packers, so there was plenty of down time for chat on the Fox-lot studio set of “Fox NFL Sunday.”

fox_nfl_sunday.JPGCourtesy of FoxFox’s “NFL Sunday” team.SAINTS-CARDINALS PRE-GAME SHOWSLocal pre-game: Noon, WVUEFox network pre-game: 2:30 p.m., WVUEThe Jan. 10 wildcard game would ultimately turn into an overtime corker, so shouted exclamations at the unfolding action would gradually begin to punctuate the low-key jocularity that typically fills the minutes between on-air reports.

The afternoon would conclude with the long-running game running up against the East Coast air time for “The Simpsons” 20th anniversary block the network had been promoting since summer — and with David Hill, chairman of Fox Sports, shouting, “You’re killing me!” at the monitors in the executive control room — but as the one-sided blowout turned to a thriller of an Arizona Cardinals victory, the stars of Fox’s football pre- and post-game studio show had plenty of time to talk to a visiting reporter.

Earlier in the season, Howie Long had delivered a commentary on the show built around a Nice Guys Finish First theme. In it, he praised Sean Payton and Drew Brees for their deportment on and off the field.

As the Packers clawed their way back into the game on a monitor behind him, Long talked about the piece’s inspiration.

“In this business, I think it’s easy to do the negative, ” Long said. “It’s out there. It’s easy to do. I think there are a lot more good guys in the league than bad guys. I certainly think your

quarterback is one of the good guys in the league. And I think in these days of worrying about the last dollar, Sean Payton knows the defensive coordinator he wants and he quietly gives him some of his salary in order to bring Gregg Williams in, a boon for them.

“There are guys you take for granted. In this 24-hour-news-cycle, attention-deficit-world we live in, the car wreck sells. I’m not particularly a fan of it. But then again, I’m the person that looks away when I drive by a car wreck. Maybe I’m a little different.”

Long said he likes the Saints chances today, late-season downturn aside.

“They were really beat up, ” he said. “They were out of rhythm.

“Arizona is the ultimate Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde team. Today you got Mr. Hyde. They are meaner than snot.

“If New Orleans can get healthy and get their rhythm again, they’re frightening. Particularly down there. I think that building and Minnesota are the last of the small concrete bunkers. The noise just reverberates.

“I think it’s an incredible opportunity. You win one and you’re hosting the NFC Championship game, and you’re one game away from the Super Bowl.

“They’re going to be tough for people to beat.”

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