New Orleans (AP)— A 40-yard field goal in overtime by a little-known kicker
could become as famous as jambalaya in these parts.
The New Orleans Saints, a team with no home and an uncertain future five
years ago, are heading for their first Super Bowl. By battering Brett Favre and
beating the Minnesota Vikings 31-28 Sunday, they set off celebrations on Bourbon
Street that locals never could have imagined in the aftermath of Hurricane
Katrina.
“This is for everybody in this city,” said coach Sean Payton, the
architect of the Saints’ turnaround. “This stadium used to have holes in it and
used to be wet. It’s not wet anymore. This is for the city of New Orleans.”
“In reality, we had to lean on each other in order to survive and in order
to get where we are now,” quarterback Drew Brees said. “The city is on its way
to recovery, and in a lot of ways has come back better than ever. We’ve used the
strength and resiliency of our fans to go out and play every Sunday and play
with the confidence that we can do it, that we can achieve everything we’ve set
out to achieve.”
Favre threw away Minnesota’s best chance to win, tossing an interception
deep in New Orleans territory in the closing seconds of regulation. Then the
Saints won the coin toss and ended it on Hartley’s kick 4:45 into OT.
The Saints (15-3) will meet Peyton Manning and the Indianapolis Colts (16-2)
in the Super Bowl in two weeks in Miami. The Colts opened as 4-point favorites.