Miami (AP)— The New Orleans Saints overcame an early 10-point deficit, pulled
off a risky onside kick and won their first NFL title by beating the Indianapolis Colts 31-17 on Sunday.
New Orleans quarterback Drew Brees equaled a Super Bowl record for
completions and was voted the game’s most valuable player, while the Saints held
his Indianapolis counterpart Peyton Manning to a single score in the final three
quarters, intercepting him for a touchdown that sealed the victory.
From the trophy podium on the field, Brees blew kisses and caught confetti
raining down as New Orleans musicians Dr. John and Professor Longhair blared
from the stadium speakers. Coach Sean Payton hung over the railing clapping and
shouting down to the crowd as if he were rolling on a Mardi Gras float, then
waved a newspaper with the banner headline “WORLD CHAMPS.”
New Orleans knows how to celebrate, but for the beleaguered city and its
long-bedraggled NFL franchise, the championship touched off a new kind of joy.
“Four years ago, who ever thought this would be happening when 85 percent
of the city was under water?” Brees said. “Most people left not knowing if New
Orleans would ever come back, or if the organization would ever come back. We
just all looked at one another and said, `We are going to rebuild together. We
are going to lean on each other.’ This is the culmination in all that belief.”
Nearly an hour after the game, Saints fans kept chanting their rally cry,
“Who Dat?” One player climbed into the stands, others tossed their sweaty
padding to souvenir seekers, and Payton held up the Lombardi Trophy so fans
along the railing could touch it.
“I just wish we could split it up in a lot of little pieces,” Payton said.
New Orleans still recovering from Hurricane Katrina, an NFL title is sure to
accelerate the healing. It was the Saints’ first appearance in a Super Bowl, and
few outside of Louisiana foresaw a victory, with Indianapolis a 5-point
favorite.
“We really felt as underdogs we had the better team,” Payton said. “To be
in that position where maybe a lot of people were picking against us, we liked
the spot we were in.”
The Saints weren’t thrilled to fall behind 10-0. Manning directed an early
96-yard touchdown drive that tied a Super Bowl record, and when New Orleans
managed only one first down on its first two possessions, a blowout seemed
possible.
Instead, the Saints mounted a comeback to match the largest in Super Bowl
history, and the onside kick turned the tide. The last chord of “Won’t Get
Fooled Again” from rock band The Who’s halftime show had barely faded when the
Colts got fooled.
“That really becomes like a turnover,” Payton said. “We knew we were
going to call it at some point. At halftime I told them, `We’re going to open up
the second half with this. Let’s go make a play.”’
The Saints had spotted a flaw in the Colts’ alignment, but they needed for
kicker Thomas Morstead to put the ball in play properly.
“I was terrified and excited at the same time, because I knew we could do
it if I executed it,” Morstead said.
The Saints’ Chris Reis emerged from a huge scrum with the ball, and six
plays later Brees’ 16-yard touchdown pass to Pierre Thomas gave them a 13-10
lead.
Manning and the Colts answered with a 76-yard touchdown drive, so the Saints
had to rally again. Brees threw for another score, a 2-yarder to Jeremy Shockey,
and this time they were ahead to stay, 24-17.
With barely three minutes left, the Colts’ last chance was for Manning to
make an open-field tackle, and that wasn’t going to happen. Tracy Porter returned an interception 74 yards for the clinching score, with Manning spinning
awkwardly to the turf at midfield in his vain attempt to stop the score.
An anticipated shootout between the NFL’s two highest-scoring offenses never
materialized. Manning finished 31 for 45 for 333 yards, and the Colts outgained
the Saints by 100 yards. But Indianapolis scored on only one of its final six
possessions against a Saints defense that ranked 25th during the regular season.
“We probably never got into a great rhythm,” Manning said.
The Colts came up short in a bid for their second NFL title in four seasons.
Four-time NFL MVP Manning used the word “disappointing” at least 10 times in
his postgame interview session.
But the New Orleans native could appreciate what the result meant to
Louisiana.
“I certainly know how it was three years ago when we won,” Manning said.
“I know the people of New Orleans and the Saints have that same feeling right
now.”
Garrett Hartley, hero of the National Football Conference title game with
his overtime field goal, made kicks of 46, 44 and 47 yards to keep the Saints
close, and Brees put them over the hump. He went 32 for 39 for 288 yards and two
scores, and the Saints scored on five of six possessions as the game swung their
way.
“We just believed in ourselves, and we knew that we had an entire city and
maybe an entire country behind us,” Brees said.
Long derided as the Aints for their futility, the Saints became nomads after
Katrina in 2005. The NFL refused to abandon the city, and the Saints won the NFC
South in 2006, their first season with Brees and Payton.
This winter they swept three postseason games after winning only two in the
previous 42 years.
“This championship is for you, New Orleans,” Brees said.