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METAIRIE, La. (AP) - Sean Payton briefly allowed himself to
smile faintly when asked about his blood pressure.
“My wife asked me that,” the Saints’ coach said Tuesday, a day
after New Orleans’ error-filled 30-27 loss to Minnesota. “I’m
fine. You know, I’m disappointed.”
Other coaches might have used stronger language if their teams
had made the blunders that plagued Payton’s squad on Monday night.
The Saints had one field goal blocked and returned 59-yards for
a score, missed another field goal that would have given them a
late lead, committed four turnovers, dropped several passes and
committed 11 penalties for 102 yards.
One of Drew Brees’ interceptions came on a tipped pass at the
Minnesota 12-yard line. And the Saints also failed to recover a
surprise onside kick in the first quarter, leading to a Minnesota
field goal.
Such failures proved too much to overcome, even with Reggie Bush
returning two punts for touchdowns and the Saints’ defense
impressively limiting Adrian Peterson to only 32 yards rushing on
21 carries.
The Saints have had more than their share of memorable losses
since their inception in 1967. This is the same franchise that used
a 75-yard pass play involving three laterals to score a touchdown
as time expired in a 2003 game at Jacksonville - only to miss the
tying extra point.
When Payton was hired to replace Jim Haslett in 2006, he
predicted he would change the culture of the franchise, preaching
discipline while revamping the roster with smart, detail-oriented
players who would know their assignments, minimize mistakes and do
all the little things that help win games - especially the close
ones.
He named the New England Patriots’ model as one he’d like to
emulate.
He appeared to be succeeding in his first campaign, when he was
named AP Coach of the Year after leading the Saints to their first
appearance in an NFC championship game.
In his second season, however, the Saints conjured follies of
old. They lost one home game to Carolina because of missed field
goals and an interception on which Brees’ well-thrown pass bounced
out of receiver Devery Henderson’s hands. They lost another home
game to Tampa Bay after turning the ball over on a botched exchange
between Reggie Bush and Henderson on a reverse, when all the Saints
really needed to do was protect a late lead.
Still, one day after the Saints finished 2007 at 7-9 and out of
the playoffs for the 35th time in 41 seasons, Payton bristled at
the notion that New Orleans was falling back into the same old
patterns of ineptitude.
“This isn’t the same old Saints,” Payton asserted at the time.
“We’re changing that.”
Certainly, Payton is trying. The Saints’ practice headquarters
is decorated with posters meant to remind players of the importance
of team unity and to warn against being a “dumb player.”
The motto for this season, printed on T-shirts worn by players,
coaches and staff during training camp, was “Edge.”
Yet in three close losses, New Orleans (2-3) has given the edge
to its opponents with glaring and untimely mistakes, or by too
often failing to convert short yardage situations and field goals.
In a 34-32 loss at Denver, the Saints came away with nothing
after having a second-and-goal from the 1 in the first half, yet
still were in position to run down the clock and set up a winning
field goal at the end. But with about 2 minutes left, New Orleans
could not convert on third-and-1 and ended up having to kick
earlier, and from farther away, than they hoped. Martin Gramatica’s
43-yard kick missed.
It makes one wonder how much a coach can really do.
“The worst thing to say is that there’s only so much we can
do,” Payton said. “There evidently isn’t enough right yet when
you start looking at some of these pre-snap penalties and holding
calls and missed assignments.”
The Saints also have had bad luck with injuries this season.
Tracy Porter is the latest starter in danger of missing games after
dislocating his wrist on Monday night. First-round draft pick
Sedrick Ellis went out last week with a torn medial meniscus.
But Payton said he doesn’t want to make, or hear, any excuses.
The Saints still have talent, starting with Brees, who threw for
330 yards against Minnesota and is one pace to become only the
fifth player to eclipse 4,000 yards passing in three straight
seasons.
They were in position to win all three games they lost. And
players like center Jonathan Goodwin - whose low shotgun snap
skipped past Brees in the third quarter of Monday night’s game -
know it.
“We’re a couple plays away from being 5-0,” Goodwin said.
“We’ve had some things come back to haunt us and cost us games, so
we’ve got to get those things corrected.”
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