Take that, Katrina: Triumphant homecoming for Saints, Superdome
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| Team Stat Comparison |
| |  |  |
| 1st Downs | 10 | 19 |
3rd down efficiency | 3-16 | 4-12 |
4th down efficiency | 2-3 | 0-0 |
| Total Yards | 229 | 326 |
| Passing | 112 | 180 |
Comp-Att | 12-31 | 20-28 |
Yards per pass | 3.6 | 6.4 |
| Rushing | 117 | 146 |
Rushing Attempts | 23 | 34 |
Yards per rush | 5.1 | 4.3 |
| Penalties | 5-43 | 4-40 |
| Turnovers | 0 | 0 |
Fumbles lost | 0 | 0 |
Interceptions thrown | 0 | 0 |
| Possession | 27:20 | 32:40 |
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| Atlanta Passing | | | C/ATT | YDS | TD | INT | | Vick | 12/31 | 137 | 0 | 0 |
| | New Orleans Passing | | | C/ATT | YDS | TD | INT | | Brees | 20/28 | 191 | 0 | 0 |
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| Atlanta Rushing | | | CAR | YDS | TD | LG | | Vick | 6 | 57 | 0 | 30 | | Dunn | 13 | 44 | 0 | 13 |
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| | New Orleans Receiving | | | REC | YDS | TD | LG | | Colston | 7 | 97 | 0 | 29 | | Horn | 3 | 47 | 0 | 19 |
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| | New Orleans Fumbles | | | FUM | LOST | REC | | Team | 0 | 0 | 0 |
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| Scoring Summary |
| FIRST QUARTER | ATL | NOR |
 | TD | 1:30 | Curtis Deloatch 0 Yd Return Of Blocked Punt (John Carney Kick) | 0 | 7 |
 | FG | 5:19 | Morten Andersen 26 Yd Drive: 9 plays, 65 yds, 3:49 | 3 | 7 |
 | TD | 12:06 | Devery Henderson 11 Yd Run (John Carney Kick) Drive: 8 plays, 80 yds, 4:05 | 3 | 14 |
| SECOND QUARTER | ATL | NOR |
 | FG | 8:16 | John Carney 37 Yd Drive: 10 plays, 66 yds, 5:05 | 3 | 17 |
 | FG | 15:00 | John Carney 51 Yd Drive: 10 plays, 54 yds, 1:49 | 3 | 20 |
| THIRD QUARTER | ATL | NOR |
 | FG | 7:46 | John Carney 20 Yd Drive: 12 plays, 73 yds, 7:46 | 3 | 23 |
NEW ORLEANS -- Just 90 seconds into a game that was a
horrific year in the making, the New Orleans Saints flopped on a
ball in the end zone -- and the party was on.
The defense beat up
Michael Vick. Tom Benson danced off the
field with his parasol. Even "The Superdome Special" worked to
perfection.
| Longest Losing Streaks on MNF |
The Saints ended their 7-game losing streak on Monday Night Football but remain winless (0-5) on Monday night outside of New Orleans. The ledger of "Monday Night" futility:
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Streak
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Span
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Team
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10
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1981-99
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Falcons
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8
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1991-95
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Bears
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7
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1990-94
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Broncos
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7
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1970-76
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Jets
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The Saints are home again.
In an earsplitting return to their rebuilt stadium, the Saints
gave the Big Easy something to cheer about -- an undefeated football
team that made it look easy with a 23-3 victory over the Atlanta
Falcons on Monday night.
This one couldn't have been scripted any better for a team that
spent all of last season on the road, and it couldn't have come at
a better time for a city that is still struggling to overcome the
devastation of Hurricane Katrina.
"From the moment I signed with the Saints, I was looking
forward to this," said quarterback
Drew Brees, who joined New
Orleans during the offseason. "It was a great night. It's
something we'll never forget."
After a Super Bowl-like pregame show that included a performance
by supergroups U2 and Green Day, the Saints wasted no time turning
their welcome-home party into Mardi Gras: The Falcons' first drive
went three-and-out, and special teams demon
Steve Gleason sliced
through the middle of the Atlanta line to smother
Michael Koenen's
punt.
The ball skidded across the goal line, where Curtis Deloatch
fell on it for a touchdown -- the first given up by the Falcons this
season. Just like that, Saints sent an emphatic message to the NFL
and the entire country: New Orleans is open for business.
DeLoatch ran over to the stands and pointed at the crowd of
70,003, as if to say, "Take that, Katrina!" Undoubtedly, many more
were cheering around this still-recovering city, some of them
vowing to set up televisions outside government-issued trailers
that pass for homes more than a year after the storm blew ashore,
the levees broke and the water poured through.
"That set the tone," Brees said. "That's when we all knew.
This was our day, our night."
Benson, the Saints' once-reviled owner, broke out his parasol
when it was over, bouncing off the field to ``When The Saints Go
Marching In'' and reveling in the cheers of a fan base that feared
he would take their team away.
The Saints dedicated a game ball to the entire city.
"It meant a lot to them when the Saints didn't leave in their
time of need," rookie
Reggie Bush said. "When the people of New
Orleans needed something to look to for confidence and something to
be proud of, they looked to the Saints."
The Saints (3-0) poured it on against the Falcons (2-1), who
fell behind 14-3 in the first quarter and never recovered. Devery
Henderson scored New Orleans' second TD on an 11-yard
double-reverse, taking a handoff from Bush and cutting inside the
pylon with help from a gutsy block by quarterback Drew Brees.
How could that play not work? When working on it in practice,
the Saints dubbed their bit of chicanery "The Superdome Special."
John Carney kicked two field goals in the second period,
including a 51-yarder that cleared the crossbar as time ran out.
The Saints trotted to the locker room with a 20-3 lead and a
rousing ovation ringing in their ears. The Falcons straggled off in
the opposite direction, as if they already knew this wasn't going
to be their night.
"As tough as it is to lose a game, I'd be lying if I said there
isn't a little, little, little piece of me that didn't appreciate
what this game meant to this city," said Falcons coach Jim Mora,
whose father is the winningest coach in Saints history. "It meant
a lot."
Of course, a Saints win seemed in the stars even before the
kickoff. This was intended to be a showcase for New Orleans'
rebirth, as frustrating and halting as that process has been for so
many.
| It was over when ... |
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John Carney drilled a 20-yard field goal to cap a 12-play, 73-yard drive that burned 7½ minutes after the second-half kickoff. Carney's kick gave New Orleans an insurmountable 23-3 lead.
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Game ball goes to ... |
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The residents of New Orleans and the Gulf Coast region who were forever impacted by Hurricane Katrina's life-changing fury.
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Scouts Inc.'s take ... |
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On a very special Monday night in New Orleans, the Saints played off the electricity in the Superdome as they dominated the Atlanta Falcons. Head coach Sean Peyton continues to keep defenses off balance with his play calling and QB Drew Brees is managing the game effectively, while doing a great job of utilizing the supporting cast around him.
Defensively, Saints defensive coordinator Gary Gibbs utilized his multiple attacking up-field schemes to disrupt the Falcons blocking patterns, which forced the Falcons into being a one-dimensional team through the air. The Saints' secondary was physical on the outside in disrupting the timing and rhythm of the Falcons passing attack, as the Saints continued to harass Vick with their four-man rush.
The Saints did a great job of anticipating routes on the back end with their disguise and reacted well in their match-up zones, which affected Vick throughout the game. |
Fans clad in gold and black strolled around the French Quarter
throughout a brilliantly sunny day, ready to look forward instead
of looking back at those awful scenes of suffering inside the
Superdome in the days after Katrina. Those who had tickets to get
inside the 31-year-old stadium found it spruced up with new
scoreboards, bright video screens and plenty of fresh paint, all
part of a $185 million renovation that was designed to keep the
Saints from moving to San Antonio, Los Angeles or some other
NFL-deprived city.
Showing the significance of the game, former commissioner Paul
Tagliabue and his successor, Roger Goodell, were both at the
Superdome. Signs were hung throughout the stadium, sending messages
such as "Home Sweet Dome" and "Thank You America. New Orleans &
Saints Are Here to Stay."
After Bono left the stage and former President George Bush took
care of the coin flip, the Saints made sure the party would last
all night. They dominated on special teams -- also blocking a short
field goal attempt by 46-year-old
Morten Andersen -- and shut down
Atlanta's feared running game.
The Falcons, coming off a franchise-record 306 yards on the
ground against Tampa Bay, managed just 117 yards rushing on the
inspired Saints. Vick had a miserable game, completing 12 of 31 for
137 yards.
"I never in my life heard a crowd roar so loud," Vick said.
"It just goes to show the appreciation they have for having the
New Orleans Saints back in the dome, bringing football back to the
city. I commend them for that. They deserve it."
Any hopes of an Atlanta comeback were snuffed out on the first
possession of the second half. New Orleans took the kickoff and
drove 73 yards in 12 plays, burning more than 7½ minutes off the
clock before settling for Carney's third field goal from 20 yards.
"Who dat? Who dat? Who dat say dey gonna beat dem Saints?" the
fans chanted.
Not the Falcons. Not on this night.
Alge Crumpler, the team's normally sure-handed tight end,
dropped a pass in the end zone with no one around him in the first
quarter. Andersen, still reviled in New Orleans for leaving to sign
with the rival Falcons more than a decade ago, had a 25-yard chip
shot swatted away by
Josh Bullocks on the night the kicker became
the second-oldest player in NFL history.
Even the referees chipped in, picking up a flag on a dubious
pass interference call that could have extended a Falcons drive
late in the third quarter.
About the only thing that didn't go right for New Orleans was a
first touchdown for Bush. Still, "Saint Reggie" gave the fans
several chances to cheer their rookie sensation, rushing for 53
yards and catching four passes for 19 yards.
Deuce McAllister handled the bulk of the ground attack, with 19
rushes for 81 yards. Brees was 20-for-28 passing for 191 yards. His
favorite receiver was rookie
Marques Colston -- the fourth-to-last
pick in this year's draft -- who grabbed seven passes for 97 yards.
"If we had lost, the fans still would have been partying, they
still would have been happy, because the organization is still in
New Orleans," receiver
Joe Horn said. "But we wanted to put the
icing on the cake."
And what a cake. The Saints seized first place all to themselves
in the NFC South while matching their wins from all of last season.
Forced to play in San Antonio, Baton Rouge and East Rutherford
because of the Superdome's massive damage, New Orleans struggled to
a 3-13 record as a team without a home.
Now, they're home for good.
Game notes
Andersen did connect on a 26-yard field goal for the
Falcons' only points. ... Atlanta DE John Abraham missed his second
straight game with a groin injury. ... Saints FB Mike Karney
returned to the lineup after sitting out the previous week with a
strained calf.