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Don Banks- SI.com

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Can the Saints take their fireworks outdoors? (Don Banks)

Drew Brees dives for 1st down New Orleans is hearing all the usual dome-team blather about now, but the Saints have got to prove it's just that if they're going to win at the 49ers this week and maybe at Green Bay in the NFC title game. The Saints went 3-2 outdoors this season, losing at Green Bay and Tampa Bay, and winning at Jacksonville, Carolina and Tennessee. The wins against the Panthers and Titans were narrow, as were the losses to the Packers and Bucs. Indoors, the Saints have gone 11-1 this year, losing only at St. Louis in Week 8. In their five games outdoors, the Saints averaged almost 26 points per outing, but topped 30 points only once, in a 42-34 season-opening loss at Green Bay. They've been considerably more potent with a roof over their heads, averaging almost 39 points per game, and eight times topping the 30-point plateau. In their past three games, all at home, the Saints offense has been machine-like, scoring exactly 45 points in wins against the Falcons, Panthers and Lions and rolling up more than 600 yards of offense in the last two. The 49ers pose the stiffest defensive challenge New Orleans has faced all season, and San Francisco's personnel on that side of the ball will do more to decide the outcome than the grass playing surface and weather conditions. The 49ers were second in the league in fewest points allowed (14.3 per game), and their No. 1-ranked run defense (77.3 yards) and tied-for-league-best 38 takeaways are reasons for hope to San Francisco's faithful.

Read more: http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2012/writers/don_banks/01/10/elite.eight.storylines/index.html#ixzz1j5PRkDQW
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Saints have the "Look" of Contenders (Don Banks)

NEW ORLEANS -- Things we learned watching the Saints' 49-24 destruction of the downward-bound Giants at the Superdome on Monday night.....

1. I love the 49ers' rags-to-riches story this season, but you've got to pour on the points to win in the playoffs. And there's only one team in the NFC capable of matching scores with the undefeated and defending Super Bowl champion Green Bay Packers. And that would be the New Orleans Saints, who display an embarrassment of riches on offense.

Where to begin with the offensive extravaganza the Saints put on Monday night against the outmanned Giants? Try these statistics on for size and tell me if anyone but the Packers might be able to match them:

New Orleans amassed a season-high 577 yards of offense against New York, the second-highest total in Saints franchise history. New Orleans had eight plays of 20 yards or more, but still somehow did all that damage without a 100-yard rusher or a 100-yard receiver.

Five different Saints scored touchdowns, with two running backs (Mark Ingram and Pierre Thomas), two pass-catchers (tight end Jimmy Graham and receiver Lance Moore had two each) and quarterback Drew Brees (one 8-yard rushing score) finding the end zone. Brees also chipped in with four passing touchdowns to go with his 363 yards passing and one attempted slam dunk over the crossbar.

The Saints ran for 205 yards, threw for 372, punted just twice and played turnover-free ball. New Orleans had four different touchdown drives of at least 80 yards, and another for 73 yards. The Saints opened the game with a 70-yard drive that produced no points when a fake field goal didn't result in a first down.

"The thing about this team is we have so many playmakers," said Ingram, the rookie running back who led the Saints with 80 yards rushing on 13 carries. "When guys are on the field, we still have elite players standing on the sideline. So at any time we know we can make a play. We know we can score at any moment in the game."

It almost felt like the Saints scored at every moment of this game, with nine different players touching the ball on offense and eight of them accounting for 50-plus yards of offense. New Orleans had 354 yards and 18 of its 31 first downs in the first half, when it took a 21-3 lead into the break against New York.

Read the entire article Drew Brees, New Orleans Saints look like contenders in 49-24 rout of New York Giants - Don Banks - SI.com


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Don Banks on the Saints Win vs. Bucs (SI.com)



The Saints might have lost shockingly in St. Louis in Week 8, but I didn't think it was time to panic in New Orleans, because Sean Payton has a pretty mature team built at this point. I expected the Saints (6-3) to play well and rebound at home against the Bucs on Sunday, and they did, winning 27-16 in a game that really didn't even feel that close.

You think of New Orleans as a passing team first, but the Saints went out and ran the ball down the Bucs' throats in this one, with 195 yards rushing on 28 carries, a cool 7.0 average. Tampa Bay's defensive front, which is heavily populated with first-round picks, was no match for the Saints offensive line. Four New Orleans rushers had gains of at least 12 yards, with Darren Sproles popping one for 35 yards, Pierre Thomas taking a carry for 33 yards, and even Drew Brees ripping off a 20-yard gain.

With Brees throwing for 258 yards and a pair of scores, the Saints rolled to a 453-yard day on offense, with 24 first downs and just two punts. New Orleans made it clear that last week was an aberration, and now next week's trip to Atlanta (5-3) will be a battle for first place in the NFC South, just as most presumed it would be in the preseason.


Read more: http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2011/writers/don_banks/11/06/week.9/index.html#ixzz1d3YS6gOg


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Saints Ranked #4 in NFL Power Rankings - Don Banks (SI)

Don Banks of SI.com have the Saints ranked #4 on his NFL Power Rankings for the first week of the 2011 Season.
NFL Power Rankings
1Green Bay Packers
Last Week: --
With the consensus being that this Packers team is stronger and deeper than last year's championship club, research reveals that only two Super Bowl repeat winners have improved their record by at least two games the second time around: The 1989 49ers went 14-2, four games better than the 10-6 edition of 1988; and the 1998 Broncos finished 14-2, winning two more games than the 12-4 club of 1997. I see at least a 12-4 year coming in Green Bay, and it'll get started in victorious fashion Thursday night at Lambeau, in a shootout with the Saints team that could block Green Bay's path to another NFC title. Come Week 17, remember this game if we're talking about tiebreakers to determine the conference's top seed.
 
2New England Patriots
Last Week: --
Only the Colts own more regular season wins (36-12) than the Patriots (35-13) in the past three years, but New England has no playoff victories (0-2 in that span) to show for all that September through December dominance. That's why it feels like nothing matters this season in Foxboro but January. Everything Bill Belichick has done this offseason is aimed at erasing the stench and sting of those twin playoff meltdowns at home against Baltimore (2009) and the Jets (2010).
 
3Pittsburgh Steelers
Last Week: --
I know they take their balance on offense and power running game very seriously in the Steel City, but if you're Pittsburgh offensive coordinator Bruce Arians, how do you resist not loading it up and throwing all day to the likes of Hines Ward, Mike Wallace, Antonio Brown, Emmanuel Sanders, Jerricho Cotchery and Heath Miller? The Steelers scored more than 28 points only three times in the 2010 regular season, but that number could easily double this year with all the downfield options that Ben Roethlisberger can look for.
 
4New Orleans Saints
Last Week: --
The last time we saw the Saints, they were getting carved up by the 7-9 Seahawks in the playoffs, to the tune of 41-36 amidst the bedlam of Qwest Field. I think Marshawn Lynch is still weaving his way to the end zone as we speak. But the New Orleans defense is better than that, and Gregg Williams and Co. are going to be motivated all season to prove it. The Saints' first chance at redemption is a doozey, but something tells me they're not going into Lambeau Field to play the sacrificial lamb for a Packers team that will hang a championship banner Thursday night.
 
5New York Jets
Last Week: --
As it turns out, neither brash-talking Ryan brother (the Jets' Rex or the Cowboys' Rob) were able to land the services of ex-Raiders cornerback Nnamdi Asomugha in free agency. But that's okay, because the Dallas-New York Week 1 showdown on Sunday night still has plenty of sizzle, with the Ryan family feud being just part of the attraction this week.
 
6Baltimore Ravens
Last Week: --
If you want to get to the essence of the Ravens-Steelers smashmouth rivalry, just talk to Baltimore linebacker Terrell Suggs: "I respect them, but I like to get after their ass," Suggs told me in training camp. "Most definitely. And I'm pretty sure every Pittsburgh fan hates me. But they respect me because they know what they're going to get. I'm coming to fight every time, and the same for their guys." We do know what we're going to get when the Steelers and Ravens collide, and we like it.
 
7Atlanta Falcons
Last Week: --
For a team that won more games (13) than anyone in the NFC last season, the Falcons are somehow in that under-the-radar zone as the new season begins. Like everyone, I can't wait to see if the Julio Jones draft-day gamble starts paying immediate dividends for Atlanta. I liked the boldness of the move in late April, but that's an easy opinion to toss off months before the games begin. Starting Sunday in Chicago, Jones has to make a difference for a team that's in win-it-all-now mode.
 
8Philadelphia Eagles
Last Week: --
And to think a year ago right now Michael Vick was still Kevin Kolb's veteran backup, with no apparent path leading back to stardom or contract riches. It's a good reminder of how much can change in Week 1 of the NFL season, and I wonder if there's another significant plot twist in store for Vick and the Eagles in Sunday's opener at St. Louis?
 
9San Diego Chargers
Last Week: --
I don't know if the Chargers have a slogan for 2011 yet, but it should be: "Start fast, or else." San Diego lost its opener in the rain at Kansas City last year, and never really recovered, missing the playoffs for the first time since 2005. It simply can't happen again, not in an AFC West where the Chiefs, Raiders and Broncos all look so flawed.
 
10Indianapolis Colts
Last Week: --
Here's how long it has been since we've seen a meaningful Colts game without Peyton Manning under center at the start of things: Jim Harbaugh, the new head coach in San Francisco, was the quarterback for Indy on Dec. 21, 1997, a 39-28 season-ending Colts loss at Minnesota. Marshall Faulk, in his pre-St. Louis incarnation, was in the Indianapolis backfield, Randall Cunningham started at quarterback for the Vikings, and the ancient Eddie Murray kicked for Minnesota. If that doesn't scream eons ago, you're not paying attention.
 
11Chicago Bears
Last Week: --
At the start of a training camp interview I did with him, Bears offensive coordinator Mike Martz leaned over and whispered: "We're going to be pretty good. Nobody thinks so, but we're going to be pretty good." But I don't know, Mike. I'm not seeing the positive omens at the moment. Lance Briggs wants a new deal or wants to be gone. Talks break off with Matt Forte regarding his contract extension. Roy Williams can't catch a cold. I suppose the Bears have us all right where they want us and are ready to sneak up on the rest of the NFL once again. Or not.
 
12New York Giants
Last Week: --
Some teams thrive in the preseason, and some teams barely survive. With linebacker Jonathan Goff's torn ACL on Monday, the Giants defense has lost five significant contributors since the start of camp. Those 90-man preseason rosters would come in pretty handy in New York about now.
 
13St. Louis Rams
Last Week: --
I think the Rams get it in Year 3 of the Steve Spagnuolo era. They know they're better than last year's 7-9 club, but they also know they've got to earn their promotion to a higher NFL weight class. "It's not automatic," Spagnuolo told his team in August. "From 1-15 (in 2009) to 7-9 doesn't guarantee 10-6 or 11-5. It doesn't work that way." No, it doesn't. But I do sense these Rams are hungry for more ?- especially second-year QB Sam Bradford ?- and ready to climb back into the 12-team playoff field.
 
14Dallas Cowboys
Last Week: --
It's been a fairly quiet, uneventful preseason for the Cowboys, and that's a sign of Jason Garrett's calming influence on display. But look for the volume to get pumped up this week with the Ryan Bowl and a trip to New York on the horizon. I see that Rex is 3-0 in head-to-head matchups against twin brother Rob in the NFL, and that's got to hurt. If Rob is to realize his goal of becoming an NFL head coach, and soon, this would qualify as a statement game waiting to happen.
 
15Tampa Bay Buccaneers
Last Week: --
The Bucs lost the greatest player in franchise history this week with the stunning death of Hall of Fame defensive end Lee Roy Selmon, and his memory should serve to inspire a Tampa Bay team that seems to be intent on attaining greatness itself. I grew up a Bucs fan in St. Petersburg and watched Selmon?s entire career play out. Like his life itself, it was all too brief, but packed with accomplishment. Bucs head coach John McKay once said when he "wanted to feel good," he just "thought of Lee Roy Selmon." There aren't many tributes more eloquent than that.
 
16Detroit Lions
Last Week: --
I've got a friend who's a life-long Lions fan, and I don't think he's ever been more hyped for a season to begin than this one. For a change, it doesn't seem like false hope. Detroit has done things the right way in the Jim Schwartz-Martin Mayhew era, and now the payoff should start to come.
 
17Houston Texans
Last Week: --
I'll say it again: I can't remember a team that had more pressure to win in Week 1 than the Texans if they do indeed face the Colts without Peyton Manning. It's one thing to lose at home to No. 18, but to fall upset to his stand-in Kerry Collins, who just climbed off the couch the other day? If the unthinkable occurs, the air might come out of the balloon so quickly in Houston that you could hear it from Seattle to Miami and all NFL cities in between.
 
18Kansas City Chiefs
Last Week: --
Injuries are a part of the game and they can happen at any time in the most freakish of ways. But I promise you Chiefs head coach Todd Haley won't have any key starters playing into the second quarter of his team's fourth preseason game next year. There's just not enough upside. Some lessons have to be learned the hard way, and the loss of tight end Tony Moeaki for the season, not to mention seeing quarterback Matt Cassel get crushed, will be burned into Haley's memory.
 
19Oakland Raiders
Last Week: --
The Raiders make trips to Denver and Buffalo in the first two weeks, and that's a golden opportunity for new Oakland head coach Hue Jackson to get things rolling right away against a pair of clubs that finished 4-12 last season. But it was difficult for me to see the seeds of progress being sewn in a winless Raiders preseason. Oakland scored a league-low three touchdowns in their four exhibition games, and that doesn't reflect well on Jackson's offensive acumen.
 
20Cleveland Browns
Last Week: --
I'm high on Colt McCoy from what I've seen so far, but the Browns are one of 12 teams starting new quarterbacks in Week 1 compared to their 2010 openers (it's 13 if Kerry Collins starts for Indy). In the vast majority of those cases, the teams starting over at the game's most critical position are coming off either losing or .500 seasons. That applies to Buffalo, Cincinnati, Cleveland, Tennessee, Jacksonville, Minnesota, Carolina, Washington, Arizona and Seattle. That should tell you something about the correlation between winning and quality quarterbacking in the NFL.
 
21Tennessee Titans
Last Week: --
I'm intrigued to see how much Chris Johnson can manage to contribute to the Titans offense so soon after his holdout ended. Tennessee will obviously use him, but how much work is too much, and will the fear of injury keep the Titans from letting Johnson really cut it loose? Imagine how different the AFC South race would instantly look if both Peyton Manning and Johnson were lost to the teams they lead.
 
22Washington Redskins
Last Week: --
I still believe John Beck will be the Redskins' starting quarterback at some point fairly soon this season, but his late preseason play must have given the Shanahans pause, tilting the competition in favor of Rex Grossman. As Mike Shanahan explained it to me in training camp, his only concern with Beck was "trying not to build him up too much, so he can go in low-key and let his play do the talking for him." I?d say making Beck the backup in Week 1 should nicely counteract any potential hype factor.
 
23Miami Dolphins
Last Week: --
The Dolphins draw the Patriots at home on Monday night, and that's as good as any place to open the 2011 season, because it's where 2010 starting going so wrong. Miami was a hopeful 2-1 when it played host to the Patriots on a Monday night in Week 4, but then came that monumental special teams meltdown and a second-half New England explosion in a 41-14 Pats win. The Dolphins lost seven of their final 12 games and never really got over that embarrassment in front of their home crowd. Time to make amends.
 
24Buffalo Bills
Last Week: --
We should know pretty early if the Bills have improved a run defense that ranked dead last in the NFL in 2010, giving up 170 yards per game. Buffalo travels to Kansas City on Sunday, and the Chiefs led the league in rushing with 164 yards per game last year. In a 13-10 overtime win against Buffalo in October, K.C. rolled to 274 rushing yards, so little wonder the Bills spent their No. 3 overall pick on run-stuffing Alabama defensive lineman Marcell Dareus. Don't look for a quick fix by Buffalo, but baby steps toward the middle of the pack are definitely expected.
 
25Jacksonville Jaguars
Last Week: --
It's Jack Del Rio's style to make some of his calls with his gut, and dumping starting quarterback David Garrard five days before his team's opener is another sterling example. But the question that begs an answer is why the Jaguars waited so long before moving beyond the Garrard era? Wouldn't it have been wiser to give Luke McCown or rookie Blaine Gabbert more work with the first team this preseason, rather than wasting it on Garrard, who apparently was a lost cause in Del Rio's eyes?
 
26Arizona Cardinals
Last Week: --
I am admittedly not as sold on the Kevin Kolb acquisition as some other NFL observers, but with the Cardinals opening the season against Carolina, Washington and Seattle -- three teams starting new quarterbacks and coming off losing records in 2010 -- Kolb and Arizona have an excellent chance to prove me wrong.
 
27Seattle Seahawks
Last Week: --
With the exception of the improved Rams, the NFC West looks like the eighth-strongest division in the NFL once again. The Seahawks need to get their offensive line playing the physical, zone-blocking brand of ball that new line coach Tom Cable prefers, and quarterback/newly elected team captain Tarvaris Jackson has to limit his mistakes. But if everything comes together smoothly, Seattle still only has the potential to threaten the .500 mark this season.
 
28Minnesota Vikings
Last Week: --
Leslie Frazier was ready for me when I asked him why anyone should be optimistic about his team's chances in the NFC North this season. After all, the Packers are defending Super Bowl champions and look loaded, the Lions are on the way up, and the Bears made it all the way to the NFC title game last season. Which was exactly his point. "Nobody picked Chicago last year, and they almost made the Super Bowl," Frazier said. "Every year in this league is different. What happened in 2009 and 2010 has no relevance on the 2011 season, because teams change so quickly." He's got a point.
 
29Denver Broncos
Last Week: --
It's a tough era to be a Broncos fan. In the decade of 1996-2005, Denver won at least 10 games seven different times, with seven playoff berths and a pair of Super Bowl titles. But in the past five seasons, the Broncos are eight games under .500 (36-44), with nary a postseason trip. And I don't see any quick turnarounds ahead for this once-proud franchise. The glory days are going to feel even farther away in 2011.
 
30San Francisco 49ers
Last Week: --
It's once again last-chance time for Alex Smith in San Francisco, and this time we mean it. (I think.) If 2005's top pick can't bring forth the best effort of his underachieving NFL career with the guidance of new head coach Jim Harbaugh, it's hard to imagine he'd ever get another starting opportunity. That said, there's a good bit of pressure on Harbaugh, too. He made re-signing Smith a priority this offseason, and his reputation as a teacher of quarterbacks is on the line as well.
 
31Cincinnati Bengals
Last Week: --
I like that the entire AFC North is facing off this Sunday, with Pittsburgh at Baltimore and Cincinnati traveling to play Cleveland. It should give us a good early barometer of where things stand in the division. But I'll be greatly surprised if the Browns don't look like a solid third-place team after Week 1, with the Bengals and rookie quarterback Andy Dalton firmly entrenched in last place.
 
32Carolina Panthers
Last Week: --
Rookie Panthers quarterback Cam Newton will make his NFL regular season debut at Arizona on Sunday, and if nothing else, the kid will know how to find the locker room. Newton's final game at Auburn was at the University of Phoenix Stadium, exactly eight months earlier. That was the national championship game, which the Tigers won 22-19, beating Oregon behind Newton's 265 yards passing and two touchdowns.
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Saints are now in Atlanta's and NFC Heads with Psychological Advantage (SI)

Here is a great article by Don Banks of SI.com on the Saints:

1. No one can afford to overlook the defending champs now. In reality, this game won't change the outcome of either the NFC South race or the fight for the conference's top seed. Atlanta (12-3) will still claim both by beating a woeful 2-13 Carolina team next week in the dome, and New Orleans will have to content itself with a wild-card berth and taking to the road in the postseason.

Jimmy GrahamBut that doesn't mean Monday night was meaningless. Far from it. Besides putting the Saints (11-4) back into the playoffs for the third time in coach Sean Payton's five seasons, New Orleans ' gritty win announced to the rest of the NFL that it intends to make more than a token defense of its hard-earned Super Bowl title. Oh, and in the process, the Saints just punctured a little of Atlanta 's air of invincibility at home.

It's pretty obvious why getting that task accomplished was important to the Saints: Because they could easily be right back in the Georgia Dome in three weeks, facing the top-seeded Falcons in the NFC divisional round as a road underdog. Beating the Falcons and snapping its eight-game winning streak served notice that the tough-minded and battle-tested Saints can once again win anywhere, against any opponent.

Though it wasn't an artistic type of victory for New Orleans, it was still beautiful all the same. Atlanta entered the night 19-1 at home when quarterback Matt Ryan started a game, and the Falcons were 6-0 this season in their dome, with only three home losses since 2008. With the win, the Saints planted a seed of doubt in the minds of the Falcons, who had come to believe that the game would always last just long enough for Ryan to find a way to win it.

After all, Atlanta had won 24 consecutive games once it had a fourth-quarter lead, dating to 2008. But not this time. The Saints played with resilience and a whatever-it-takes mentality, never giving in to Atlanta 's home-field mojo. New Orleans led 10-0 in the second quarter, gave the lead back at 14-10 in the fourth quarter, then got a clutch 90-yard touchdown drive from quarterback Drew Brees to win it in late-game, comeback fashion.

After trading three-point wins in each other's domes, there's really only a whisker's worth of difference between these two quality programs. But the Saints' playoff success of last season gives them a potential psychological edge against Atlanta, and New Orleans only reinforced its growing reputation for being able to handle the biggest of pressure situations by going into one of the NFL's toughest venues and living to tell. If there is a Round 3 in three weeks, the Saints just reminded us that being the league's defending champ could wind up mattering more than being the division's reigning champ.

2. With one week to go in the regular season, the NFC playoff bracket is now almost in place. The Saints' win made them the fourth NFC team to clinch a playoff berth, joining the Falcons, Bears and Eagles. That leaves Week 17 to settle whether the Rams or Seahawks will win the NFC West's stumble to the finish, and who will emerge with the conference's second wild-card berth.

In the three-team wild-card race between the Packers, Giants and Bucs, Green Bay (9-6) is in the most commanding position. Currently seeded sixth in the NFC, the Packers are in the playoffs with a win over the NFC North champion Bears Sunday at Lambeau Field. They don't need help from anyone to make it two consecutive playoff trips and three in four years.

The reeling Giants (9-6), the team Green Bay just humiliated at Lambeau, need a win at Washington, plus a Bears victory over Green Bay. Sure, the Bears will be playing hard, given they still have a shot at a first-round bye and homefield advantage in the NFC. But the Packers are hitting on all cylinders right now and are favored to win in another must-win playoff-like atmosphere at Lambeau.

As for Tampa Bay, the Saints' victory hurt its playoff hopes the most. The Bucs (9-6) will need to win at New Orleans -- no easy feat -- and then get losses by the Giants and Packers in order to advance. Tampa Bay 's season isn't officially over, but it's on life support and fading fast.

3. Drew Brees should prepare for teams to blitz the daylights out of him from here on out. Baltimore had pretty good success with that approach in its 30-24 defeat of the visiting Saints last week, and Atlanta, even in defeat, successfully followed the Ravens' blueprint. The Falcons blitzed Brees approximately 40 times, with pretty good results.

Brees finished 35 of 49, for 302 yards passing and one touchdown, but the constant pressure from the Falcons' defensive front forced Brees into two fourth-quarter interceptions, one of which was returned 26 yards for a touchdown by Chauncey Davis. That gave Brees 21 interceptions in 15 games this season, his career-high in that department.

Atlanta sacked Brees just once, but they hurried him constantly, and were pretty effective at limiting the damage the Saints did with their downfield passing game. The longest completion went for 25 yards to Robert Meachem, mostly because Brees simply didn't have a lot of time to let his receivers' routes fully develop.

The Saints' short passing game was effective, but Atlanta forced New Orleans to be more patient and methodical than it would have liked, taking smaller bites of the apple instead of the larger chunks that Brees and Co. have been known for. In the first half, Brees completed 20 of 26 passes, but for just 135 yards, 5.2 yards per pass attempt.

Before their game-winning, 90-yard touchdown drive, the Saints had six consecutive possessions ending in four punts and two fourth-quarter interceptions. Prior to Brees saving his best for last, the Saints had only scored on a short-field touchdown drive set up by a Falcons second-quarter fumble, and a 52-yard Garrett Hartley field goal.

The Saints won and Brees delivered when it mattered most, so you can't say Atlanta's blitz-happy defensive strategy was a total success. But I'm sure opposing defenses would rather take their chances with New Orleans having to throw 49 times to generate just 17 points, believing they'll eventually force Brees into some game-changing mistakes.

Read more: http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2010/writers/don_banks/12/28/saints.falcons.insider/index.html#ixzz19P8Rwul5

The Saints definitely got into the heads of the Durty Burds!!!  Remember, they are the reigning Champions!!!!!

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Don Banks previews the Thanksgiving NFL games (Video)

Don Banks believes the Cowboys have more momentum going into the Thanksgiving day matchup with the Saints.

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Reggie Bush's Impact (SI.com)

Don Banks of SI.com analyzes the return of Reggie Bush and his impact for the Saints the second half of the NFL 2010 season. Read more
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Don Banks NFL Power Ranking for Saints

Don Banks ranks the Saints at #9 in the NFL for the second straight week.  Here are his thoughts on the Saints:


If the Saints really intend to make a serious defense of their Super Bowl title, the push for home field and an attractive playoff seed starts now. New Orleans had better make some hay against the Seahawks, Cowboys, Bengals and Rams in the coming four weeks, because a very challenging three-game stretch closes out the regular season (at Baltimore, at Atlanta, Tampa Bay).

Read more: http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2010/writers/don_banks/11/17/nfl-power-rankings-week-11-1/index.html#ixzz15dgwhC00
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Top Ten in the NFL (SI)

NFL Power Rankings: Week 3
1 New Orleans Saints
Last Week: 1
The Saints have displayed that resilient, whatever-it-takes-to-win mentality in narrow wins over the Vikings and 49ers, and that's a necessity when defending a Super Bowl title. Losing Reggie Bush with a fractured fibula is a blow to the versatility of the offense, but there are weapons in reserve and I expect Sean Payton and Drew Brees will creatively adapt. We're about to find out how the NFC South stacks up against New Orleans, because the Saints get the Falcons, Panthers and Bucs over the next four games.
2 Green Bay Packers
Last Week: 3
The Packers lead the NFC through two weeks with 61 points, but that's not their most impressive statistical feat so far. Green Bay outside linebacker Clay Matthews has six sacks, which is more than 25 of the league's 32 teams have amassed. Given the Bears' early pass protection problems, Chicago might want to pay a little extra attention to No. 52 on Monday night.
3 Houston Texans
Last Week: 7
The Texans got the job done at Washington and continue to climb to unaccustomed heights in our power rankings, but there is an ominous development if you're looking for potential pitfalls: Houston is the first team to surrender at least 400 yards passing in its opening two games of the season, and the Texans rank last in the NFL with 411 average passing yards allowed, a 113.4 opposing passer rating, and a 71.6 completion percentage on defense. That should make Tony Romo and the Cowboys -- Houston's opponent this week -- feel a little bit better.
4 Pittsburgh Steelers
Last Week: 12
In my Sunday evening Snap Judgments, I wrote that thanks to the Steelers' shutdown defense, Pittsburgh could win right now with Mark Malone at quarterback. On Sunday night, I heard Dan Patrick on NBC say the Steelers could win with Bubby Brister at quarterback. On Monday morning, Peter King wrote that Pittsburgh could play Cliff Stoudt and still triumph. Two questions: Where will this all end, and who are we leaving out when it comes to forgettable Steelers quarterbacks? Terry Hanratty?
5 Indianapolis Colts
Last Week: 5
The Colts were once again the Colts Sunday night against the Giants, and their two-headed backfield of Joseph Addai and Donald Brown galloped for 161 yards and a touchdown on 36 carries, giving Peyton Manning reason to throw only 26 passes. This could turn out to be a very handy approach to victory three or four times this season in Indianapolis when defenses load up to stop the Colts' multifaceted passing game.
6 Miami Dolphins
Last Week: 18
We're moving the Dolphins way, way up this week, and why not? They're the only 2-0 road team in the league, and new defensive coordinator Mike Nolan has his guys playing some hellacious ball. Seems to me we were hailing Nolan's work early last season in Denver, too, and I suppose that's both a feather in his cap and a bit of a cautionary note, given how the Broncos' season ended.
7 New York Jets
Last Week: 8
It was New York's inability to beat the Dolphins last season -- four- and five-point losses in a three-week span -- that really wrecked the Jets' chances to win the AFC East. Let's see how Team Drama fares this week in South Florida. I hope the Jets don't decide to stay on South Beach this weekend, because clearly Braylon Edwards can't be trusted with any free time on his hands.
8 New England Patriots
Last Week: 4
It's a tricky little knot we're trying to untangle at the bottom of our Week 3 top 10. The Jets just beat the Patriots, and they're both 1-1, so New York has to be ranked at least one notch higher than New England. But the Patriots beat the Bengals soundly in Week 1, so they get the nod over Cincy. The Bengals just beat Baltimore, so you want them at least one slot better than the Ravens. But the whole thing gets complicated because Baltimore beat the Jets in Week 1, and I happen to think the Ravens are going to the Super Bowl. See what I'm dealing with here?
9 Cincinnati Bengals
Last Week: 20
Nice, defensive-led win by the Bengals against Baltimore, but where's that impact passing game that was the story of the offseason in Cincinnati? Marvin Lewis' club still looks like it was designed to prosper within the tough AFC North, where low-scoring slugfests are the norm, but I'm not sure that gets the Bengals where they want to go in the broader AFC picture.
10 Baltimore Ravens
Last Week: 2
Secondary issues or not, the defense is doing its job, allowing just eight field goals and nary a touchdown so far in 2010. Now it's time for Joe Flacco to step it up at home against Cleveland this week and prove that last week's four-pick debacle at Cincinnati was a blip rather than a sign of regression in Year 3. The Ravens are simply too good to be in this particular neighborhood of our rankings. Anything less than the top five represents underachievement in Baltimore this year.


Read more: http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2010/writers/don_banks/09/22/power.rankings.1/index.html?eref=sihp#ixzz10Hx0sBta
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Saints' blueprint for championship repeat may hinge on stingy Defense

NEW ORLEANS -- Things we learned while watching the Saints begin their Super Bowl title defense with a gritty 14-9 victory over the Vikings at a ready-to-rock Superdome ...

1. I'm not yet sure the Drew Brees-led Saints are capable of another 510-point season and No. 1 offensive ranking again this year; but if Thursday night was an indication, they might not need to hit those lofty benchmarks to contend for another Lombardi Trophy. And it's because this New Orleans defense looks even more legit in Year 2 of playing in coordinator Gregg Williams' system.

"Nine points. Nine points,'' said Saints defensive tackle Sedrick Ellis in a New Orleans locker room that was quite business-like after the hard-fought win in a rematch of last season's NFC title game. "That says it better than anything. We played good tonight, held them to nine points, and we're excited about it.''

There was a lot to be excited about if you're a lover of the Saints defense. Like the strong play of the New Orleans secondary, including new free safety Malcolm Jenkins, who's replacing the injured Darren Sharper for the time being (and maybe longer if he keeps this up). Jenkins and fellow safety Roman Harper had standout games, but cornerbacks Jabari Greer and Tracy Porter were crucial in limiting Brett Favre to just 15 of 27 passing for 171 yards, with one touchdown, one interception and a measly 71.7 QB rating.

The Saints defense didn't blitz or hit Favre anywhere near as much as they did in the NFC championship game, sacking him just once, and getting real pressure only a few other times. But the Saints kept almost everything Favre threw in front of them, and correctly guessed that Minnesota's early focus would be establishing the running game through Adrian Peterson.

Why? Because of history, several Saints defenders said. "We knew we had to be at our best early to stop the run, and we thought they'd run the ball because Brett's only been in camp two weeks or so,'' Saints defensive end Will Smith said. "We thought he'd be a little rusty. We thought he wouldn't throw the ball all that much.''

Saints middle linebacker Jonathan Vilma said New Orleans looked at how Minnesota played in a season-opening win at Cleveland last year, with Favre again only having two or three weeks of practice time to prepare. Peterson ran for 180 yards on 25 carries in that game, with Favre only throwing for 110 yards. In Thursday's opener, the Saints held Peterson to just 87 yards on 19 carries, with a long gain of 14, but Favre couldn't make up the slack.

For New Orleans, it was a winning game plan and impressive first display of defensive muscle in 2010. The Saints hadn't won a game scoring 14 points or less since beating Dallas 13-7 in late December 2003, from the Jim Haslett coaching era. Maybe the formula for success in New Orleans has officially begun to evolve: The Saints are still going to thrive on a combination of a high-powered offense and a takeaway-hungry defense, but they might have more ways than ever to win this season.

"I don't think we're the team with the target on our backs,'' Ellis said. "They're not gunning for us, we're gunning for them. We're the ones with the scope.''

2. It's only one game, of course, but I think it's already apparent how much the Vikings miss big-play receiver Sidney Rice, who's out until mid-season thanks to hip surgery. Minnesota's starting two receivers -- Percy Harvin and Bernard Berrian -- combined for just catches and 15 yards against the Saints, and Favre struggled all night to get the ball to anyone but his tight ends and running backs.

Reserve receivers Greg Camarillo and Greg Lewis had some impact in the fourth quarter, catching one pass each for 41 combined yards. But the four-catch, 44-yard production from the Vikings' entire receiving corps represented less than what passed for a good half of work for Rice last season.

Without Rice's ability to stretch the field vertically and keep a defense honest, Minnesota lacked the explosiveness it was known for last year. Only tight end Visanthe Shiancoe resembled a deep threat for Favre, catching a team-best four balls for 76 yards, including a 33-yard gain that set up Minnesota's only touchdown on the next play -- a 20-yard pass to Shiancoe over the deep middle late in the first half.

Favre didn't look in sync with his receivers most of the game, and it appeared the lack of playing and practice this preseason could have been a factor. But maybe it all came down to missing Rice, the receiver who became his big-play partner and security blanket last season, grabbing 83 passes for 1,312 yards and eight touchdowns.

"There were not a lot of throws to be made far down the field,'' Vikings head coach Brad Childress said. "We need to be a little more patient, and we have to be able to run the football. I thought we had a pretty good pulse going at halftime.''

But that pulse wasn't strong enough to lift the Vikings over the defending champion Saints. Not when Favre didn't have a great night, and couldn't make the downfield plays that he routinely produced in 2009.

3. So far, so good with correcting Adrian Peterson's fumbling problem. The Vikings superback touched the ball 22 times (19 rushes and three receptions for 14 yards), and I didn't see one solitary bobble. And No. 28 ran as hard as ever, routinely breaking one or two tackles and struggling free for more yardage at the end of his runs.

It was a strong showing in a return to what was Peterson's personal house of horrors last January -- the Superdome. In the NFC title game, Peterson fumbled twice and caused another turnover after a bad exchange with Favre. Unfortunately for him, Peterson played a key role in Minnesota staying home and New Orleans representing the NFC in the Super Bowl.

Peterson entered the game with 20 fumbles since 2007 (his rookie season) and spent most of this offseason trying to correct the one serious flaw in his game. He ran like he had something to prove against the Saints, even though his yardage total wasn't eye-catching. He averaged 4.6 yards per carry on his 19 attempts, and on the Vikings' 16-play, 66-yard second-quarter scoring drive (field goal), he was a horse, touching the ball eight times for 44 yards.

"I'm ready to carry the ball more,'' Peterson said. "I'm ready for that. I was close a lot of times out there to breaking tackles, to make big gains. But they have great players on defense who make plays, and they held us in check.''

And Peterson, though held in check, held onto the ball. For the Vikings, that's the best news of all from Thursday night.

4. You just never know about NFL kickers, and suddenly the Saints have reason to wonder about their guy, Garrett Hartley. The last time Hartley kicked in a game that mattered at the Superdome, he was the hero of heroes, nailing the game-winning field goal in overtime to send the Saints to their first Super Bowl.

This time? Not quite as heroic. Hartley missed both FG attempts against Minnesota, from 46 yards in the second quarter and more glaringly, from 32 yards in the fourth quarter. Both kicks sailed considerably left, with the second one belonging in the shank category. Maybe the Saints' Super Bowl hangover this season will be Hartley's alone.

Hartley's first miss wasted a Vilma interception at the Minnesota 34. His second miss gave the Vikings' restored comeback hopes with 9:14 left in the game, since Minnesota only trailed by five at 14-9 and could still win the game with a touchdown.

"My mindset was great,'' Hartley said. "I was hitting the ball real well in preseason, practice, and warmups. I went 0 for 2, but I was fortunate the way the offense and defense played. The offense puts some points up and the defense shut the Vikings out.

"Both (the misses) were completely on me. The snap and hold were great. Things like that are inexcusable at this level. I just need to go back to my techniques and understand what I did wrong. I need to come out next Monday night against the 49ers and put some points on the board.''

5. Back to Favre for a moment, because, well, we can never talk enough about No. 4, right? He looked pretty jumpy in the pocket all night, and I can't help but think the 2009 Saints -- with their blitz-happy defense and constant pass rush -- were in his head a bit. Favre looked like he was expecting to get the same pummeling from last January, and he was bracing for it.

Some of the Saints defenders I talked to thought the same thing.

"We hit him some, but not as much as we did last game (in the NFC championship),'' Smith said. "When he had the ball, he did not look real comfortable. When we didn't hit him, we had someone in his face and he looked like that bothered him.''

Agreed. The Saints didn't blitz all that much, but Favre looked a bit edgy against New Orleans. Maybe he should have tried coming to training camp for once and getting a little more practice time in before taking on the Super Bowl champions at their home field.

Just a thought.



Read more: http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2010/writers/don_banks/09/10/vikings.saints.5things/index.html#ixzz0z8bljhuE
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