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Drew Brees

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Falcons vs. Saints: 5 Things We Learned in Drew Brees and New Orleans' Win

Monday Night was mostly about Drew Brees. But it was also about the dominance of the New Orleans Saints over the Atlanta Falcons

Monday night's 45-16 Saints victory was yet another example of the amazing ability of coach Sean Payton to get his team ready and prepared to execute against Mike Smith's squad. And the Saints execute almost without fail when they see the red and black of the Dirty Birds. 

Matt Ryan played well for Atlanta, but Drew Brees played better. Michael Turner was virtually nonexistent; the Saints' three-headed running back monster was monstrous on the big stage. 

And the Saints won with ease again Monday night in prime time.

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Drew Brees Breaks Dan Marino's Single-Season Passing Yard Record

New Orleans Saints QB Drew Brees broke Dan Marino's 27-year-old record of 5,084 passing yards in a season in dramatic fashion as he threw a nine-yard touchdown pass to running back Darren Sproles over the middle of the field with 2:51 seconds left in his team's 45-16 victory on Monday night.

The touchdown was immediately followed by a standing ovation for the new record holder as well as an announcement over the PA system. Brees finished with 307 passing yards, four passing touchdowns and two interceptions. Brees came into the game needing only 305 passing yards to break the record.

Brees stood on the sideline receiving congratulations from multitudes of teammates and coaching staff members as he held the record-breaking football in the air. The longer the crowd continued to cheer, the more teary-eyed Brees got. Before the game was even over, photographers were lining up Brees with his offensive linemen for a photo shoot to show the sporting world the new standard for a historic passing offense in the National Football League.

Brees also could not have performed so well at any better of a time. The Saints QB gave his record-breaking performance to beat the Atlanta Falcons and put his team one win away from a potential No. 2 seed in the NFC for the playoffs. For that to happen, the Saints will need to win against the Carolina Panthers next week and have the San Francisco 49ers lose to the St. Louis Rams. Brees now goes into the final game of the season two yards ahead of the former record.

Dan Marino congratulated Brees through his Twitter account, saying, "Congrats to @drewbrees. Great job by such a special player."

One final side note: Brees has thrown a touchdown pass in 42 consecutive games. This streak is only six games shy of Johnny Unitas' record of 47 straight games.

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Drew Brees Breaks Dan Marino's NFL Single-Season Passing Yards Record

New Orleans Saints’ quarterback Drew Brees has broken Dan Marino’s NFL record for passing yards in a season.

Brees’ year has been one for the ages. From being in the middle of negotiations between players and owners during the lockout, to communicating to fans around the world what progress was being made (or not made) while we all waited, to lighting up defenses after the lockout ended, he has done it all in 2011.

In the Saints’ critical Week 16 game against the Atlanta Falcons on Monday Night Football, Brees needed just 305 passing yards to surpass the NFL record of 5,084 yards set by Dan Marino in 1984.

It was not as easy as everyone expected it would be. In the first half Brees threw for 230 yards, leaving him just 75 yards shy of the mark. The Atlanta defense was stingy enough to limit him to 45 passing yards up until the four-minute mark of the fourth.

The moment came with 2:51 remaining in the game. The raucous home crowd in New Orleans erupted as Brees found running back Darren Sproles on a nine-yard touchdown strike, putting him at 5,087 yards for the year. The game was stopped for a brief celebration immediately following the score as teammates mugged him on the field.

The record stood for 27 years; perhaps a surprise because of the rules changes the league adopted that has made defending the passing game harder to manage than the pigeon population in the US.

New York Jets' great Joe Namath became the first player in league history to throw for better than 4,000 yards in a season when he totaled 4,007 yards through the air in 1967. That record lasted until 1979, when Dan Fouts threw for 4,082 yards for San Diego.

 

Fouts would go on to break the record in three consecutive seasons, throwing for 4,715 yards in 1980 and 4,802 yards in 1981—the latter being the very record Marino would himself break just three years later.

Since Namath first cracked the 4,000-yard threshold nearly a half-century ago, 44 quarterbacks have topped the mark a total of 91 times. That’s right. In 45 years, his record has slipped to the 92nd-best passing season of all-time.

Fast forward to 2008. Brees, in his third season in the Bayou, became the second player ever to amass 5,000 passing yards in a season. He came up short on the record, finishing with 5,069 yards and falling just 15 yards short of Marino’s magical 1984 campaign.

This season he has been on a tear. Coming into play in Week 16, Brees had exceeded 300 passing yards in 11 of the Saints' 14 games—twice eclipsing 400 yards. Now he is the first player in NFL history to surpass 5,000 yards passing twice.

Bien fait, monsieur.

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Drew Brees Video: Watch Superstar Break Dan Marino's Single-Season Passing Mark

It's been a remarkable season for New Orleans Saints quarterback Drew Brees, and he made it a record-breaking season on Monday night against the Atlanta Falcons.

Though a relatively low total for him, Brees' 307 yards passing on Monday night bumped his 2011 total to 5,087 yards, a mark that breaks the single-season record of 5,084 yards set by Dan Marino in 1984.

Brees has been on pace to break Marino's record ever since Week 1, as he threw for over 400 yards against the Green Bay Packers in the first game of the 2011 regular season. He has routinely topped 300 yards passing, and has put the Saints on track to make a run at their second Super Bowl appearance in the last three years.

The amazing part is that this is not the first time Brees has flirted with breaking Marino's passing mark. Back in 2008, he finished the year with 5,069 passing yards, just 15 yards shy of Marino's record. 

The difference this year is that Brees has been much more efficient with his passes. He entered the day with a completion percentage of 71.5, and he completed 23 of 39 passes on Monday night. What we have seen this season is a master quarterback at work.

A season like this should help Brees get the contract he desires. His current deal with the Saints expires at the end of the season, and it's going to take a lot of money for the Saints to bring him back.

Something tells me Brees isn't going anywhere. 

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Drew Brees Gets NFL Passing Record as New Orleans Saints Crush Atlanta Falcons

It seemed it was only a matter of time during tonight's Monday Night Football game when Saints QB Drew Brees would break Dan Marino's 1984 record of 5,084 passing yards in a single season.

Brees broke the record late in the fourth quarter as the Saints beat the Falcons 45-16.  He now has 5,087 passing yards this season as the New Orleans clinched the NFC South division title. 

The record-breaking pass was a nine-yard touchdown pass to Darren Sproles.

Brees has shown throughout the season that he is an MVP candidate and a true leader.  Brees always keeps the Saints offense moving downfield, scoring a lot of points.  

He is a real danger to face in the playoffs at the great pace he set this season.  

The New Orleans Saints offense had their way with the Atlanta Falcons defense. 

The Saints offense made quick substitutions early and quickly in the game, which didn't give the Falcons defense time to make adjustments. 

It just shows how much depth the Saints have on offense. 

The running backs for the Saints alone are very dangerous.  Between Chris Ivory and Pierre Thomas pounding the ball up the middle and Darren Sproles making unbelievable moves, the Falcons defense had their hands full.

Brees threw for 307 yards with four touchdowns and two interceptions.  The interceptions were both deflections that the Falcons were able to recover.

Falcons QB Matt Ryan had his ups and downs in his game.  He completed 34 passes for 373 yards, but he only had one touchdown pass. 

RB Michael Turner was completely taken out of the game by the Saints defense.  He only had 11 caries for 39 yards and no touchdowns.

Without a running game, most of the Falcons' drivers just fizzled out even after great passes by Ryan.

The Saints showed they are ready for the playoffs, but they will probably be the No. 3 seed unless they win their last game against the Carolina Panthers and the San Francisco 49ers lose their game against the St. Louis Rams

The Falcons need to get their team straightened out fast.  They made too many mistakes and bad penalties that killed scoring drives.  Unless something miraculous happens, the Falcons will get one more chance to beat the Saints in the first round of the playoffs. 

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Drew Brees Breaks Dan Marino's Yardage Record, Earns Place Among All-Time Greats

Drew Brees entered Monday night's contest against the Atlanta Falcons needing 305 passing yards to break Dan Marino's single-season passing record of 5,084 yards.

With a nine-yard touchdown pass to Darren Sproles in the third quarter, Brees bumped his nightly total to 307 yards. 

So yes, it is official. We have ourselves a new record holder.

Brees had been on a pace to break Marino's record since the very first night of the season when he threw for 419 yards against the Green Bay Packers. Throwing for over 300 yards became routine for him, and it became apparent a couple of weeks ago that he was going to break Marino's record.

Remarkably, Brees still has one more game to add to his total. Those who would break his record in the future may very well have to top 5,500 yards.

I have no doubt that pundits and fans alike are going to try to cheapen Brees' record. They could point out that the Saints' offensive attack called for Brees to pile up passing attempts, so it's therefore no surprise that he has piled up so many yards. To boot, defense has been down across the league this year, an upshot of a lockout that left teams with just a couple of weeks to come together.

As fair as these points may be, they should not overshadow just how good Brees has been this season. To break Marino's record, he's needed more than just circumstance and luck.

For example, a lucky quarterback doesn't attempt as many passes as Brees and completes better than 70 percent of them. That is the work of a truly skilled quarterback, and one who has totally mastered the schemes and plays that he has been given.

Of course, Brees mastered the Saints offense several seasons ago. That his production has climbed to such lofty heights should not come as a surprise. In fact, we should all take a step back and realize that Brees has been building towards this moment.

Brees has thrown for over 4,300 yards every year he's been a member of the Saints, topping out at 5,069 in 2008. This year's spike in production is far from a fluke.

Considering this, Brees has broken Marino's record fair and square, and he should get the credit he deserves for having one of the greatest seasons of all time. His 2011 season should definitely be placed alongside Marino's 1984 season, and it's right up there with Peyton Manning's 2004 season and Tom Brady's 2007 season.

Brees didn't need to break Marino's record to validate himself as one of the best quarterbacks of his day and age. But because he's had to share the spotlight with Manning, Brady and now Aaron Rodgers, he's been somewhat overlooked.

Brees is front and center now—make no mistake about that—and now he has a single-season record to call his own. Add that to the accomplishments he already has under his belt and it's apparent that there's really not much left for him to do.

However, I'm sure he would be just fine with a second Super Bowl victory.

Whatever you do, don't doubt his ability to get it.

 

Follow zachrymer on Twitter

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Drew Brees Passing Record: New Orleans Saints QB Breaks Dan Marino's Yard Mark

It only took 15 games, and Drew Brees is now the holder of the NFL's single-season passing yardage record.

Before Monday night's game between the Saints and Falcons, former Miami Dolphins quarterback Dan Marino held the record of 5,084 for 27 years.

A 24-yard touchdown pass to Robert Meachem brought Brees 31 yards away from the hallowed record.

The Purdue-graduate quarterback proceeded to break the record on a later drive, with a nine-yard touchdown pass to Darren Sproles.

As for Brees' team, the New Orleans Saints, beating the Falcons on Monday night locked up the NFC South title and brought the team a step closer to a first-round bye.

Coach Sean Payton has helped Brees become a top-level quarterback, as Payton has installed an easy offense to help his star 2006 free-agent acquisition succeed.

Brees was cut by his former team, the San Diego Chargers, when Charger brass had concerns about the health of No. 9's shoulder plus Philip Rivers in reserve.

The Saints took a chance on the signal-caller and it's paid off, with perennial playoff appearances and a Super Bowl win in 2009.

With Brees playing like he is of late, it's conceivable to think that the Saints could return to the Super Bowl this year.

The Saints field-general adds to his Hall of Fame resume, which includes a Super Bowl title and now the yardage record. If Brees keeps this up for a few more years, he could be headed to Canton.

As for Marino, who lost his record on Monday night, the quarterback's legacy continues to fade.

Marino never won a Super Bowl in his NFL career, but he is still remembered as one of the best quarterbacks of all time for his prolific passing and consistency.

Unfortunately, without a Lombardi trophy and without the single-season yards record anymore, the argument for Marino gets weaker and weaker as the years go on.

It was a special night in New Orleans, as Brees was able to set the record in front of the home crowd at the Mercedes-Benz Superdome in the most spectacular of ways—against the rival Atlanta Falcons on Monday Night Football.

The Saints play the Panthers next week, where Brees could give himself some cushion from Marino's old record.

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New Orleans Saints-Atlanta Falcons Rivalry: True Happiness Is Hating This Much

 

(Originally published in 2009, Bleacher Report)

Hatred strikes me as one of the few signs of life remaining in the world. This is another thing about the world which is upside-down: all the friendly and likable people seem dead to me; only the haters seem alive.
Walker Percy  

 

Any Saints fan 40-plus remembers when they became a Falcon hater like it was yesterday.

It was Nov. 12, 1978, when New Orleans Saints fans discovered the kind of true happiness that only the hatred of a bitter rival can produce.

With the Saints still in playoff contention on that fall afternoon 31 years ago, Archie Manning and a stubborn defense held the Steve Bartkowski-led Atlanta Falcons at bay for 59 minutes.

The Falcons had closed the gap to 17-13 on a Hascal Stanback touchdown run with 57 seconds to go. Then, the Saints took over presumably to run out the clock.

Legendary Saints radio Voice Wayne Mack , a Chicago native, had the call:

"With this big win, the fans will be dancing on the tables at Pat O'Brien's."

A melancholy Mack would say later, "I should have learned from the Chicago Tribune headline that proclaimed, incorrectly, the victory of Tom Dewey over Harry Truman in the presidential election of 1948." 

On 4th-and-2, Saints coach Dick Nolan decided to run Chuck Muncie. The Falcons defense held. Then, Big Ben, and we're not talking Roethlisberger here, reared his ugly head.

With 19 seconds remaining, Atlanta QB Steve Bartkowski lined up in what came to be known as the Big Ben formation: three wide receivers on his right. At the snap, the receivers started flying toward the New Orleans end zone with seven defensive backs in hot pursuit.

Bartkowski launched a missile to the goal line and then everything seemed to move in slooooowwwwww motion.

Ten bodies collided around the 10-yard line like tourists at Mardi Gras fighting for a pair of beads flung from a Bourbon Street balcony. The ball seem to hang in the air forever.

It was then that diminutive Falcons receiver Alfred Jenkins attained his moment of glory.

Jenkins caught his only pass of the afternoon emerging from the sea of bodies and darting into the end zone.

An eerie silence followed in the jam-packed Superdome. Kind of like one of those spooky New Orleans Victorian mansions on Halloween night.

The crowd sat in stunned silence enduring sheer agony no sports fans should ever have to endure but ultimately does. 

Atlanta had won 20-17, cruelly dashing the Saints' playoff hopes.

A local radio talk show host printed up a batch of "I Hate the Falcons" T-shirts. The batch sold out in three days. Three decades later, mine still hangs in my locker. I sneer every time I look at it.

Two weeks later, the Saints traveled to Atlanta for a rematch.

Different city. Same creepy results.

With 53 seconds left and the Saints leading again 17-13, New Orleans went into the infamous, dreaded prevent defense. Bartkowski marched the Falcons to the Saints' 23 with 16 seconds remaining.

Deja vu all over again Rocky....ugggghhhhh.....Deja vu all over again....

Bartkowski fired to the end zone. Saints defensive back Ralph McGill intercepted.

Flag on the play!!! Oh My Sweet Jesus, you gotta be kidding me!!!!!

Referee Grover Klemmer called interference on New Orleans DB Maurice Spencer. Falcons receiver Dennis Pearson would admit later he didn't feel a thing. Two weeks later the league office informed the Saints that Klemmer blew the call.

Same spooky final score: Falcons 20, Saints 17. 

New Orleans States-Item sports editor Bob Roesler began campaigning for instant replay, a revolutionary idea in those days.

"We had the biggest meeting in the the history of the fan club Tuesday night, Joey!!!!! I haven't been able to sleep: I hope the players aren't as nervous as I am."

Turns out one player was suffering from extreme anxiety that day, punter Russell Erxleben. The Saints spent a No. 1 draft pick on Erxleben in hopes that the former Texas Longhorn could handle both the kicking and punting.

Incumbent Saints placekicker Rich Szaro of Poland ribbed Erxleben mercessly in training camp.

" He's a punta, not a keecker......ha ha ha ha.....he will not kick in this league," said Szaro in his Polish accent.

Turns out he was neither a kicker nor a punter. More head case than anything else.

This time it took four quarters plus about eight-and-a-half of overtime for the Dirty Birds to traumatize the City of New Orleans again. John Watson snapped the ball over punter Erxleben's head.

A mad dashed ensued. Erxleben recovered it at the goal line and under heavy pressure threw it into the waiting arms of Atlanta's James Mayberry who raced into the end zone for a 40-34 Falcons win. 

Three fluky wins in a row by the hated Atlanta Falcons.

True happiness is hating this much!

So for all us Saints fans who remember the days before ESPN, the seeds of hatred for the Dirty Birds were sown over 30 years ago.

As one of those Greek philosophers said, (I think it was Aeschylus), "Before the old wound is healed, there is fresh blood flowing."

I'm sure the Falcons will receive a warm Southern welcome Monday night. The kind of a Halloween weekend welcome you receive only in New Orleans.

A former Saints All-Pro told me Friday morning that Atlanta rock star QB Matt Ryan has never seen anything like he's gonna see from Gregg Williams' defense Monday night in the Dome.

Surely, a much better defense than the one that suffered those Shakespearean losses back in the late 70's.

Said New Orleans safety Ralph McGill all those years ago, "We got nothin' but buzzard luck. They did to us what buzzards do to you when they die."

Yeah, losing like that three times in a row....well, it was just a damned shame. A hell of a thing. A real damned shame.

Those kind of memories they cut deep ya know. Cut real deep.

They say the first cut is the deepest, but the second and third aren't much fun either.

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Falcons vs. Saints: Drew Brees Won't Let Atlanta Spoil Fun in New Orleans

Monday night should be, and will be, all about Drew Brees and the New Orleans Saints, as much as Matt Ryan and the Atlanta Falcons may try to play spoiler.

The Saints, as a team, have everything to play for. With a win over the Dirty Birds, New Orleans will clinch the NFC South title in front of the home fans and move one step closer to securing the No. 2 seed in the NFC playoff picture. Such would assure them an extra week of rest and their legions of fans at the Superdome at least one more home game to cheer on their favorite team.

But all of that will pale in comparison to Drew Brees' pursuit of Dan Marino's single-season passing record, which he may well eclipse tonight. Brees needs "only" 304 yards to match Marino's mark, which would seem to be a foregone conclusion given that he's topped the 300-yard mark 11 times this season and threw for 412 yards just last week.

Don't think for a second, though, that Atlanta is simply going to roll over and play dead so Brees can have his moment in the spotlight. The Falcons have allowed just 231 yards per game to opposing passers, though Brees torched them for 322 yards the last time they met.

Realistically, it would be more of a surprise if Brees didn't leave Marino in his rear view on Monday night. He came agonizingly close in 2008, posting just the second 5,000-yard passing season in NFL history but falling all of 15 yards shy of the record.

This time around, Brees will leave no doubt, about his own accolades or those of his team. He and the Saints have a division title firmly in sight, with a Super Bowl berth not too far down the road. That, in itself, should be motivation enough to elevate them about the flawed Falcons and on the path to Indianapolis.

 

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Why Saints QB Drew Brees Should Be in the Greatest of All-Time Conversation

If you asked who is the greatest quarterback in the history of the NFL is, you're sure to get similar answers. Names like Dan Marino, Joe Montana, John Elway and Brett Favre are a few of the selective names that will pop up.

It may be time to add Drew Brees into that conversation as well.

The Saints quarterback has always been the type of player that many people consider elite but often gets overshadowed by the accomplishments of other players like Peyton Manning, Tom Brady and now Aaron Rodgers

But what Brees is doing this season puts him in a class of his own and only adds to his Hall of Fame resume.

In case you've been hypnotized by what the Green Bay Packers have been doing this year, Brees is only 305 passing yards away from breaking Dan Marino's single-season record of 5,084 yards—a record he could very well own by the end of tonight's game against the Atlanta Falcons.

He would also become just the second player in the history of the game to throw for over 5,000 yards in a single season and the first player to accomplish that feat twice. 

Brees nearly broke Marino's record in 2008, just to fall 15 yards short. Although Brees didn't break the record then, he threw for over 5,000 yards and didn't have a 1,000 yard receiver. A total of 17 players had receiving yards in 2008. That just shows how special this guy is.

This would put Brees in elite company and give him one of the greatest records a quarterback could ever own. It would also provide an argument that he has had the greatest season at the quarterback position in the history of the NFL.

But things get even more interesting.

Brees is only 193 passing yards behind Johnny Unitas for 12th all-time in career passing yards. He's only 505 behind Joe Montana for 11th all-time. As you continue to look up the list, he's only 11,429 passing yards behind John Elway for fourth all-time in career passing yards.

That may sound like a lot, but Brees is only 32 years old, in excellent shape and has thrown no less than 4,300 yards since 2006. If he continues this pace, he could be in the top five all-time for career passing yards by the time he turns 35 years old.

As far as touchdowns are concerned, he is only one behind Joe Montana for 10th all time with 272. He's only 28 touchdowns behind John Elway for fifth all-time which he should surpass next season with no problem. Bress has thrown no less than 33 touchdowns since 2008.

Again, he's only 32 years old and with Peyton Manning's future up in the air, he could pass the Colts quarterback for third all-time in career passing touchdowns. Manning does have a 127 touchdown lead over Brees but he's soon to be 36 and with his recent neck surgeries, nobody really knows what to expect.

Then you look a career completion percentage, where Brees has completed 65.9 percent of his passes. That's good for second all-time, only behind Chad Pennington, who has a 66.0 completion percentage.

Career passing yards per game, Brees averages 263.5 which is also good for second all-time. The guy who is first is Peyton Manning, and he averages 263.6.

So, let's recap shall we?

Brees will likely own the record for most passing yards in a season. He's the only quarterback ever to throw for 5,000 yards twice. He averages more passing yards a game than almost anybody and has one of the top completion percentages ever. And with him at the young age of 32 and the pace he's on, he has the opportunity to finish in the top five of every major statistical category for quarterbacks.

Then you throw in the fact he tore his labrum in his throwing shoulder in 2005 and did damage to his rotator cuff. There was a great chance he wasn't going to be able to play football again. After surgery and rehab, he led the league in passing yards with 4,418 the very next season.

Brees has been one of the most consistent quarterbacks since he's came in the league. He's broken NFL records and put up godly numbers every season. He also helped save a city that was going through a rough time by winning one of the most emotional Super Bowls ever.

The Saints quarterback may often get overlooked by a few other quarterbacks, but that should no longer be the case after this season.

When the greatest quarterbacks of all-time are mentioned, Brees name should begin popping up.


Randy Chambers is a B/R Featured Columnist that covers College Football and the NFL. You can contact him @Randy_Chambers or [email protected]

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