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NFL Saints' banged-up secondary bracing for Falcons (FoxSports.com)

The Saints have enough difficulty slowing down Matt Ryan and Atlanta's passing game when their defensive backfield is at full strength. For Sunday's game in Atlanta, with first place in the NFC South on the line, New Orleans could be forced to thrust a couple reserves into more prominent roles in its pass defense. ''We're still trying to see who's going to be back, but I don't think we're worried at all,'' Saints safety Malcolm Jenkins said. ''We've got some young guys that can play. ... We know (the Falcons) have some threats, but we trust in our guys to prepare and get it done the same way.'' When New Orleans practiced on Wednesday, starting cornerback Tracy Porter and nickel back Patrick Robinson both stood off to the side, watching without pads. Porter hurt his neck last Sunday while making a tackle against Tampa Bay. Robinson is having stomach pain. Coach Sean Payton hopes one, if not both, will feel well enough to play in Atlanta on Sunday. In the meantime, though, veteran cornerback Leigh Torrence is working as a first-team cornerback along with starter Jabari Greer, while rookie Johnny Patrick is lining up in formations with five defensive backs. Torrence and Patrick could be called upon to play key roles in stopping an offense that not only runs the ball well, but has a number of solid receiving targets including tight end Tony Gonzalez and receivers Roddy White, Harry Douglas and rookie Julio Jones. ''There's a lot that goes into defending a team that has weapons like Atlanta and then you throw in the tight end and the running game,'' Payton said. ''That's not even getting into some of the logistics we're looking at'' with injuries. ''I'm optimistic about Tracy. We'll see where Patrick's at. The other players got good work in today and that's kind of the way our league is,'' Payton continued. ''The next guy's up and he's getting the practice (snaps) and you just have to be able to adjust.'' Patrick has been inactive in five of nine regular season games, including the past four. When he has played, it has been on special teams. Now he could wind up seeing his first significant action against Ryan and Co. ''It's going to be a challenge regardless of who goes out there,'' Jenkins said. Patrick is ''going to have a challenge and we think he's ready,'' Jenkins added. ''He sat back for a while, learned a lot. He's going to have some challenges in this game, but he's got confidence that he can overcome them.'' Torrence said Patrick has done everything asked of him since he was drafted in the third round last spring. ''We're not worried about any one person because you're not going to go out there by yourself,'' he said. ''We're all going to be out there together on Sunday, and what better time to get out there than a divisional game on the road in Atlanta?'' Meanwhile, the Saints also have the option of moving Jenkins to a cornerback spot as they see fit. Jenkins was drafted as a cornerback out of Ohio State in the first round of 2009 and the Saints have relied on his versatility before. Torrence, now in his seventh season out of Stanford, also has shown he is comfortable playing various roles in the defensive backfield. He's had a solid season so far, highlighted by his interception return for a touchdown against Indianapolis three games ago. ''Our secondary's always been one where we had a lot of versatile players, guys that can go inside or outside or play safety,'' Torrence said. ''That's just part of being in the NFL, that you may be called to do something different from any given Sunday.'' Notes: In addition to Porter and Robinson, LB Jon Vilma (knee), DE Turk McBride (ankle) and LT Jermon Bushrod (stomach virus) also missed practice. ... RB Mark Ingram (heel) returned to practice on limited basis, while RB Chris Ivory (hamstring) also was limited

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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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Video: AccuScore on Bucs-Saints (ESPN)

Prim Siripipat goes inside the numbers for the Tampa Bay-New Orleans matchup. Prim Siripipat goes inside the numbers for the Tampa Bay-New Orleans matchup. Read the entire articleVideo: AccuScore on Bucs-Saints - NFC South Blog - ESPN

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Forbes list Saints owner Benson as a Top 10 Owner



NFC South Blog - ESPN
By Pat Yasinskas

Forbes put out its annual list of the 10 best and 10 worst owners in the NFL, and I’m thinking the NFC South didn’t get a real fair shake.

The division got one owner on each list, and I’m not sure I agree with either selection.

New Orleans Saints owner Tom Benson came in at No. 8 on the best list. There’s no question Benson’s reputation with fans has improved in recent years. That’s largely because the Saints have been successful, the Super Bowl is coming back to New Orleans in 2013, and the Saints have committed to stay for the long haul. But there are still a lot of New Orleans fans that haven’t forgiven Benson for reportedly looking to relocate the team. Forbes cites a 13-percent increase in franchise value over five years as one of the reasons for Benson’s selection, and also points to the team’s five-year winning percentage (61 percent).

Brett Davis/US PresswireSaints owner Tom Benson has been through several ups and downs with the franchise.
If Benson is on the list, I think Atlanta’s Arthur Blank and Carolina’s Jerry Richardson also deserved strong consideration. Neither has ever made any noise about relocating their teams. Blank also learned from some early mistakes and has his franchise in the best shape it’s ever been in. The Falcons have had three straight winning seasons. Prior to that, they never had back-to-back winning seasons.

Richardson’s popularity with fans took a big hit as the Panthers have struggled in recent seasons. He was roasted for being “cheap’’ as he prepared his franchise for the labor lockout, and no employees lost their jobs. Richardson was extremely instrumental in eventually getting a new labor agreement. Once that was in place, he came out spending more than he ever has, and the future appears bright because the Panthers finally have a franchise quarterback in Cam Newton.

The only NFC South representative on the list of the league’s 10 worst owners is Tampa Bay’s Malcolm Glazer. First off, it should be noted that Glazer hasn’t been in good health for several years and sons Bryan, Joel and Ed handle the operations of the team. I know there’s a disconnect between Tampa Bay fans and the Glazers, but I don’t really understand it. The Glazers might not be the best owners in the league, but they’re far from the worst.

For those of you who weren’t around before the Glazers, and those without long-term memories, let me remind you of what things were like when Hugh Culverhouse owned the team. The Bucs were almost always horrible. They played in the old Tampa Stadium and always had one of the league’s lowest payrolls.

The Bucs have a low payroll these days, but Glazer did spend big for a while before former coach Jon Gruden and general manager Bruce Allen showed that shuttling in high-priced free agents every year doesn’t bring consistent success. The Bucs are building through the draft these days, and the team appears to be on the upswing.

Plus, when Glazer still was heavily involved, he helped the Bucs get Raymond James Stadium, which still is one of the league’s finest facilities. He brought in coach Tony Dungy, who made the franchise consistently respectable for the first time. When Dungy couldn’t quite get over the hump, Glazer made a trade with Oakland to bring in Gruden.

The Bucs turned around and won the Super Bowl. The Glazer era has been much more prosperous than the Culverhouse days.


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Tampa Bay at New Orleans - Start 'Em & Sit 'Em (SI.com)

Start 'em

RB LeGarrette Blount, TE Kellen Winslow, QB Josh Freeman

The Saints are not a bad defense, but they are in the bottom half of fantasy against QBs, RBs, WRs and TEs. That about covers it. The Saints are giving up a league-worst 5.5 yards per rush and the return of Blount from injury and bye should boost an offense that will be asked to score points in the Superdome to keep up with the Saints. The usefulness of Freeman should encourage you to start the likes of the struggling Winslow and WR Mike Williams. You might even consider Arrelious Benn if you need a WR option in deeper leagues.

QB Drew Brees, RB Darren Sproles, WR Marques Colston, TE Jimmy Graham, K John Kasay

The Saints had a week to forget, but they are going to come out like gangbusters here in trying to avenge an earlier-season loss. They tend to score early and often at home and should give us great passing numbers as Brees rebounds and torches a Bucs defense that is in the bottom half against QBs and WRs. Colston and Graham (Bucs are fifth-worst in fantasy against TEs) will rebound from off weeks, and Lance Moore is a nice fill-in in deeper formats. Sproles should be productive either on the ground or out of the backfield against a Bucs team that is 10th-worst in fantasy against RBs.

Sit 'em

D/ST Buccaneers

The Saints are a much better offense at home. You have to find a different defense to use this week. There are going to be points and yards everywhere.

RB Pierre Thomas, RB Mark Ingram, D/ST Saints

We might like Thomas if we knew for certain Ingram would be out. We won't like Ingram even if he plays. The Saints use a three-headed monster for their RB and Sproles is by far the best playmaker. Thomas had a bad week in a great matchup last week if you throw out the late score. As for the Saints defense, the Bucs have an offense that plays consistent and close to the vest, hence their ranking of seventh-best against opposing D/STs. The Saints are going to turn this one into a shootout and the Bucs are going to get garbage-time yards and scores.


Read the entire article  Drew Brees, Tony Romo among best Week 9 NFL fantasy options - Eric Mack - SI.com

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Saints vs. Rams TV Game Map

NFL on FOX: Week 8 - October 30, 2011 (single game)

Map data ©2011 Europa Technologies, INEGI - Terms of Use
Map
Satellite
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Alaska Hawaii

EARLY GAMES
  Minnesota @ Carolina Kenny Albert, Daryl Johnston, Tony Siragusa
  Arizona @ Baltimore Sam Rosen, Brian Billick
  New Orleans @ St. Louis Chris Myers, Tim Ryan

LATE GAMES

  Washington vs Buffalo (in Toronto) Thom Brennaman, Troy Aikman
  Detroit @ Denver Dick Stockton, John Lynch

UPDATES:



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Saints need 41 points to set NFL Scoring Record

NFC South Blog - ESPN
The New Orleans Saints scored 62 points (tied for the most since the NFL-AFL merger) against the Indianapolis Colts. With the Saints playing the winless St. Louis Rams on Sunday, there’s a very logical question on the horizon.

What’s the NFL record (since the merger) for points scored in a two-game span?

I went out and got the answer, courtesy of Elias Sports Bureau. Before I reveal, I’ll just say, with Drew Brees and the New Orleans offense, I think the Saints have a decent chance to make history. And they’ve got a chance to make it against the team that set it.

Yep, back when the Rams were still “The Greatest Show on Turf’’, they scored a combined 102 points in consecutive games in the 2000 season. This year’s Rams have scored 56 points -- all season.

So, the Saints can tie the record if they score 40 points and break it if they score 41 or more.

The next five best point totals in consecutive games came from the 2002 Raiders (101), the 2004 Chiefs (101), the 2007 Patriots (101), the 2000 Rams (98) and the 2002 Chiefs (98).
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Saints serve notice that they’re still a threat – Audibles

Saints serve notice that they’re still a threat – Audibles
The debate over the NFL’s best team begins and ends, at least right now, with Green Bay. The Packers are the defending Super Bowl champions and, at 7-0, the only remaining undefeated team in football — heck, there are only three one-loss teams at this point.

But before we go and deliver the Vince Lombardi Trophy to Lambeau Field again, it might be worth remembering what happened on this NFL season’s opening night.

The Saints visited Green Bay, played a so-so game, spotted the Packers an early 21-7 lead, trailed by 15 with three minutes left … and came within two inches and a two-point conversion of going to overtime. New Orleans’ furious late rally, of course, will mean nothing when the playoffs come, just like New Orleans’ 62-7 dismantling of a sleepwalking Colts team Sunday night was relatively meaningless.

Except for this: With the win, the Saints put a Week 6 loss to the Bucs behind them and reclaimed sole possession of first place in the NFC South.

There are no guarantees New Orleans will stay there — though back-to-back games against 4-3 Tampa Bay and Atlanta in Weeks 9 and 10 will give us a clearer indication. If the Saints do, though, it will solidify their status in the NFC as the Packers’ biggest competition.

Why New Orleans instead of, say, the Giants, Dallas, Tampa Bay, Atlanta, San Francisco or Detroit?

We saw most of the reasons Sunday night, and they start with Drew Brees. Tom Brady can put forth an argument in the AFC, maybe Ben Roethlisberger or Philip Rivers on his best day, too, but there is just one NFC quarterback capable of keeping pace with a locked-in Aaron Rodgers.

That guy is Brees, who delivered the easiest 31-for-35, five-touchdown passing day you’ll ever see. The zombies in “The Walking Dead” put up more of a battle Sunday night than the Colts’ defense did.

That’s what Brees, like Rodgers, can do. When he hits his groove — not to mention when the offensive line holds up and his talented receiving corps finds some space — there is almost no stopping Brees.


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Saints Beat Down the Colts Recap (ESPN)

By Pat Yasinskas
Thoughts on the New Orleans Saints' 62-7 victory against the Indianapolis Colts at the Mercedes-Benz Superdome: What it means: A week after a disappointing loss to Tampa Bay, the Saints went back out and claimed sole possession of first place in the NFC South. They did it by going out and doing pretty much everything you could ask of a very good team playing against a very bad Indianapolis team (without Peyton Manning). The Saints were precise and controlled the game all the way. Plus, they play another struggling team (the St. Louis Rams) next week. The Saints are 5-2 and they may hold a bigger edge over the 4-3 Falcons and Buccaneers, who each had to play difficult games on Sunday, than it appears. You can pretty much pencil in the Saints for a 6-2 record before their Nov. 6 home game with Tampa Bay and their Nov. 13 game at Atlanta. The Saints get a bye after the Atlanta game. For now, the Saints have a firm grip on the division. What communication problems? There was some understandable concern that the Saints might encounter some problems with coach Sean Peyton relegated to the press box after suffering major damage to his leg and knee last week. Payton certainly had some input in the overall game plan, specifically the offensive side. But offensive coordinator Pete Carmichael did a masterful job of calling the plays. He and quarterback Brees worked as smoothly as Payton and Brees usually do. That was a very encouraging sign because Payton is probably going to have to supervise from above for most of the rest of the season. Almost perfect: Brees left the game in the fourth quarter as the Saints gave Chase Daniel some playing time (and showed the Colts some mercy). But Brees was almost flawless while he was playing. He completed 31 of 35 passes for 325 yards with five touchdowns and no interceptions. Absolutely perfect: The Saints scored on their first nine possessions. They added a defensive touchdown in the fourth quarter when Leigh Torrence intercepted a pass and took it in for a touchdown. The Saints finally punted on their 10th possession. Stat of the night: The last time an NFL team scored 62 points in a game, it was Jacksonville in a 1999 playoff game against Miami. The 62 points were also a franchise record for the Saints. What I liked: The running game. The Saints got Darren Sproles more involved and gave him 10 carries. He gave them 82 yards and a touchdown. Rookie Mark Ingram carried 14 times for 91 yards. What I didn’t like: Ingram limped off the field with an apparent leg injury in the fourth quarter. We don’t know the severity of the injury, but the Saints have been doing a nice job of mixing Sproles, Ingram and Pierre Thomas. If Ingram’s injury is serious, the good news is the Saints have Chris Ivory, who says he’s healthy, waiting to come off the physically-unable-to-perform list. Interesting twist: New Orleans center Olin Kreutz walked away from the team during the week with his agent saying he had lost his passion for the game. On a Westwood One Radio broadcast of the game, it was reported that Kreutz made his decision after learning he was going to be benched this week. What’s next: The Saints play at St. Louis next Sunday.


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Drew Brees tops in Total QBR (ESPN)

NFC South Blog - ESPN
This should come as no surprise. New Orleans’ Drew Brees had the league’s best Total QBR in Sunday’s games.

Brees came in at a near-perfect 97.2 points (100 is the highest possible score) and posted the third-best Total QBR of the season as he threw for five touchdowns in a 62-7 victory against Indianapolis.

Carolina’s Cam Newton (77.5) came in at No. 5 in Sunday’s games an Atlanta’s Matt Ryan was No. 8 at 59.9. Tampa Bay’s Josh Freeman was No. 16 at 29.8.

For the season, Brees is No. 3 in the league with a 77.2 average. Ryan is No. 9 at 62.7.

Newton (57.5) is No. 14 and Freeman (47.0) is No. 20.


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