Saints, Colts to square off in rare Super Bowl XLIV rematch in 2023

The New Orleans Saints and Indianapolis Colts will meet in a Super Bowl XLIV rematch in 2023, but a lot has changed in the last 14 years:

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The New Orleans Saints and Indianapolis Colts will meet in a Super Bowl XLIV rematch in 2023, but a lot has changed in the last 14 years. Neither team is quarterbacked by the Hall of Famers who led them to that championship bout — Peyton Manning has already been enshrined, and Drew Brees is patiently waiting to join him at the Pro Football Hall of Fame. These days Jim Caldwell is working in a senior assistant role with the Carolina Panthers, while the opposing coach Sean Payton has moved on to the Denver Broncos.

Of the 90-plus players who suited up for the title game, only one is still in the NFL: former Saints punter Thomas Morstead, who signed with the New York Jets this offseason. Many players have turned to coaching (like Colts receiver Reggie Wayne and Saints right tackle Zach Strief). Others have moved on from football altogether.

Sure, the Saints and Colts have crossed paths since the Super Bowl. And New Orleans has come out ahead every time:

  • 2011: Saints 62, Colts 7
  • 2015: Saints 27, Colts 21
  • 2019: Saints 34, Colts 7

Will Indianapolis challenge them this time? Maybe, if they don’t hesitate to give Anthony Richardson the keys to the offense. And even if they do waffle on that decision and let Gardner Minshew start the season at quarterback, odds are Richardson will have supplanted him by the time New Orleans visits Lucas Oil Stadium in Week 8, with kickoff scheduled for 12 p.m. CT on Oct. 29.

Richardson does everything well that the Saints have struggled to defend as a big-armed passer who can make plays with his legs. If he does start the season and has had some time to settle in, he’ll be a problem for the New Orleans defense. Maybe he’s got what it takes to deliver some long-awaited payback to the team that took Manning’s Colts down in the Super Bowl.

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Here’s what Jaguars HC Doug Pederson said about rematch with Chiefs in divisional round

#Jaguars HC Doug Pederson says that executing better and maximizing opportunities is the key to winning the rematch with the #Chiefs in the divisional round.

The AFC’s divisional-round game is set to feel mighty familiar for the Jacksonville Jaguars.

It’s a regular-season rematch with the Kansas City Chiefs, who faced off with the Jaguars at GEHA Field at Arrowhead Stadium back in Week 10. It’s the same opponent and the same location, but the stakes are much higher. Jacksonville also hopes for different results as they lost the initial matchup 27-17 despite Kansas City turning the ball over multiple times.

Speaking to reporters on Monday, Jaguars HC Doug Pederson spoke about what his team needs to do better this time around in order to come out with an upset.

“We have to execute better than we did the first matchup,” Pederson said. “That was one of the things, going back and watching that game again, I thought our execution was off. Again, when you’re playing a good football team, a well-coached team (you have to execute better). Coach (Steve) Spagnuolo on defense – who I know – teams that don’t do a lot schematically, but they do it well and they’ve got great players over there. So, we just have to execute better. We have to take care of the football. We can’t obviously do what we did the other night and expect to win, not against this team. We’ll take a look at it and make some adjustments for the week.” 

Pederson knew heading into the first matchup that he’d need to give his team every possible opportunity, opening up the game with an onside kick. Even though the onside kick was successful, the defense thwarted their attempt to steal a possession, forcing a punt on the drive. In the playoffs, that sense of urgency against an opponent like Kansas City increases according to Pederson.

“When you get this far into the postseason now, everything matters,” Pederson explained. “Every mistake is magnified, every turnover is magnified. Every point you can get – and again – you’re playing an explosive offense, you better score touchdowns. I mean, that just goes without saying. Because you know they’re going to score and you’ve just got to try to minimize as much as possible, but maximize your opportunities.”

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3-game sweeps are more common in the NFL than you might expect

While it’s relatively easy to beat a team three times, the New Orleans Saints still have a tough rematch with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers.

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The NFL’s Divisional Round headline matchup has Drew Brees and the New Orleans Saints hosting Tom Brady and the Tampa Bay Buccaneers in their third meeting of the season, and there’s already a popular narrative making the rounds: that it’s tough to beat the same team three times in a single year.

But it’s a fake narrative. Made up. False. If the Saints lose to the Buccaneers, it won’t be because of any sort of payback after two previous wins.

Thanks to research from Chase Stuart for Football Perspective, we can look back on NFL history and see that 17 teams have been in the Saints’ position before, hosting a playoff game against an opponent they defeated twice in the regular season. And the home team went 12-5 in those meetings — that’s a winning percentage of .706.

So let’s reiterate that point: if the Saints lose to Tampa Bay, it’s because the Buccaneers play a better game, not because they’re more motivated or whatever. The better team is going to come out on top, and that doesn’t consider how many times they met previously.

As Stuart pointed out in his writeup, New Orleans isn’t guaranteed a win just because they’ve won twice already — each team’s point differential (Saints +145, Buccaneers +137) suggests they’re strong on both sides of the ball. Take a moment to throw out the past results and really focus on how these two opponents match up with each other now.

But with all of that said: the Saints themselves were the most recent team to pull off the three-game sweep back in 2017. They won both regular season games with the Carolina Panthers before facing them again in the Wild-Card Round, which they won. Maybe they can do it again this time and advance to another NFC Championship Game.

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NFL Week 13: Will your market broadcast Taysom Hill’s Falcons rematch?

The New Orleans Saints and Atlanta Falcons are set to kick off the NFL’s Week 13 schedule in a highly-anticipated rematch for Taysom Hill.

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All eyes will be on Mercedes-Benz Stadium for the Atlanta Falcons’ rematch with Taysom Hill and the New Orleans Saints, who handed the dirty birds their worst loss of the year just two weeks ago. That 24-9 victory was powered by a commanding day from the Saints defense, which sacked Falcons quarterback Matt Ryan 8 times on the afternoon.

Things should go differently this time around. The Saints ruled out several starters for this game, with cornerback Janoris Jenkins and defensive end Marcus Davenport sidelined by injuries and left tackle Terron Armstead remaining on the COVID-19 reserve list. Atlanta is hoping the return of wide receiver Julio Jones can get their offense on track, while the return of pass rusher Dante Fowler Jr. from COVID-19 reserve could add some juice to their defense.

But will you even have the game on your local FOX affiliate? Check the latest broadcast coverage map from 506sports.com, Here’s how the color coding works out:

  • Green: New Orleans Saints at Atlanta Falcons
  • Yellow: Detroit Lions at Chicago Bears
  • Blue: New York Giants at Seattle Seahawks
  • Orange: Los Angeles Rams at Arizona Cardinals

And here’s everything you need to know about Sunday’s matchup:

Connect with us on our Facebook page and Twitter account  (@TheSaintsWire)

Follow our friends over at Falcons Wire on Twitter (@TheFalconsWire), Facebook, and TheFalconsWire.com

Gannett may earn revenue from audience referrals to betting services.  Newsrooms are independent of this relationship and there is no influence on news coverage.

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Chiefs coaches reflect on Week 5 loss to Raiders

Steve Spagnuolo, Eric Bieniemy and Andy Heck explained what went wrong in Week 5.

The Kansas City Chiefs suffered their lone loss of the season in Week 5 against the Las Vegas Raiders.

On the defensive side of the ball, the coverage on the back end failed, surrendering a number of long touchdowns to various Raiders receivers. When Chiefs DC Steve Spagnuolo went back to review the tape and adjust, he didn’t identify a specific problem. Instead, he identified a number of things that snowballed into the most points ever scored on his defense in Kansas City.

“It’s a little bit of everything,” Spagnuolo explained. “It wasn’t one specific item. I told you guys this before, after the game, I hold myself personally responsible for at least one of them because I just didn’t think it was a good call and I put CW (Charvarius Ward) in a bad down. But look, if that was nine plays, 214 yards if I remember correctly, and it kind of changed the whole game and it did not help our football team. So, the emphasis has been not to allow explosive plays, it’s that every week. I’ve got to be a little bit smarter with the calls that I make and everybody’s eyes and what they’re doing, and everybody does their job a little bit better and hopefully, that doesn’t happen.”

This time around the goal is for the defense to not allow those explosive plays. It’ll take a combination of Spagnuolo doing a better job calling the defense on a play-to-play basis, but he also challenged his players to improve as well.

On the offensive side of the ball, the Chiefs allowed 22 total pressures against the Raiders in Week 5. It’s the single most they’ve allowed in a game all season. Chiefs OL coach Andy Heck explained how his group felt after the game and how they’ve prepared ahead of this game.

“With regards to the game against the Raiders previously, we came out of that thinking, ‘We’ve got to do a better job. We’ve got to put our nose to the grindstone and get to work,'” Heck said. “We got outplayed there. Those guys got the win. They did a nice job. It’s a young, aggressive, talented, well-coached group and they came to play. They played the game the way it was supposed to be played and they got us that day. We know the challenge that’s in store for us. We know what we’re capable of. We’re working our tails off to go out there and compete and get a win.”

Chiefs offensive coordinator Eric Bieniemy was a little blunter with his comments on Week 5, but no one would expect anything less. He says that this game will be all about his players being better prepared, mentally and physically.

“Well, I just thought it was obvious, they played better than what we did,” Bieniemy said. “And at the end of the day, kudos to them. They did an outstanding job of coming in here and doing what they needed to do. I’ve said this before, we got exactly what we deserved. Now it’s up to us to make sure that we’re mentally and physically ready for the battle in which we’re about to face.”

One common thread between all of the Chiefs’ coaches — no one was content with the performance from their unit during the Week 5 loss. That fact alone has been a source of motivation from the coaching staff heading into this pivotal Week 11 rematch with Las Vegas.

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Deontay Wilder calls out Tyson Fury for trying to ‘weasel out’ of rematch

“Now it is time for you to be a man and honor your word, instead of trying to weasel out of our agreement.”

After Tyson Fury knocked out Deontay Wilder in their heavyweight title bout earlier this year, most boxing fans assumed that we had just witnessed the second fight in an eventual trilogy.

The third fight appeared to be agreed to, with only dates needing to be set, with some suggestions that the fight could come as early as this summer. Then COVID-19 happened, the world got turned upside down, and no fight ever came.

According to a furious Deontay Wilder post on Twitter on Saturday, that third fight still isn’t happening. Wilder accused Fury of trying to “weasel out” of their rematch, suggesting that Fury will fight challenger Carlos Takam in London on December 5, and not Wilder.

For their part, Fury’s camp has not announced who the fight will be against on December 5, though Wilder would probably know if it was him, one would sort of have to think.

In a video and series of posts,

Warning: Explicit language below.

It reads:

“When you were going through your darkest time, I told you that if you got yourself together I would give you a title shot. Being a man of my word, I gave you the title shot. When that fight was a draw, I told you that I would give you a rematch. You know I was offered more money to fight [Anthony] Joshua than I was getting to fight you. Again, being a man of my word, I fought you like I said I would.

“In the rematch agreement, there was a rematch clause. Now it is time for you to be a man and honor your word, instead of trying to weasel out of our agreement.”

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Paulie Malignaggi: Deontay Wilder’s handlers should be honest with him

Paulie Malignaggi says Deontay Wilder tried to get him ousted from his commentating gig at Showtime after the first fight with Tyson Fury…

Paulie Malignaggi is widely regarded as one of the sharpest and most perceptive commentators in boxing. Those qualities almost got him into trouble one time, he says.

The former two-division titleholder recently appeared on the SiriusXM boxing show to talk about Deontay Wilder’s excuses after his surprising stoppage loss to Tyson Fury in their rematch Feb. 22 in Las Vegas. Malignaggi explained how Wilder’s excuse-making has been an ongoing pattern stretching back to the first fight with Fury in 2019, which ended up as a disputed draw. Many observers felt Fury outboxed Wilder, who nevertheless managed to score two knockdowns.

“Here’s the problem I have, and this is I think where Deontay’s had a problem in the last couple years,” Malignaggi said. “Nobody around him is honest anymore, in my opinion. OK? Because when you say certain things publicly, you’ve already said them in your circle. … So, starting from the first Fury fight, somebody [should have] been like, ‘Yo, player, you didn’t win that fight. We got away with it.’ Just run with it and say, ‘Yo, I’m gonna make this even better the next time. I got the knockdowns.’ Say you even feel like the result wasn’t a robbery. But don’t go saying like people were out of their minds to think you lost the first fight, when you got out-classed in the first fight.”

Malignaggi and unofficial judge Steve Farhood worked the first Fury-Wilder fight for Showtime. Both of them believed Fury outclassed Wilder, with Malignaggi going so far as to call the draw a “robbery” against Fury. Farhood scored it 115-111 in favor of Fury. Those opinions, according to Malignaggi, weren’t well received by Wilder, who he claims attempted to get both on-air talents booted from the network.

“That was my issue with the whole thing,” Malignaggi said. “(Wilder) tried to get me fired from Showtime and all this other stuff. You know? He was trying to have me and Farhood removed and all this other stuff.”

Malignaggi believes Wilder misunderstood the point of the criticism. He was merely suggesting the fighter shore up some of the more glaring weaknesses in his game.

“So I have sort of an issue with that, because I don’t have an issue with you being competitive and you even not liking the criticism,” Malignaggi continued. “I don’t have an issue with that, because you are not supposed to accept that that easily. But when it’s constructive … when you calm down, you have to be able to understand the difference between constructive criticism and hating criticism. You know? And so, you have to be able to take the constructive criticism and build yourself and get better.”

Malignaggi feels Wilder failed to make the requisite adjustments for the rematch, in which he was unable to cope with Fury’s aggressive tactics. Fury scored two knockdowns before referee Kenny Bayless stopped the bout in the seventh round.

Among Wilder’s excuses afterward was a doozy: He claimed that the 40-pound costume he wore during his ring walk had weakened his legs, which drew a great deal of ridicule. Too many sycophants, Malignaggi said, in Wilder’s corner.

“If everybody’s just agreeing with you, a bunch of yes men, you start to lose track of reality,” Malignaggi said. “And I feel like Deontay putting out that excuse is just another sign, another clue, to say there’s too many yes men around this guy. Because somebody in his team should’ve been like, ‘Yo, you are gonna look like an idiot if you put that out there. Don’t say that.’ Just say, ‘Yo, we got the rematch clause. I’m gonna run it back, and I’ll make this right.’

“Don’t say it was the outfit, though. Don’t go with the outfit.”

Fury and Wilder are expected to meet for a third time on July 18 in Las Vegas.

Trump might invite Tyson Fury and Deontay Wilder to White House

President Trump told reporters Sunday that he is considering inviting heavyweights Tyson Fury and Deontay Wilder to the White House.

Tyson Fury and Deontay Wilder might meet again sooner than expected — inside the Oval Office.

President Trump, who watched the much-ballyhooed Wilder-Fury rematch on Saturday, told reporters that he is considering inviting both heavyweights to the White House.

“That was a great fight,” Trump said outside the White House on Sunday before leaving on a trip to India. “Two great fighters who are really, really exciting. Maybe we have to bring them both to the White House because that was really a good one.

“In fact, I think we will do that.”

The uncharacteristically aggressive Fury (30-0-1, 21 KOs) stopped Wilder in the seventh round at the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas to become the newest titleholder in the division.

Wilder (42-1-1, 41 KOs) has the option of calling for a third fight, as per their contract.

Read more:

Tyson Fury vs. Deontay Wilder III: It’s seems likely

Tyson Fury prepared to face Anthony Joshua if Deontay wilder opts out

Good, bad, worse: Tyson Fury had perfect game plan, perfect execution

Tyson Fury beats the heavyweight title out of Deontay Wilder

Tyson Fury trolled Deontay Wilder ahead of their weigh-in

Tyson Fury was too resourceful here.

Deontay Wilder and Tyson Fury are two of the fiercest fighters in the world, but they also seem like they might be two pretty funny dudes.

The two fighters had live cameras on them ahead of their weigh-in on Friday while they were sitting backstage – Fury happened to notice that both were being broadcast simultaneously. So he took the liberty of trolling Wilder a bit, who was sitting backstage on a coach with his fianceé.

Wilder flipped him a quick bird and then had a little fun with the moment himself. It was a pretty funny moment between the two ahead of their rematch on Saturday night.

Man, that is one resourceful troll from Fury. You’ve got to appreciate that. It’s good to see them both getting a laugh out of this before they have to, you know, bash each other’s heads in.

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Dillian Whyte on Deontay Wilder: ‘(Klitschko) knocked him out’

Dillian Whyte can’t get a straight answer as to why his mandatory status has not translated into a title shot against Deontay Wilder.

It’s no secret that Dillian Whyte has got it in for heavyweight colleague Deontay Wilder. The Londoner has been Wilder’s WBC mandatory for God knows how long, but his status has yet to translate into a title shot. What gives? Whyte himself can’t seem to figure it out, nor has been able to get a convincing answer from the powers that be. In the meantime, he has not been shy about turning to the press to air out his grievances.

“Coward.”

“Chicken.”

“Yellow-livered hillbilly.”

Whyte’s latest bit of trash talk arrives just as Wilder and Tyson Fury conducted a press conference to kick start the promotion for their highly anticipated heavyweight title rematch on Feb. 22 at the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas.

In an interview with Sky Sports, Whyte recounted a long ago incident in which he claims to have witnessed Wilder hit the canvas during a sparring session with then-reigning heavyweight titleholder Wladimir Klitschko.

“I’ve seen him getting knocked out,” Whyte said. “Wladimir knocked him out. (Wilder) knew what happened. He had his hands up. He was roughing Wlad up, bringing the smoke, and he was going wild.

“Wlad backs up, changes his footwork, feinting, feinting, jabs to the body, throws that feint jab, left hook. Wilder had his hands up, he was gone. It wasn’t no knockdown, he was knocked cold. Properly twitching as well.”

There it is. Yet another untold sparring tale lifted out of obscurity. Clearly, Whyte does not subscribe to the oft-cited brotherly code, “What happens in the gym, stays in the gym.”

“That’s why they probably didn’t want him to fight Wlad,” Whyte (27-1, 18 KOs) continued, “because Wlad was going to fight him as a pro and Wilder never fancied it the whole time.”

Meanwhile, Wilder (42-0-1, 41 KOs) seems to be doing alright for himself. After a pay-per-view outing against Luis Ortiz last November, in which he knocked out the Cuban in the seventh round, he will attempt to settle unfinished business with Fury in another pay-per-view clash. The first fight ended in a controversial draw.

Whyte, on the other hand, is coming off a particularly sluggish performance against Mariusz Wach on the undercard of the Andy Ruiz Jr.-Anthony Joshua rematch on Dec. 7. Before that, his career nearly came down in flames when he allegedly tested positive for a banned substance before his fight against Oscar Rivas in July. The issue was exacerbated by the fact Rivas and his team were not aware of the test result. The WBC dropped Whyte’s mandatory status but reinstating him after UK Anti-Doping cleared him of wrongdoing. 

As it pertains to a match-up with Wilder, Whyte was a bit more charitable, noting that “It would be a tough fight because he is quite agile with awkward movement. I would expect a tough fight, but I believe I can knock Wilder out.”

“People might laugh, but I believe I can get to him and knock him out. It wouldn’t be a fight where I would jab my way in. I’d run at him in the first round and start brawling and, if I get chinned, then so be it.”