Sean Payton wasn’t thrilled when asked if he butchered a decision

Sean Payton had a bit of a beef with a Whole Foods butcher.

It simply wasn’t a great idea to test Sean Payton on his decisions after the New Orleans Saints’ 48-46 loss to the San Francisco 49ers Sunday. Not the media. The butcher at Whole Foods.

The coach has his Saints in first place but that wasn’t enough for the butcher at the supermarket to avoid questioning why the coach decided to go for a two-point conversion in the loss.

The discussion first came to light during the coach’s radio show.

“I was actually shopping for my dinner at Whole Foods,” Payton said on his WWL radio with Bobby Hebert and Zach Strief on Monday.. “People are like, ‘Oh, he actually shops for his dinner?’ Yeah, I shop for my dinner. And I go down the aisle with an aisle cart like everyone else.”

On Thursday, Payton went into more detail about it, giving the play-by-play.

Per Nola.com

“I was kind of in that sliding down the aisle, got the produce right here to the left, you see the meats, I made a right and I’m heading for the coffee,” I thought they were all kind of in jest, and I heard one of them say something about, ‘Why’d you go for two?’ I kept walking toward the dairy and I’m like, ‘Ah, I’m not letting this go, I’m turning around.’”

Payton said that the butcher just wanted to know, so he obliged — and gave some jest back.

“I would never that early, but when we get a penalty, now we’re on the 1-yard line and we’re 50 percent closer than the 2. He got it, then I gave him a hard time and said, ‘Some of these cuts don’t look good to me.’ That was what happened. It was in jest. We were having a little fun.”

Wonder how the coach will handle things when the steaks, er stakes, rise in the postseason.

 

Ranking the 12 biggest changes in sports in 2019

A new era of NFL quarterbacks, juiced baseballs and the resurgent Lakers top Touchdown Wire’s list of the 12 biggest changes in sports.

For the better part of the past decade, Tom Brady and Drew Brees were the NFL’s two top quarterbacks. But that’s no longer true.

Brady and Brees are still great. But they’ve got company at the top of the mountain with the likes of Patrick Mahomes, Lamar Jackson, Dak Prescott, Deshaun Watson and Josh Allen emerging as the next generation of great quarterbacks. That’s a major change in the NFL landscape.

Change is inevitable in the world of sports. In 2019, there have been myriad significant changes in sports, and we’re not just talking about the changing of the guard at quarterback in the NFL.

We’re talking about things such as big-name coaches landing in new places, NBA teams rising and falling, a first-time champion in men’s NCAA basketball, allegations of a juiced baseball and new looks with new uniforms.

Those are just a few of the changes that took place this year. Let’s examine the 12 most significant changes in the sports world in 2019.

12. The spread of legalized sports gambling

(Photo by Ethan Miller/Getty Images)

For years, betting on sports was illegal in the United States, with the exception of Nevada. Otherwise gamblers had to turn to offshore and online gambling or bet with illegal bookies. But all that has changed recently. Sports gambling now is legal in Arkansas, Delaware, Mississippi, Indiana, Iowa, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island and West Virginia in addition to Nevada. Gambling also has been legalized, pending launch, in several other states with legislation pending in approximately 20 other states. Only a handful of states have taken no action toward legalizing sports gambling.

Former Saints coach Joe Brady wins 2019 Broyles Award with LSU Tigers

LSU Tigers coordinator Joe Brady, formerly of the New Orleans Saints, won the 2019 Broyles Award for the nation’s best assistant coach.

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Big news broke Tuesday for a former New Orleans Saints coach, when LSU Tigers passing game coordinator Joe Brady was named the winner of the 2019 Broyles Award. Brady left Saints coach Sean Payton’s staff earlier this year to take a position under Tigers coach Ed Orgeron, and immediately made an impact in modernizing and diversifying LSU’s playbook on offense. With Brady’s influence, the Tigers jumped from an average of 402.1 yards per game (and 32.4 points per outing) in 2018 to eye-popping marks of 554.5 yards and 47.8 points per game in 2019.

The Broyles Award is handed out to the best assistant coach in the nation, who is chosen from a list of nominees submitted by college football teams. Brady is the first Tigers assistant to win this recognition since then-defensive coordinator John Chavis did so back in 2011. Saints defensive line coach Ryan Nielsen was twice nominated for the Broyles Award during his tenure with the North Carolina State Wolfpack, where he coached before New Orleans poached him.

Brady’s influence on the Tigers offense has been palpable, having introduced many concepts that are staples of the Saints’ playbook developed by Sean Payton while bringing in his on philosophies, tendencies, and play designs. He’s been instrumental in the Heisman Trophy campaign for Tigers quarterback Joe Burrow, as well as the team’s national title aspirations.

His next game will come against the Oklahoma Sooners in the Peach Bowl on Dec. 28, with the winner advancing to the national championship game against the winner of the Fiesta Bowl matchup between the Clemson Tigers and Ohio State Buckeyes. That title game will be played inside the Mercedes-Benz Superdome, the home of the Saints, creating an opportunity for the many fans with shared loyalty for the Saints and Tigers to take over a familiar venue.

Brady may be the fast-rising star in the college football ranks, and it’s a testament to the staff Payton has built in New Orleans that success stories like Brady have sprung from his coaching tree. He’s expected to be a popular name as new coaching staffs and hirings start filing in during the offseason, but for now, he’s laser-focused on winning it all for LSU.

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Deonte Harris got back up to speed quickly for Saints vs. 49ers

The New Orleans Saints needed rookie returns specialist Deonte Harris to make an impact against the San Francisco 49ers, and he impressed.

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The New Orleans Saints went into their game with the San Francisco 49ers with an aggressive mindset, and few players embodied that approach stronger than rookie returns specialist Deonte Harris. Harris returned quietly from a hamstring injury in the Saints’ Thanksgiving game against the Atlanta Falcons, picking up just 30 yards on two kick returns and a punt return, but his numbers versus the 49ers could not have been more different.

The rookie fielded five kickoffs to gain 155 yards, a season-high. He returned a pair of punts to pick up 37 yards, his third-best mark on the year so far and his highest since Week 7’s game with the Chicago Bears, in which he gained 46 punt return yards (and lost a 67-yard touchdown return to a phantom holding penalty). Combine all of his touches against San Francisco — including a 13-yard pickup on a screen pass and an 8-yard gain on an end-around handoff — and he gave the Saints 205 all-purpose yards on the day.

Saints coach Sean Payton credited Harris with his consistent production on kick returns, noting that the rookie was taking advantage of poor kicking by San Francisco rather than following a “green light” directive to try and make a play on every kickoffs, no matter the odds. It’s a sign of Harris’s intelligence that he saw an opportunity to help his team, and took it.

Where does this stand in recent Saints history? Harris has an argument to make as the best special teams returner in the Sean Payton era, because his 269 punt return yards this year trails just two other single-season performances going back to Payton’s hiring in 2006. Only Reggie Bush’s 2008 season (270 punt return yards) and Darren Sproles’ 2011 campaign (294) are above Harris’s output, and he still has three games to play. He needs 26 combined yards in those games to set the high-water mark for Payton’s tenure.

His next game comes on ‘Monday Night Football’ against the Indianapolis Colts, who will be without all-time great kicker Adam Vinatieri after his recent knee surgery. Vinatieri has not been handling kickoff duties for the Colts, with third-year punter Rigoberto Sanchez standing in. Harris will have opportunities to build on his impressive rookie season in front of a national audience.

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Drew Brees, Sean Payton don’t regret botched two-point conversions

The New Orleans Saints took an aggressive approach in their loss to the San Francisco 49ers, but Sean Payton and Drew Brees don’t regret it.

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The New Orleans Saints were determined to stay aggressive in their game with the San Francisco 49ers. They expected it to be a close game, where an extra possession or score here or there would ultimately make the difference. If you had told them going in that the final score would end up being just two points apart, they wouldn’t have been surprised.

Now, no one expected it to be 48-46 as time expired. The Saints didn’t take much solace in the success they had against the NFL’s best pass defense, but it’s impossible not to be encouraged by all of the scoring opportunities they created. Count Saints quarterback Drew Brees among the group who was happy to be competitive in so many high-leverage situations.

“You know you’re in that type of game, right?” Brees said during his postgame media availability. “We’re going to play aggressive. We faked the punt. We brought just about (every) kickoff out of the endzone and hit on a couple of those. We had a great return there. Let’s see if we can break one of these.”

Saints coach Sean Payton wasn’t nearly as eager to get into the specifics of his team’s approach. Still smarting from the loss, Payton summed up his decision to go for it on an early two-point conversion moved up by a 49ers penalty as, “Flag puts it at the one (yard line). That’s why.”

Fortunately, Brees was feeling more amiable to explain his team’s thinking in that situation: “Those are difference makers. If you just look at the statistics if you’re going from the two-yard line versus going from the one-yard line it’s a big difference. We had a play we liked. Oddly enough, they miss a line(backer). They had an extra guy who shouldn’t have been there.”

As Brees said, that first two-point try was snuffed out by the unexpected 49ers defender, who crashed down on the ball-carrier unblocked. A miscommunication between Brees and his receiver on a later two-point attempt failed to add any points, but these are obviously gambles the Saints are comfortable making.

“So, unfortunately, the play didn’t work,” Brees continued, “but that’s a big play in the game if we get (it). We’re going to play aggressive. We’re going to take chances. We’re not going to making excuses.”

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Former Saints CB Jabari Greer shares his thoughts on always-evolving offense

Jabari Greer practiced against the New Orleans Saints offense every day for almost four years, and he’s noticed changes in today’s team.

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Jabari Greer was one of the unsung heroes of the 2009 New Orleans Saints squad, which won Super Bowl XLIV and brought the city its first Lombardi Trophy. The veteran cornerback started several years for New Orleans and consistently manned up against the best receivers in the league.

His playing career ended with a torn ACL, but Greer has found success in covering NFL games in Canada for TSN and contributing to the SEC Network as a college football analyst, a role he’s enjoyed as a proud Tennessee Volunteers alum.

When prompted by a fan to discuss the changes in the 2019 Saints offense against the unit Greer played alongside from 2009 to 2013, Greer acknowledged the differences seen today while praising Saints coach Sean Payton and his staff for creatively working with the personnel they have, and not trying to put players in positions they aren’t suited for.

“Great question! I believe the Saints have adjusted their offense based on the personnel they have available, and not draft based on the system that is in place,” Greer wrote from his official Twitter account. “That is good coaching! Humbly asking ‘Who do we have, and how can we make ‘em shine.'”

A great illustration of Greer’s point would be Taysom Hill. Nominally a quarterback, the Saints have developed Hill’s positional versatility to a point where he’s scoring multiple touchdowns (both on the ground and through the air) while making an impact on special teams with blocked punts, all in the same game.

Obviously it would be great if the Saints had the personnel to where Payton doesn’t have to scheme up so much smoke and so many mirrors. If they had, for example, another wide receiver to make plays opposite Michael Thomas then things would be going much more smoothly — but their best options, Ted Ginn Jr. and Tre’Quan Smith, have caught just 38% of their targets since the bye week.

The Saints will have opportunities to improve that position group in the offseason. But for now, it’s like Greer said — good coaching and creative adjustments to personnel are helping the Saints win the day, week in and week out.

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Sean Payton reminds Saints fans to show out, get loud for early 49ers game

New Orleans Saints coach Sean Payton values his homefield advantage, and wants fans ready for an early kickoff with the San Francisco 49ers.

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New Orleans saints head coach Sean Payton appreciates the impact his home crowd can make inside the Mercedes-Benz Superdome, and he’s doing all he can to inspire their support again this week. And it isn’t the first time he’s gone out of his way to compliment — and challenge — the rowdy Who Dat Nation; back in October, Payton suggested fans would wake up easier with help from a Bloody Mary cocktail on their way to a noon kickoff against the Arizona Cardinals. He’s driving that point home again ahead of Sunday’s game with the San Francisco 49ers.

“We think about a lot of things, we think about everything, is it going to be loud, can we be louder?” Payton said during his Thursday media availability before Saints practice. “It’s going to be a noon game. Does the crowd realize how much of an impact they can have. Do they truly realize that?”

However, the visiting team isn’t quite so mindful of the crowd. 49ers running back Raheem Mostert has been impressed by how well fans have traveled this season for road games with teams lacking homefield support, like the Cincinnati Bengals, Washington Redskins, and Los Angeles Rams. He’s said he expects Sunday’s game in the Superdome to feel like a neutral site game.

We’ll see how that works out for him. If Payton gets his way and Saints fans turn out in droves even with a midday kickoff, there shouldn’t be any doubt by the time the final whistle calls.

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Panthers fire head coach Ron Rivera, announce staff changes

The Carolina Panthers have given the New Orleans Saints more trouble than other NFC South rivals, but they fired longtime coach Ron Rivera.

The Carolina Panthers announced Tuesday that they fired longtime head coach Ron Rivera, who was four games away from from finishing his ninth year with the team. Rivera’s Panthers teams have given the New Orleans Saints more consistent trouble than any other NFC South division rival; he leaves having accomplished a 76-33-1 record (.695), with four of Carolina’s eight division titles.  They peaked with a 15-1 season in 2015, ultimately falling short in Super Bowl 50.

In his place, the Panthers designated secondary coach Perry Fewell as the interim head coach, with offensive coordinator Norv Turner his special assistant. Quarterbacks coach Scott Turner will pull double-duty as the offensive coordinator.

This move signals that Panthers owner David Tepper is throwing in the towel on the 2019 season, in which his team has slid to a 5-7 record and lost five of their last six games. With franchise quarterback Cam Newton on the injured reserve list and a playoffs berth growing further distant, they should focus on further evaluating backup passer Kyle Allen and rookie quarterback Will Grier.

Tepper released a brief statement through the team’s official webiste, saying: “I believe this is the best decision for the long-term success of our team. I have a great deal of respect for Ron and the contributions he has made to this franchise and to this community. I wish him the best. I will immediately begin the search for the next head coach of the Carolina Panthers.”

The Saints will close out the regular season with a Dec. 29 road game against the Panthers at Bank of America Stadium. It’s anyone’s guess who will be playing quarterback or filling in at head coach during that game, much less what could be an offseason filled with even more changes.

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What’s with the penalty disparity between the Saints and their opponents?

The New Orleans Saints rank among the most-penalized NFL teams, but their opponents are playing uncharacteristically clean against them.

The New Orleans Saints have overcome plenty of adversity this year, ranging from the five-week loss of starting quarterback Drew Brees to an opening-half schedule that saw them travel to play four opponents on the road in their first six weeks. They’ve also dealt with extra attention from the NFL’s referees and their officiating crews. That’s just part of the game, but this season (and in recent weeks specifically), it’s been unprecedented.

Check out the chart above from Jeff Asher of AH Datalytics, sourced from Pro Football Reference. From what we can see there, the Saints and their opponents have largely been penalized at similar rates; New Orleans played largely-clean football from 2006 to 2009, though a brief window from 2015 to 2017 saw their sloppy play benefit their opponents. But this latest surge in fouls has been very clearly one-sided.

The Saints are averaging 7.9 penalties per game, which ranks eighth-worst in the NFL. That’s turned into 68.3 penalty yards per game, nearly the equivalent of an offensive drive downfield after good starting field position. It’s kept a number of opposing drives alive, with New Orleans’ opponents gaining the second-most first downs by penalty per game (2.8) in the league.

And as the chart above demonstrates, the teams playing the Saints are not being held to the same standard. Those opponents are averaging the fewest penalties per game (5.3) and penalty yards surrendered per game (40.6) in football, granting the Saints the second-fewest first downs by penalty per game (0.92) around the NFL.

In a perfect world, officials would keep things fair and balanced and refuse to let one team get away with foul-worthy plays while turning a blind eye to their opponents. However, so long as people — with limited vision and too much autonomy to make judgment calls — are in charge, mistakes are going to happen. You would expect one team to end the day with fewer penalties than their opponent; typically speaking, some teams are better-coached and more disciplined than others. But the difference between how the Saints are being judged and how their opponents are being officiated deserves inspection.

One possible answer for that disparity could be that the Saints are playing a schedule filled with the league’s fewest-penalized teams. That’s not the case. New Orleans has played many teams ranked inside the top half of the league in penalties and penalty yards per game. We’ve broken down their penalty stats per game against what they were fouled for in the Saints’ games in the chart below:

This illustrates how officiating was nearly even to start the year, if marginally beneficial to the Saints. But over time (especially in recent weeks) there has been a visible shift in opposing teams being fouled less often against the Saints than in their typical games. Things bottomed out in Week 6 against the Jacksonville Jaguars, when they were fouled for 6.8 penalties and 61.5 penalty yards below their season averages. There’s been a clear shift since that game.

On the whole, the Saints’ opponents have averaged 2.2 fewer penalties per game and 21.4 fewer penalty yards per game when playing against New Orleans than in their typical outings. In a vacuum, that isn’t much. But when considered in the big picture, those numbers snowball into 35.2 penalties and 342.4 penalty yards over a 16-game season.

So what gives? Are the Saints playing sloppy, while their opponents suddenly turn in their cleanest games of the year back-to-back-to-back? Or are the officials allowing the teams playing the Saints to get away with the ticky-tack fouls that happen on every down (holding, hands-to-the-face, that sort of thing) while not giving New Orleans the same leeway? It’s bizarre to say the least.

A big part of the problem is limited sample size. Analyzing the game from a quantifiable perspective like this works in other sports like baseball and basketball because there are literally hundreds (if not thousands) of data points to work with, whereas football begins and ends very quickly, relying on a 16-game regular season and four-stage postseason tournament. Instances like this are easy to explain away as an outlier, a freak accident, against what recent history informs us. That said, it’s totally understandable if fans aren’t satisfied with that explanation. It’s frustrating to see your team get fouled for what the other squad gets away with, week in and week out.

For his part, Saints coach Sean Payton isn’t going to chalk up these lost plays and surrendered yards to any biases from the NFL’s officials. He’s preached the need for improved coaching from his staff as well as better discipline from his players, summing up the situation after their penalty-filled Week 12 win over the Carolina Panthers as, “We are going to need to be smarter in bigger games.” That makes sense, because it’s all he and his team can control.

Hopefully the Saints can clean it up and give the officials fewer opportunities to impact their games. Despite dealing with quality opponents and a fine-combed approach by the zebras, the Saints are still 10-2 and owners of their third consecutive NFC South title.

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Sean Payton exasperated by ’embarrassing’ repeated onside kick flops

New Orleans Saints coach Sean Payton saw plenty to like in their NFC South-clinching win over the Atlanta Falcons, but not on onside kicks.

New Orleans Saints coach Sean Payton saw plenty to like in his team’s NFC South-clinching win over the Atlanta Falcons, but not on special teams. He watched with increasing irritation as the Falcons recovered three consecutive onside kicks in the game’s final moments, though the first was wiped out by an Atlanta penalty. Payton addressed the chronic problem during his postgame press conference.

“It’s not good. It’s embarrassing. We’ve got to get it cleaned up. It’s not the first time that this has happened now. We went through this (already),” Payton said, referencing similar issues in a game with the Chicago Bears earlier this season. Two of the Saints’ best pass-catchers, Michael Thomas and Alvin Kamara, each failed to secure the live ball after it was kicked onside by Falcons specialist Younghoe Koo.

It’s obviously an area that Payton plans to emphasize in practice, continuing: “We’ve got to get that cleaned up. We’ve got to make sure we understand what we’re telling them. Clearly after one or two of them [onside kicks], you saw it wasn’t going very deep and we’re still lined up 10 yards behind the [line]…so we’ll get that cleaned up. That’s on us.”

Those late-game possession steals gave the Falcons hope in a game that shouldn’t have been so close. They turned those two drives into 15 more plays against the Saints defense, but to their credit New Orleans kept battling despite having logged 90-plus snaps in the game already. Of those 15 plays, the Falcons offense surrendered 5 sacks (one of them was nullified by a Saints penalty) and left with just 42 net yards from scrimmage.

That speaks to how talented this Saints team is. Even when one phase of the game breaks down (as the special teams unit did here), another group is ready and able to step up to secure the win. Once Payton and his staff get these issues cleared away, they just might be unstoppable.

Maybe he should try again to recruit retired coach Mike Westhoff, who shared a cup of coffee with the Saints back in August after serving as the team’s de facto special teams coordinator the last two years. Westhoff resumed his retirement after the Saints shook up their special teams staff during the offseason, hiring longtime Miami Dolphins coordinator Darren Rizzi and his assistants.

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