Offense Gaining Respect After Struggling at Start : Saints: Unit is finally clicking, compiling 342 yards and 22 first downs in the first three quarters against the Rams.
ANAHEIM â Saintsâ Coach Jim Mora took the podium after his teamâs 37-14 rout of the Rams Sunday, squinted into the glare of the television lights and asked, âOK, what are your negative questions?â
âWhat happened on the missed extra point?â someone in the sea of note pads and microphones shouted.
Moraâs knees buckled, his eyes rolled back in his head and he pretended to faint. Everyone--even Mora--laughed.
Jim Mora mugging it up for the amusement of the media?
The Saints winning handily without the aid of even one sack?
A New Orleans offense scoring 37 points?
Whatâs going on here? Whatâs an NFL fan got left to believe in? When the subject of the playoffs came up at the office Christmas party, you used to be able to nod knowingly and say, âThe Saintsâ defense is awesome, but theyâll never get to the Super Bowl with that offense.â
These days, you might find someone whoâll want to argue, and theyâll probably point to Sundayâs game at Anaheim Stadium as part of the reason the Saints do indeed have what it takes to come marching into Pasadena in January.
The Saints racked up 342 yards and 22 first downs in the first three quarters, took a 37-0 lead early in the fourth quarter and looked a lot like a team that is more than just a collection of quarterback-bashing linebackers.
âOffensively, it was our best game of the year,â Mora said. âWe ran and passed, we moved the ball well and we scored points. We did a good job in our goal-line offense and we did not turn the ball over.
âI feel like weâve really made strides offensively as the season has gone on. We were struggling early, really struggling. But weâre improving, and you can see the progress.â
In the first six games of the season, the Saints managed only one rushing touchdown. In the next five, they scored three. Sunday, they got three in one game.
âEverybody always says, âOh the Saints. Great special teams. Great defense. The offense? Well. . . . But once it all comes together, look out,â said fullback Craig Heyward, whose nine-yard touchdown run put the Saints ahead, 37-0.
âWe couldnât let ourselves get caught up in what the media thinks. If we did, weâd wake up and say, âWhy go to work?â â
The Saintsâ offensive unit has been working, however, in the shadow of the NFLâs No. 2 defense--No. 1 in fewest points allowed--but working and improving. The emphasis in New Orleans is always on ball control, and these Saints have been doing a very good job of hoarding the football. In each of the last four games, they have held onto the ball for more than 30 minutes.
And even a little bit of offense is exciting for Saint fans, who have seen their team fail in each of its three postseason appearances. A day like Sunday is almost too much to ask.
âI donât think thereâs been a Saints team that has established what we have been able to establish, except for in â87 and that was the strike year, and I donât think people consider that a real season,â Heyward said. âNow, people are looking at us as a complete team and they know theyâre in for a tough ballgame.â
The Saints are 11-3 and headed for another playoff game this winter. They may not be the 49ers or Bills when it comes to offensive dominance, but they also no longer have to pray that their defense can make two field goals and a safety hold up.
âThey have a very good defense and theyâre going to go a long way just because of what theyâve got defensively,â Ram quarterback Jim Everett said. âOffensively, it looks like (quarterback Bobby) Hebert is playing well and now theyâve got the running game.
âSo theyâre going to match up well with anyone.â
Hebert, who completed 15 of 25 passes for 238 yards and two touchdowns Sunday, says the Saints have to quit worrying about what they perceive to be a lack of deserved respect and concentrate on winning in December and January.
âNo, we donât get the recognition of some teams, but we keep it in perspective,â he said. âNew Orleans is a small market, so we just try to take care of our business on the field.
âHopefully we can continue to play well and win a championship.â
That would pretty much take care of the Rodney Dangerfield gig, but Mora knows that once the regular season ends, every game means a battle with a proven winner.
âThere are a lot of teams going into the playoffs that are winning football games now,â he said. âSo when you get into the playoffs, itâs a completely different story.
âWeâre still fighting for a division championship and weâve got a shot at it, although every time San Francisco wins, it looks bleaker for us. Weâve still got two (regular-season) games and things can happen. Iâll just hold my breath and hope that no one gets injured.
âBut I feel good about this football team right now. Weâre playing well and weâre playing with a lot of confidence.â
The Saints, who play Buffalo next week in New Orleans, have the incentive down the stretch of ensuring a home-field advantage in early playoff games. But you canât blame them if they take a few moments to daydream about the possibility of a Super Bowl berth and a couple of weeks in the limelight.
âI hope weâre peaking at the right time,â Heyward said, âbut we certainly still have a lot to accomplish. Once we win a Super Bowl, then we can sit back and say, âWeâre damn good,â and there ainât nobody who can argue.â