Boston Herald

It’s a Brees for Saints

- By BRETT MARTEL

NEW ORLEANS — Saints All-Pro defensive end Cameron Jordan grinned playfully as he glanced up at a bottle of red wine in the top shelf of his locker and asked if anyone knew Carolina quarterbac­k Cam Newton’s address.

A bottle with the name “Jordan” on the label — even if it isn’t made by the Saints star’s family — might be the last thing Newton wants right now.

Drew Brees and his receiving corps came through when Carolina stifled New Orleans’ prolific backfield, and a relentless Jordan spearheade­d a late defensive stand to seal a 31-26 an NFC wild card victory yesterday.

“You can’t be more happy about the way we played in terms of how we finished the game,” Jordan said. “We almost let them back in the game, but here I am standing as winner. Here I am, as a Cam Jordan, sending Cam Newton a bottle of Jordan wine.”

Brees passed for 376 yards and two touchdowns, but one more completion would have considerab­ly lowered the stress level on the Saints’ sideline. Coach Sean Payton kept the offense on the field on fourthand-2 with two minutes remaining and Carolina out of timeouts, hoping for one more first down that would have allowed New Orleans to run out the clock.

But Brees couldn’t find an open receiver, was flushed out of the pocket and decided his best option was to throw it up for grabs. It was intercepte­d by safety Mike Adams, which turned out better for New Orleans than an incompleti­on because it meant the Panthers had to start from their own 31 instead of midfield.

Still, Newton completed three straight passes to move the Panthers to the Saints 26-yard line with 58 seconds left before New Orleans’ resistance stiffened.

“I’m frustrated,” Newton said. “I hate that I couldn’t do enough to get a win today for a lot of guys that I think so highly of.

“I just have to be better,” he added. “I’m not going to take the cowardly way and point somebody else out.”

The comeback bid began to fizzle when Jordan induced an intentiona­l grounding penalty on Newton, making it third-and-25 on the Saints 34 and a requiring 10-second runoff.

After an incompleti­on in the end zone, Vonn Bell sacked Newton on a safety blitz, ensuring the Saints (12-5) swept all three meetings with Carolina (11-6) this season, in addition to winning the first postseason game they’ve played in four seasons.

“The coaches wanted to get the ball out of the quarterbac­k’s hands fast,” Bell said. “They dialed it up and I said, ‘Go make a play.’ ”

Brees’ touchdowns went for 80 yards to Ted Ginn and 9 yards to tight end Josh Hill. Fullback Zach Line and running back Alvin Kamara each ran for short touchdowns, the latter set up by Michael Thomas’ 46yard reception.

“What we’ve shown offensivel­y is we have a lot of ways to be effective,” Brees said, mentioning clutch first-down catches by Brandon Coleman and Willie Snead in addition to the big plays by Ginn and Thomas. “The ball was spread around quite a bit and guys were making plays when they had the chances.”

Thomas caught eight passes for 131 yards on a day when the Saints needed the passing game to compensate for a ground game that struggled to get going. When he noticed the Panthers playing with one safety deep instead of their usual two, Thomas said: “You’re licking your chops with a quarterbac­k like Drew Brees and the talent we have. We knew what we had to do.”

 ?? Ap photo ?? iT’S Over: drew Brees (right) shakes hands with cam Newton after the Saints beat the Panthers yesterday in New Orleans.
Ap photo iT’S Over: drew Brees (right) shakes hands with cam Newton after the Saints beat the Panthers yesterday in New Orleans.

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