Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Saints’ Payton fuming over officiatin­g in loss

- By Les East

NEW ORLEANS » Saints coach Sean Payton had a full night and morning to reflect on and review how much of an effect officiatin­g really had on New Orleans’ narrow loss to Atlanta.

By Friday afternoon, it sounded like the coach had decided that his initial concerns were warranted, and that it’s a problem the league should address.

“The officiatin­g was extremely poor,” Payton said in a conference call. “Inconsiste­nt would be a great way to put it. I thought that had a lot to do with the way this game ended.”

The way the game ended was costly for the Saints.

New Orleans (9-4) missed an opportunit­y to strengthen its hold on first place in the NFC South, which now has three teams within a game of one another; Carolina (8-4) sits in second place and Atlanta (8-5) in third. The Saints also lost several players to injury during Thursday’s 2017 loss, but Payton seemed most concerned by the penalty flags that were thrown against his team — or weren’t thrown against the Falcons.

Payton said he “went through every one of ‘em — and the ones that weren’t called. Too many inconsiste­ncies.”

The Saints were penalized 11 times for 87 yards, and the Falcons gained nine first downs by penalty.

Payton would not address all of the calls he disagreed with, but he did single out a roughing-the-passer call on defensive lineman Sheldon Rankins against Matt Ryan. The penalty came at the end of third-down incompleti­on, keeping alive a drive that ended with Atlanta’s first touchdown.

“I know what that rule’s in place for,” Payton said, “but it wasn’t in place for what happened with Sheldon.”

The officiatin­g “has been a problem all year and it’s something that’s going to have to be addressed from a leadership standpoint at the top in our league office.

“It’s frustratin­g when you have a game, instead of it being decided on the field like it’s supposed to, you have a crew make so many mistakes in one event.”

After Matt Bryant’s 52yard goal gave Atlanta a 2017 lead with 3:49 left, Drew Brees drove New Orleans into position for a tying field goal or winning touchdown.

But linebacker Deion Jones made a leaping intercepti­on of a Brees pass in the end zone with 1:25 left.

The Saints lost their last chance to get the ball back when an unsportsma­nlike conduct penalty on Payton — who had angrily rushed onto the field to communicat­e with an official — gave the Falcons a first down.

Payton said after the game that he was trying to call a timeout when one of the officials “asked me again.”

“I said, ‘I’ve already called the timeout,’” Payton said. “I probably said it with a little more oomph or vigor than I was supposed to, but I had enough. I’ve got to be smarter than that.”

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