New York Daily News

NO CAM DO FOR NEWTON

Saints sack Carolina comeback

- BY SAM FARMER SAINTS PANTHERS 31 26

NEW ORLEANS — The New Orleans Saints took the next step in their revival tour Sunday, knocking off the Carolina Panthers in a first-round playoff game, 31-26, and setting the stage for an epic showdown in Minnesota.

Not many people saw this coming, not after three consecutiv­e 7-9 seasons for the Saints, and the sun appearing to set on the illustriou­s career of quarterbac­k Drew Brees.

But Brees, who’s in the final year of his contract, has no plans to quietly walk off stage. He threw for 376 yards and a pair of touchdowns against the Panthers, pushing the Saints’ playoff record in the Superdome to 5-0. One of those scores was an 80-yard touchdown to former Panthers receiver Ted Ginn Jr., the Saints’ longest play of the season. “It’s hard to beat a team three times,” said Brees, whose team swept the regular-season series with Carolina. “Especially a team that’s as prideful as the Panthers.”

The Saints, who finished the regular season with the league’s fifth-best rushing attack, were limited to 41 yards on the ground – 88 fewer than their average. “It don’t matter, as long as we keep getting these W’s,” Mark Ingram said. “At this point, we’ve just got to win games. We don’t care what happens. If it comes to us and we’ve got to make plays, so be it. If Drew’s got to toss it around in the air and throw it to all our receivers and tight ends, so be it.”

What lies ahead is a divisional round filled with mismatches in terms of quarterbac­k experience. It’s Brees versus Minnesota’s Case Keenum, New England’s Tom Brady vs. Tennessee’s Marcus Mariota, Pittsburgh’s Ben Roethlisbe­rger vs. Jacksonvil­le’s Blake Bortles, and Atlanta’s Matt Ryan vs. Philadelph­ia’s Nick Foles. Quarterbac­ks don’t go head to head, of course, but in a pass-happy league, the success of a team largely hinges on the shoulders of the player who touches the ball on every snap.

Sunday’s matchup featured two of the NFL’s more experience­d hands, Brees and Carolina’s Cam Newton, who kept his team in the game even though the Panthers trailed throughout.

Newton threw for 349 yards and had a pair of touchdown passes in the fourth quarter that twice pulled his team within five points. He didn’t do excessive damage with his feet, running eight times for 37 yards, all but 17 of which came in the first half. “We knew if we could make him a pocket quarterbac­k, we could win,” Saints defensive end Cam Jordan said. “That’s been our key to success.”

What figures to be much debated was that Newton had to leave the game for a play after absorbing a punishing hit to the head – one that had him looking unstable – yet cleared concussion protocol and was allowed to return. That came with nine minutes left in the game, when the Carolina quarterbac­k twisted out of a tackle and as he was rising from a hunched position was blasted in the face by New Orleans defensive tackle David Onyemata for a 10-yard loss. Newton lay on the turf for several moments, was helped to his feet, and made his way to the sideline even though the sack came on second down. Before he could get off the field, Newton had to sit down and ostensibly regain his equilibriu­m with team medical personnel surroundin­g him.

When asked if Newton went through the concussion protocol, Panthers Coach Ron Rivera said: “No, he actually got poked in the eye. They took him in (the sideline tent) just to make sure as a precaution­ary, but when he was sitting on the ground, they were trying to wipe whatever when he got poked. So that’s what that was.”

Less than two weeks ago, the NFL announced new concussion protocol standards that would “require a locker room concussion evaluation for all players demonstrat­ing gross or sustained vertical instabilit­y (e.g. stumbling or falling to the ground when trying to stand).” Newton, who did not go to the locker room, sat out one play and returned the following series. Although Newton would throw another touchdown pass after coming back into the game – a toss to rookie Christian McCaffrey that went for 56 yards – the New Orleans defense ultimately slammed the door on any Panthers comeback.

The Panthers gave the Saints and their raucous crowd a scare down the stretch, getting all the way to the New Orleans 21 in the final minute before three incomplete passes by Newton – including an intentiona­l-grounding call – and a game-clinching 17-yard sack on fourth down.

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