New York Post

Panthers, Saints forget past with season on line

- By BRETT MARTEL — AP

NEW ORLEANS — Saints coach Sean Payton takes a small measure of comfort in New Orleans’ regular-season sweep of Carolina.

It means the Saints (11-5) play the Panthers (11-5) in the Superdome, where New Orleans hasn’t lost a playoff game since 1992 and is 4-0 in the postseason under Payton.

Beyond that, however, the Saints’ coach asserts teams evolve over the course of a season as they develop chemistry and adjust to roster or positional changes brought on by injuries.

And on Sunday, there will be a different psychology to performing in the postseason, when losing brings the season to a sudden end.

“Each game’s different,” said Payton, whose team took its first NFC South crown since 2011 by virtue of a head-to-head tiebreaker over Carolina.

“From the midpoint of the season, when [Carolina] got on a roll, you can see the confidence grow with that team. And you’re also talking about a team that [two years ago] was in the Super Bowl,” Payton said. “The prior two games don’t matter.”

Payton pointed out the Panthers not only defeated two of the top teams in the NFL this season — New England and Minnesota — but beat the Patriots on the road.

Carolina coach Ron Rivera doesn’t downplay the significan­ce of those victories.

“I don’t think that is overplayed. I think that is a reality. But at the same time, we are playing against a team that has beat us twice,” Rivera said. “We have to figure out what went well and improve on that and what went wrong and correct that.”

When the Saints pounded the Panthers, 34-13, in Carolina in Week 3, it began an eight-game winning streak that vaulted New Orleans atop the division for good.

When New Orleans topped Carolina, 31-21, in the dome in Week 13, it ended a Panthers four-game winning streak and was one of just two losses in Carolina’s past nine games.

The Panthers have been better when quarterbac­k Cam Newton runs the ball. But Newton, Carolina’s leading rusher this season, didn’t run much in two losses to New Orleans, gaining 67 yards on nine carries.

That could change with the season on the line. Newton has averaged 12.5 carries for 59.7 yards per game in Carolina’s past four games.

“That’s my edge,” Newton said. “I’m comfortabl­e running the football. I feel like I help the team when I’m running the football.”

Though Saints All-Pro defensive end Cam Jordan has done well containing the 6foot-5, 245pound, fleetfoote­d Newton in previous meetings, he said he doesn’t exactly enjoy the prospect of having to do so again.

“Who likes facing Cam Newton? I mean, come on,” Jordan said. “He’s able to escape, spins. He reverse-spins. He pivot-spins. He gets out of the pocket as well as he climbs through the pocket, and he’s got some weight to him. I mean, he’s not a frail guy.”

Saints quarterbac­k Drew Brees, whose 72 percent completion rate this season was an NFL record, enters his first playoff game in four years just days after traveling to Texas for the funeral of his 92-year-old grandfathe­r, Ray Akins, a World War II veteran and longtime high school football coach.

Brees said his two days in Texas were “obviously very sad” at times but stressed he “really came back energized.”

“Being with my family, and with friends, and with guys that played for my grandfathe­r, and just listening to their stories again, just re-emphasizin­g to me what a great man he was, and what a wise man he was, and just a true American hero,” Brees said. “He was my hero. I learned so much from him, and it just re-emphasizes all the important things in life, and the values and morals that I want to live by not only in the way I conduct myself as a family man and in the community but also as a member of this team.”

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