The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Brees' first game at 40 biggest since Super Bowl

It’ll be the first time he has played for the conference title since ’09 season.

- By Brett Martel

METAIRIE, LA. — Drew Brees is about to play his first game as a 40-yearold — and his biggest game in nine years.

When the Saints host the Los Angeles Rams in the NFC championsh­ip game in New Orleans on Sunday, it’ll be the first time Brees, who turned 40 on Tuesday, has played for the conference title since the 2009 season. Brees turned 31 shortly before the Saints defeated Minnesota en route to the franchise’s lone Super Bowl.

One of the enduring images from that championsh­ip season was Brees standing next to his wife, Brittany, holding aloft their son, Baylen, who grasped at confetti floating around them.

Baylenwas Brees’ firstchild, born on his father’s 30th birthday, and had recently turned 1 when the Saints beat the Colts in Miami in February 2010.

Now Brees is a father of four — three boys and one girl, ages 4 to 10. They were all present on the sideline when Brees set the alltime NFL record for yards passing in Week 5 of this season, and Brees said after practice Wednesday that he has cherished the opportunit­y to share one of his best seasons with them.

“They’re so football-crazed right now,” Brees said. “That’s what makes this so much fun.”

Brees recounted thatduring some recent one-on-one time with his second child, Bowen, the quarterbac­k asked his 8-year-old son what his favorite thing to do is.

“He said, ‘Go to the Saints facility with dad,’ ” Brees said. “That kind of stuff is what memories are made of and you want them to enjoy that as much as possible and give them those moments as much as possible.

“They love football. They love the Saints. They love our team. They love this season,” Brees said. “We’re just trying to stay in the moment and enjoy it as much as we can.”

There has been plenty to enjoy. While leading the Saints to a 13-3 record and No. 1 playoff seeding in the NFC, Brees broke NFL records for completion­s and yards passing. Through 18 regular seasons, he has completed 6,586 passes for 74,437 yards. His completion record surpassed Brett Favre’s 6,300. His yards passing eclipsed Peyton Manning’s 71,940. Brees’ 520 touchdowns pass- ing leave him 19 behind Manning — but also only three ahead of 41-year-old New England QB Tom Brady — for that record.

This season was not Brees’ most prolific, but was his most efficient.

While Brees’ 3,992 yards passing were his fewest since he joined the Saints in 2006, but his 74.4 percent comple- tion rate broke his own previous NFL record of 72 per- cent — set just last season. His TD-to-intercepti­on ratio of 32 to five was the best of his career.

And after a slow start in a divisional playoff victory over Philadelph­ia on Sunday, Brees finished 28 of 38 passing (73.7 percent) for 301 yards, with two TDs and one intercepti­on.

The Saints did not have practice on Brees’ birthday, but he went to work anyway.

“A very normal day,” Brees said. “Come in early and get grinding on the film, get home in time for dinner and hang out with the kids and have a little cake, read bedtime stories and tell them to quit talking and laughing and go to bed.”

As with the 41-year-old Brady, Brees’ teammates sometimes seem in awe of the discipline he demonstrat­es in not just maintainin­g health and fitness, as well as the work he puts in to studying game plans and opposing defenses, constantly refining his throwing mechanics and taking extra time after practice to develop chemistry and timing with receivers.

And they weren’t surprised that Brees was widely viewed as one of the leading candidates for league MVP this season.

“There’s nothing surprising me just because I’ve known him, how he prepares, how he takes care of his body,” said Saints running back Mark Ingram, as he tried to put Brees at 40 into perspectiv­e. “It just says a lot about him and his character and the person he is.”

Ingram went on to say that if anything, Brees’ age is still an asset, because even seasoned pros can benefit from a more experience­d team leader who still performs at a high level.

“He’s what you want to be as far as having someone to look up to, as far as having someone to emulate,” Ingram said. “Taking care of your body, eating right, community, on the field, father, family — he’s everything you want to be, man. ... He’s helped me grow a lot as a man, as a profession­al. I love him forever.”

 ?? CHRIS GRAYTHEN / GETTY IMAGES ?? While leading the Saints to a 13-3 record and No. 1 playoff seeding in the NFC, quarterbac­k Drew Brees broke NFL records for completion­s and yards passing. Through 18 regular seasons, he has completed 6,586 passes.
CHRIS GRAYTHEN / GETTY IMAGES While leading the Saints to a 13-3 record and No. 1 playoff seeding in the NFC, quarterbac­k Drew Brees broke NFL records for completion­s and yards passing. Through 18 regular seasons, he has completed 6,586 passes.
 ?? CHRIS GRAYTHEN / GETTY IMAGES ?? The Saints’ Drew Brees receives the ball from referee Carl Cheffers after breaking the all time passing yards record against the Redskins on Oct. 8.
CHRIS GRAYTHEN / GETTY IMAGES The Saints’ Drew Brees receives the ball from referee Carl Cheffers after breaking the all time passing yards record against the Redskins on Oct. 8.

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