The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

» The Saints in the Super Bowl? No place is dreading that outcome more than the city of Atlanta,

Saints are one win away from crashing Atlanta’s Super Bowl week.

- By Tyler Estep tyler.estep@ajc.com

The New Orleans Saints are just one win away from playing in the Super Bowl right here in Atlanta, in the gleaming new stadium that’s home to their biggest, albeit titleless rival.

And if t hey’re being honest, long-suffering Falcons fans from the mayor on down really would prefer to see the Saints fail to punch their proverbial ticket. Even for a city that’s grown accustomed to having sports-related disappoint­ment and despair delivered in extraordin­ary fashion, this would be a new level of indignity.

“All I can say is, we don’t need no ‘who dat’ here,” Georgia State Rep. Dewey McClain said this week, referencin­g the Saints’ infamous battle cry. “All I can say is, they won’t get no Capitol invite.”

McClain, a linebacker-turned-legislator from Lilburn, played for the Falcons from 1976 to 1981. It was an eventful run in the rivalry that included two games decided by last-second Hail Marys and another by a blocked punt.

McClain knows this idea, Atlanta fans’ aversion to the Saints appearing in the local Super Bowl (not to mention taking over the Falcons’ practice facilities and locker room), is not a manufactur­ed media phenomenon.

It is not merely a sentiment blown out of proportion after Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms — who’s tasked with playing gracious host while

her city puts on the western hemisphere’s biggest sporting event — made a joke about wanting anyone but the Saints to make it here.

“I know there’s going to be a bounty on my head for saying that,” Bottoms said. “But if it can’t be the Falcons, then hey, as long as it’s not the Saints, then I’m happy.”

Response from the Big Easy was quick and a lot meaner.

“I’m disappoint­ed that she felt that way, but we are still coming,” said Jay Banks, a New Orleans city councilman. “And it’s not our fault that her team sucks. I mean, if they could win, then they wouldn’t have this problem.”

Ouch.

‘Welcome to the couch’

And the tension between the two cities’ fan bases is not really about a single game, either.

Atlanta and New Orleans are jewels of the New South but in different ways.

New Orleans is world-famous for having a good time, a destinatio­n steeped in a multicultu­ral gumbo pot that’s been simmering for some 300 years, to paraphrase the city’s visitors bureau.

Atlanta is the slightly bigger, slightly more serious cousin, the birthplace of the Civil Rights movement that has become an internatio­nal city and continues to redefine itself.

The relationsh­ip between the two cities strengthen­ed after Hurricane Katrina turned as many as 100,000 New Orleans’ residents into accidental Atlantans — though the football rivalry didn’t really need any more juice.

Part of the growing dread Atlanta fans feel is, should the Saints defeat the Los Angeles Rams on Sunday and then hoist the Vince Lombardi trophy in our house after a Super Bowl victory, the gloating and shaming from Saints fans would be merciless and eternal.

The New England Patriots, who mounted the largest comeback in Super Bowl history to beat the Falcons in 2017’s Super Bowl, could also make it to Atlanta, presenting the potential for even more salt in the wound. It would be a kind of worst worst-case scenario.

Saints fans commemorat­ed the Falcons blowing that 28-3 Super Bowl lead — Atlanta’s best chance at getting their own Lombardi — with multiple Mardi Gras floats.

“I ain’t even trying to think like that,” Maurice Combs, a 45-year-old Atlanta native, said Thursday. He’s a barber at Off the Hook barbershop in Castleberr­y Hill, just a few blocks south of Mercedes-Benz Stadium.

“‘Welcome to the couch,’” Combs said, referring to the Saints’ season coming to an end this weekend. “That’s what I want to see. Them on the couch next to us.”

He’s not alone in hoping the Saints’ run ends this weekend. But there are plenty of talkative folks on the other side of things too.

Kay Hackney is an administra­tor of the Facebook group called “Atlanta Saints Fans,” which has nearly 2,000 members. The Acworth resident said the Saints faithful are “through the roof excited” about the possibilit­y of their team playing in “Superdome East” — a reference to the Falcons’ home stadium.

“To win the Super Bowl in your most hated opponent’s stadium?” Hackney said. “Yeah, we couldn’t let them live this down. We’ll second line down Northside Drive like it’s Canal Street.”

Second lines, if you’re wondering, are musical celebrator­y procession­s.

The dread is real

Matt Chernoff, a Dunwoody native, hosts afternoon drive on Atlanta’s 680 the Fan. His radio show, “Chuck & Chernoff,” heralded last week as “Aints Hate Week” — and it’s spent this week hosting “Part Deux.”

“This is one of the few times The City That’s Too Busy To Hate can really hate,” Chernoff said. “If you were born a Falcons fan, you were born to dislike the Saints.”

Part of that birthright is due to the fact Falcons-Saints games are almost always closely fought affairs. But even that is a product of a larger shared sports history.

The Falcons’ first NFL season was in 1966, the Saints’ in 1967. They’ve spent more than half a century in the same division, and the first few of those decades wallowing in comparable degrees of ineptitude — meaning the bragging rights afforded by their annual matchups were often just about all the joy available for fans.

“Not only do we have to represent and defend our team in New Orleans,” said Che Alexander, the senior vice president of a massive Falcons fan group called ATL Cast. “Now we have to defend our team at home.”

So, you wonder: Are feelings about the Saints potential playing in Atlanta’s Super Bowl a real thing for Falcons fans?

Ask Josh Garmon of Brookhaven how he feels about the possibilit­y: “Have you ever had food poisoning? What about a stomach ulcer? How about one of those 24-hour stomach bugs?”

Or ask Ruby Shackelfor­d, a season ticket holder from Carrollton, what she thinks: “I intend to root for whoever they are playing, even if that means cheering on the Patriots.”

Or ask Combs, the barber from Castleberr­y Hill, what he thinks the two weeks prior to the Super Bowl would be like should the Saints win Sunday.

“I plan on taking my vacation,” he said. “So I wouldn’t know.”

He’s joking. Maybe.

 ?? CURTIS COMPTON / CCOMPTON@AJC.COM ?? Falcons fans sit dejected in the stands after falling 43-37 in overtime to the Saints at Mercedes-Benz Stadium in September. The Falcons also lost at New Orleans on Thanksgivi­ng night.
CURTIS COMPTON / CCOMPTON@AJC.COM Falcons fans sit dejected in the stands after falling 43-37 in overtime to the Saints at Mercedes-Benz Stadium in September. The Falcons also lost at New Orleans on Thanksgivi­ng night.
 ?? ALYSSA POINTER / ALYSSA.POINTER@AJC.COM ?? Barber Maurice Combs (right) shows a photo of himself at a Super Bowl LI watch party in 2017. Despite leading 28-3, the Falcons lost to the Patriots in overtime.
ALYSSA POINTER / ALYSSA.POINTER@AJC.COM Barber Maurice Combs (right) shows a photo of himself at a Super Bowl LI watch party in 2017. Despite leading 28-3, the Falcons lost to the Patriots in overtime.
 ?? TYLER ESTEP / TYLER.ESTEP@AJC.COM ?? Barber Maurice Combs (right), working at Off the Hook Barber Shop in the Castleberr­y Hill neighborho­od Thursday, is a die-hard Falcons fan who will be rooting against the Saints in the NFC Championsh­ip game Sunday.
TYLER ESTEP / TYLER.ESTEP@AJC.COM Barber Maurice Combs (right), working at Off the Hook Barber Shop in the Castleberr­y Hill neighborho­od Thursday, is a die-hard Falcons fan who will be rooting against the Saints in the NFC Championsh­ip game Sunday.
 ?? CHRIS GRAYTHEN / GETTY IMAGES ?? Saints fans celebrate during their team’s win over the defending Super Bowl champion Eagles in the divisional round last weekend.
CHRIS GRAYTHEN / GETTY IMAGES Saints fans celebrate during their team’s win over the defending Super Bowl champion Eagles in the divisional round last weekend.

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