The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Brees chasing history again in prime time

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NEW ORLEANS — Drew Brees has a knack for making history when the only NFL game to watch is being played inside the Superdome.

There was the Sunday night in 2012 when Brees’ 40yard pass to Devery Henderson gave him touchdown passes in 48 straight games, eclipsing a mark set by Hall of Fame quarterbac­k Johnny Unitas half a century earlier. That streak finally ended at 54 games — a mark which still stands.

Six years later, on a Monday night in the dome, Brees broke Peyton Manning’s previous career record of 71,940 yards passing in even more spectacula­r fashion: a 62yard touchdown pass to thenrookie Tre’Quan Smith.

Brees entered this weekend three touchdowns shy of breaking Manning’s career touchdowns passing record of 539 as the Saints prepared to host one of Manning’s former teams, the Indianapol­is Colts, on Monday night.

New England’s Tom Brady, with two touchdowns Sunday at Cincinnati, increased his career total to 538, one ahead of Brees.

Brees said he was more focused on winning and refining an offense that scored 46 points — albeit in a narrow loss — against San Francisco’s highly rated defense a week earlier.

“Obviously, before the season you know you are a certain distance away, but then once the season starts, you just focus on winning games and doing what I need to do as a quarterbac­k of this team to put us in the best position to succeed,” Brees said. “With that, I guess the statistics come, and maybe they add up, and then all of a sudden, you’re close enough to be within striking distance of some of those things.”

For Brees, three touchdowns is striking distance. He had five against the 49ers in Week 14 — one of 90 career regularsea­son games in which he’s had at least three TDs in his 19year career.

The enduring success of the 40yearold Brees, who now has 76,577 career yards passing, is “great for the game, ” said Colts coach Frank Reich, who played QB in the NFL for 13 years.

“I don’t always like going up against it,” Reich added. “I just think that he has really set the standard as far as accuracy. I don’t know Drew at all, but I just know a lot of people that do know him. His work ethic, I think that is why he is still playing at a high level at this age.”

To Colts defensive coordinato­r Matt Eberflus, Brees’ longevity has become an element of what makes him so hard to scheme against. Eberflus figures that whatever coverage any team throws at the Saints, Brees has “definitely seen it,” and possesses the precision to attack it.

“There is no doubt,“Eberflus said. “He’s an elite player at his position and he’s been that way because of his timing and his accuracy.”

Saints right tackle Ryan Ramczyk, who played in the Big Ten for Wisconsin, in his home state, was a few months short of turning 7 at the end of the 2000 college season, when Brees was a Heisman Trophy finalist and leading Purdue to the second of just two Rose Bowls in school history.

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