Houston Chronicle Sunday

Epic 2010 meeting ended in tears for New Orleans

- By Brett Martel

NEW ORLEANS — Ten years ago, when the Minnesota Vikings last visited New Orleans in the playoffs, Saints punter Thomas Morstead wasn’t prepared for what he saw.

“I remember after the game was over, I didn’t expect it to be as emotional as it was. I found my family and everybody was in tears and I was surprised,“Morstead recalled of the scene in the Superdome after the Saints beat the Vikings 31-28 in overtime in the NFC title game in January 2010.

“I knew I would be excited if we won, but I mean, you saw so many people that were crying,” Morstead continued. “I didn’t realize at the time, obviously, how big a deal it was to the whole city.”

Morstead, a Pearland High product, was a rookie out of SMU in the 2009 season and is one of just two current Saints players — along with 40-year-old quarterbac­k Drew Brees—— who played in that NFC title game. This Sunday’s NFC wild-card round game between Minnesota and New Orleans in the Superdome will be the third playoff meeting in the past decade between these teams.

While New Orleans’ last playoff clash with Minnesota was a thriller in its own right — the Vikings won on a last-second, 61-yard touchdown pass called the Minneapoli­s Miracle — that January 2018 game in Minnesota came in the divisional round of the NFC playoffs. There was no Super Bowl berth in the balance; the Vikings lost the following week in the NFC title game at Philadelph­ia.

While the Saints often looked like a team on a transcende­nt mission, the Vikings came excruciati­ngly close to ending New Orleans’ storybook run. Neither team led by more than seven points the entire game. The Vikings took two firsthalf leads, with the Saints tying it each time.

The Vikings began their last series on their own 21, but were nearly in field goal range when Favre, during a scramble to his right, threw back to the left and Saints cornerback Tracy Porter intercepte­d. That set up overtime, in which the Saints got the ball first and narrowly converted a fourth-and-1 at the Minnesota 43 on the way to setting up Garrett Hartley’s winning 40-yard field goal. Under overtime rules at the time, a team could win on a field goal without the other team touching the ball.

Ear-splitting cheers filled the dome as Hartley’s kick split the uprights, but the noise began dissipatin­g as drained fans — many having watched the Saints mostly lose all their lives — began embracing, tears welling.

“It was an emotionall­y exhausting game because the stakes couldn’t be higher and there were so many big plays in the game back and forth,“Morstead said. “I wasn’t as emotional from the city’s perspectiv­e because I didn’t understand it. I was a rookie. It was like, ‘How the hell did I wind up here? I’d won one game my junior year, one game my senior year.’ And it was just kind of crazy.”

Amid the locker room celebratio­n, Morstead saw TV news footage of fans pouring out of bars onto Bourbon Street to celebrate the Saints’ first trip to a Super Bowl, which New Orleans would win over Indianapol­is in Miami two weeks later.

Morstead couldn’t resist. He eventually made his way down to the French Quarter to witness the joy his team had brought to New Orleans.

“It was the greatest thing I’d ever seen,” he said.

 ?? Jed Jacobsohn / Getty Images ?? Garrett Hartley is mobbed by New Orleans teammates after his game-winning 40-yard field goal beat Minnesota for the NFC championsh­ip on Jan. 24, 2010.
Jed Jacobsohn / Getty Images Garrett Hartley is mobbed by New Orleans teammates after his game-winning 40-yard field goal beat Minnesota for the NFC championsh­ip on Jan. 24, 2010.

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