Texarkana Gazette

Brees QB sneak lifts Saints past Falcons

New Orleans scores late in fourth quarter to take game into overtime

- By Charles Odum

ATLANTA—On the day he became the NFL’s career leader in completed passes, Drew Brees’ biggest plays came as a runner.

Brees’ 1-yard run capped an 80-yard touchdown drive to open overtime that lifted the New Orleans Saints to a 43-37 win over the Atlanta Falcons on Sunday.

That came after his 7-yard score late in the fourth quarter forced the overtime. After the Saints won the coin toss, Brees and the Saints held the ball for more than seven minutes.

Brees jumped over the pile on a quarterbac­k keeper after his apparent 3-yard TD pass to Alvin Kamara was overturned. A review determined Kamara’s knee was down before he crossed the goal line. Brees scored on the following play, giving the Saints (2-1) the win.

“This was a wild one,” said Brees, who passed for 396 yards and three touchdowns and ran for two scores. Kamara had 15 catches for 124 yards and ran for 66 yards.

Brees’ biggest play before the winner might have been his improbable 7-yard scoring run with 1:15 remaining that forced

overtime. He ran to his left and then spun to avoid tackle attempts by Brian Poole and Robert Alford.

“At some point, I felt they were coming to take my head off and I could probably spin out of it,” Brees said, adding he now has film evidence to show the youth flag football team he coaches that “spin moves work. Spin moves are good.”

With his 14th completed pass, the 39-year-old Brees broke the record of 6,300 career completion­s set by Hall of Famer Brett Favre. Brees set the mark with a 17-yard pass to Michael Thomas in the second quarter.

“I’m just very grateful,” Brees said. “I hope there’s a lot more coming. I just think about all the people who have had a hand in that. A lot of hands have caught a lot of passes. … They are all a part of this.”

Atlanta’s Matt Ryan had his first career game with five scoring passes. Calvin Ridley became the first Atlanta rookie with three scoring catches. That wasn’t enough for the Falcons (1-2) against Brees and the high-scoring Saints, who gained 534 yards.

Ryan bemoaned a lost opportunit­y when the Falcons were forced to punt when stopped at the Atlanta 44 with 25 seconds remaining in overtime.

“We had chances to finish the game today and we didn’t do that,” Ryan said. “That’s disappoint­ing.”

Saints coach Sean Payton called the defensive stop “a huge part of the win.”

Ryan passed for 374 yards, including 146 to Ridley, who had seven receptions, including a 75-yard TD.

Ridley’s third scoring catch against the Saints was a 9-yarder early in the third quarter that held up following a review.

Ryan’s five touchdown passes

tied the team record set by Wade Wilson on Dec. 13, 1992, at Tampa Bay.

The fifth scoring pass to Mohamed Sanu came after Saints defensive tackle David Onyemata was called for unnecessar­y roughness on Matt Bryant’s 29-yard field goal. With the penalty, the Falcons’ offense came back on the field.

Ridley beat P.J. Williams on his first two scoring catches, an 18-yarder in the first quarter and the 75-yarder in the second quarter.

The Saints made a defensive switch, moving Ken Crawley into coverage on Ridley. Crawley was called for pass interferen­ce on a deep incompleti­on to Ridley early in the third quarter that gave Atlanta a first down at the New Orleans 5. On second down from the 9, Ridley’s third scoring catch gave the Falcons a 21-16 lead.

Brees completed his first four passes, including a 19-yard scoring pass to Ted Ginn Jr. on the Saints’ opening drive.

 ?? Curtis Compton/ Atlanta JournalCon­stitution via AP ?? ■ New Orleans Saints quarterbac­k Drew Brees goes over the top for the winning touchdown in overtime to beat the Atlanta Falcons, 43-37, Sunday in Atlanta.
Curtis Compton/ Atlanta JournalCon­stitution via AP ■ New Orleans Saints quarterbac­k Drew Brees goes over the top for the winning touchdown in overtime to beat the Atlanta Falcons, 43-37, Sunday in Atlanta.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States