The Commercial Appeal

Thomas stepped up for Saints in time of need

- Jori Epstein USA TODAY

NEW ORLEANS – Michael Thomas said he felt himself “get a different type of heartbeat.”

Not on account of any of the Saints receiver’s 12 catches, 171 yards or goahead touchdown in New Orleans’ 2014 divisional win over the Eagles.

No, Thomas said, his heart shifted rhythm the first time Saints cornerback Marshon Lattimore intercepte­d Nick Foles on Sunday. Thomas was locked in. With his team down 14-0 in the second quarter, he turned to quarterbac­k Drew Brees with a message.

“I didn’t want him to get frustrated or panicked,” Thomas said of Brees, who on the opening pass of the game threw his second intercepti­on at the Superdome this season. “I wanted to prove to him if he let the ball go, I’ll take care of myself.

“After Marshon got the pick, I was like, ‘Man, I’ll take over this whole drive for you right now.’” Thomas did. First there was the 21-yard throw from Brees immediatel­y following a successful fake punt. Thomas doubled his distance with another 21 yards after the catch to flip the field and continue the Saints’ drive.

Then there were the short passes up the middle for 4 and 9 yards, respective­ly, immediatel­y preceding the team’s first score.

And a 2-yard dart capped off an 11:29 drive that finally, nearly three quarters of the contest elapsed, gave the Saints their first lead of the afternoon.

“You just got to keep swinging,” Thomas said. “Keep swinging, keep swinging until you knock them out.”

It was far from the knockout performanc­e the Saints enjoyed in their 48-7 win over the Eagles in November. But Brees put a 30-yard, 2-for-6 first quarter behind him to complete 28 of 39 passes for 301 yards and two scores. Alvin Kamara and Mark Ingram each rushed for at least 50 yards, the one-two punch gashing the Eagles for long runs of 15 and 36 yards respective­ly. And Thomas kept coming back to swing again.

“It’s Mike T: ‘Can’t guard mike’ is the (name of his) Twitter handle,” quipped defensive end Cam Jordan. “He’s lived up to all expectatio­ns, has he not?”

The Saints defense did, too. Nick Foles scored a passing and rushing touchdown in his 8-of-9, 113-yard passing clinic first quarter that stood in stark contrast to Brees’ start. Then Foles failed to compile 100 yards combined in the next three quarters. The Eagles group that converted both third-down attempts in the first quarter was denied on all five of its subsequent opportunit­ies.

Thomas hopes to carry that swag into a rematch with the Rams next week, two months after exploding for 12 catches, 211 yards, a touchdown and a flip-phone celebratio­n in the teams’ first matchup.

The game-changing receiver’s goals then?

No flip phone, he said, confirming that nod-to-history celebratio­n has been retired.

The 12 catches he snagged against the Rams, and again to advance past the Eagles on Sunday, don’t leave him satisfied either.

“I just wish I caught all the passes,” said Thomas, who was targeted on 16 passes. “That’s going to be my goal for next week . ... I want to be that safety blanket for Drew. I want to be that supporting cast for him. I want (Brees) to be able to be back there and play his game and be calm and know he has a guy he can trust in.”

On Sunday, Brees did.

 ??  ?? Saints wide receiver Michael Thomas celebrates his touchdown catch against the Eagles on Sunday. BILL FEIG/AP
Saints wide receiver Michael Thomas celebrates his touchdown catch against the Eagles on Sunday. BILL FEIG/AP

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