The Morning Call (Sunday)

Thomas joins elite at WR

Saints’ top target has made big plays for Brees all season

- By Sam Farmer

NEW ORLEANS — Typical horror movie. The call was coming from inside the house

The guy doing the dialing was Saints receiver Michael Thomas, who had just slashed the Rams to the tune of 12 catches for a club-record 211 yards, including a soul-crushing 72-yard touchdown.

Thomas celebrated that November score by fishing a flip phone out of a goal-post pad and pretending to make a call, an homage to long-ago Saints receiver Joe Horn, who had done the same thing back in 2003. A stickler for details, Thomas stashed phones in both Superdome end zones just in case — he knew it would happen, just not where.

When this stranger calls, the raspy voice says: “Have you … checked the scoreboard?”

That touchdown, the biggest difference maker in the Saints’ 45-35 win, ended with an awfully expensive make-believe phone call. The NFL fined Thomas $30,000 for his celebratio­n.

“I was just trying to set the tone, get the crowd going, and use it to our advantage,” the soft-spoken Thomas said this week during a break from preparatio­ns for a rematch with the Rams in Sunday’s NFC championsh­ip game. “I knew they would love it.”

Make no mistake, Thomas is terrifying to opponents. The third-year receiver led the league with 125 catches this season, and — unlike your cellphone provider — almost no drops.

Thomas, 25, figures to be a major factor in the conference title game. Drew Brees looks for him often, as he did Sunday, when Thomas caught 12 passes in a divisional victory over the Eagles.

The Rams didn’t have star cornerback Aqib Talib in the first meeting — he was recovering from ankle surgery — so the task of covering Thomas fell to Marcus Peters, who was overmatche­d. With Talib back and likely assigned to blanket Thomas, that changes the dynamic.

“Talib is going to challenge him,” said former All-Pro receiver Steve Smith, who had his own battles with the relentless cornerback. “Michael’s not going to back down, but it’s also a first for Mike. He’s a young kid. Talib is a savvy vet; he knows what he’s doing. He knows what impression he wants to make. He’s not out there to make friends. Mike isn’t out there to make friends either.”

Peters didn’t take kindly to postgame comments from Saints coach Sean Payton after the first meeting. Payton said the Saints got the matchup they wanted with Thomas versus Peters. Peters responded the following Thursday, encouragin­g Payton to “keep talkin’ ” and saying the Rams would see the Saints “soon” — as in the postseason — and they would have a bowl of gumbo together.

Peters reiterated his opinion this week when he tweeted a picture of himself with this caption: “It’s gumbo week let’s eat.” The tweet is no longer on Peters’ timeline.

“Peters is the guy who’s done more of the talking,” Smith said. “The question is, are (the Rams) even going to allow Marcus Peters to cover (Thomas)? Because Marcus Peters is also excited and animated to do it. I’m not sure why you’re so animated to do it when you got routed up last game. That’s one of those I consider false enthusiasm. I call that fake juice.”

Here’s what’s real: Brees said Thomas, a second-round pick from Ohio State in 2016, has made huge strides because of his thorough understand­ing of the offense. He has learned how to be patient and let the game come to him, rather than constantly trying to overpower defenders.

“Michael’s always been a really strong, highly competitiv­e, raw type receiver,” Brees said. “But he learned to develop the patience with the routes and understand­ing of the timing of when the ball’s going to be there. Like, ‘Hey, Mike, don’t get your head around now, I’m not ready to throw the ball to you yet.’

“Working together, talking through concepts and then just the repetition, I’d say that’s where he’s made the biggest jump, even from last year to this year. He’s always had the competitiv­eness, the work ethic, the fire. But it’s the polish.”

Troy Aikman, who will be in the broadcast booth for Fox on Sunday, can’t help but see a bit of fellow Hall of Fame Cowboys player Michael Irvin in Thomas.

Aikman said Thomas has the ability “to get big at the point of the catch.”

“I trust what Drew Brees has said, and he said that (Thomas) is the most competitiv­e wide receiver he’s ever played with. That’s quite a statement.”

Competitiv­e? Without question. But still grappling with immaturity at times, such as pregame introducti­ons against the Redskins this season when he ran out in a ski mask or plucking the cellphone from the goal post.

The latter move was such a surprise to his father, who was in the stands, that he didn’t even see it happen.

“I missed him pulling the phone out,” his father said. “I was celebratin­g. So when I looked up, I was like, ‘What’s the penalty?’ Then I saw it on the screen and I’m like, ‘Oh, man.’ I had to watch the replay because I definitely wasn’t looking for that.”

He didn’t take issue with his son celebratin­g that way.

“I was just happy the game was pretty much done at that point,” he said.

Thomas was just telling the crowd, in essence: Can you cheer me now?

 ?? DAN ANDERSON/EPA ?? Michael Thomas racked up 125 catches in becoming a go-to receiver for Drew Brees.
DAN ANDERSON/EPA Michael Thomas racked up 125 catches in becoming a go-to receiver for Drew Brees.

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