USA TODAY US Edition

Saints QB Brees getting better with age

He was masterful in return to the postseason

- Nancy Armour Columnist USA TODAY

NEW ORLEANS – There are a lot of ways to win games.

And Drew Brees and the New Orleans Saints used every last one of them.

After Brees lit up the Carolina Panthers in the first half with a performanc­e for the ages — and the aging, given he turns 39 in a week — the defense smothered Cam Newton on the final set of downs. A 17-yard sack by Vonn Bell sealed the 31-26 win and extended the Saints season for at least one more week.

The Saints play Minnesota next weekend in the divisional round.

“You try to enjoy as many of these moments as possible,” Brees said after the game, “because they’re not going to last forever.”

He’s more aware of that now than ever.

It’s not just his age, though he knows the window on his career is closing. After making the playoffs five times in his first eight seasons in New Orleans, including a Super Bowl win in 2010, the Saints spent the last three postseason­s on the sidelines.

The Super Bowl core was gone, and the roster was in a constant state of transition. Brees never would have asked for an out — not from this city, whose rise after Hurricane Katrina was so intertwine­d with his own resurgence — but many around the NFL wondered if the last years of his Hall of Fame career were being wasted.

But Brees, just as he had when he arrived, could see there was something better to come.

The Saints have surrounded him with all kinds of new toys the last two seasons. Mark Ingram and Alvin Kamara are the most effective running back tandem in the league, and Kamara is also one of New Orleans’ better receivers.

Michael Thomas is a big-time playmaker — if you missed it, Google his stutter-step that broke Shaq Thompson’s ankles for a first down that set up Brees’ 9yard TD pass to Josh Hill.

And if all that wasn’t enough, the Saints went out and got Ted Ginn Jr., the same Ted Ginn Jr. who’d killed the NFC South with the Panthers the last two years.

The same Ted Ginn Jr. who might as well have stuck a dagger in the Carolina defense with his 80-yard TD reception in the first quarter.

“You heard that stadium. It was an eruption,” Brees said. “You felt like, all right. You need those moments throughout the course of a game to provide that momentum and confidence and it’s for everyone.

“It creates that atmosphere that, no matter what, we’re going to find a way to win.”

The play came after the Saints couldn’t get anything going on the first two possession­s, with Carolina clamping down on Ingram and Kamara. But that’s what makes this Saints offense so potent. Take away two guys, and it opens things up for others.

“You take us away, we’ve got other elite players,” Ingram said.

And Brees at the heart of all of it. “He’s a once-in-a-lifetime quarterbac­k,” Ingram said.

The Ginn TD pass would be the first of eight completion­s in a row for Brees, and

11 of 13 as the Saints built a 21-6 lead. His quarterbac­k rating at the half was 151.4, highest in an NFL playoff game since Kurt Warner in the 2008 NFC Championsh­ip.

“It blew the thing wide open,” Brees said. “I think it broke the seal for us offensivel­y and got the crowd rolling.”

As explosive as Brees and the Saints offense is, they wouldn’t be here if there hadn’t been a marked improvemen­t in their defense this season.

Newton and the Panthers got their yardage — they finished with 413 to New Orleans’ 410 — but the Saints managed to get the big plays when they needed them.

After giving up a 56-yard touchdown catch to Christian McCaffrey with 4:09 left, the Saints had a fourth-and-2 at the two-minute warning. Convert, and the Saints could run out the clock. But Brees was intercepte­d by Mike Adams, and the Panthers had the ball at their own 31 with

1:51 left to play.

Newton, who’d been cleared to return to the game before the McCaffrey touchdown in an obvious breech of the newly toughened concussion protocol, took the Panthers to the New Orleans 26 with his first two passes. A holding call against New Orleans moved them to the 21.

But after an incompleti­on, Newton was called for intentiona­l grounding. After another incompleti­on, Vonn Bell burst off the line and threw Newton to the ground like a rag doll for a 17-yard sack.

The game was over. Brees and the Saints were marching on.

 ?? DERICK E. HINGLE/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Vonn Bell (48) celebrates with Mark Ingram (22) and Marshon Lattimore after New Orleans defeated Carolina on Sunday.
DERICK E. HINGLE/USA TODAY SPORTS Vonn Bell (48) celebrates with Mark Ingram (22) and Marshon Lattimore after New Orleans defeated Carolina on Sunday.
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