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this is a discussion within the Saints Community Forum; Peter King/NBC Sports NEW ORLEANS — “This is the first time in NFL history a play like this has been run from this formation! Ever!” jovial Saints coach Sean Payton called out to his offensive team Saturday night in a ...
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11-19-2018, 06:55 AM | #1 |
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FMIA Week 11—Embedded in New Orleans: The Ritz, the Rout and the Reason the Saints Are Unstoppable
Peter King/NBC Sports
NEW ORLEANS — “This is the first time in NFL history a play like this has been run from this formation! Ever!” jovial Saints coach Sean Payton called out to his offensive team Saturday night in a second-floor ballroom at the Ritz-Carlton on Canal Street. This was a man in love with his job. https://profootballtalk.nbcsports.co...11-peter-king/ |
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11-19-2018, 08:16 AM | #2 |
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Re: FMIA Week 11—Embedded in New Orleans: The Ritz, the Rout and the Reason the Saints Are Unstoppable
This picture says a lot for me ... it's all about PREPARATION & FILM STUDY. We (fans) see the end result on Sundays.
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11-19-2018, 08:49 AM | #3 |
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Re: FMIA Week 11—Embedded in New Orleans: The Ritz, the Rout and the Reason the Saints Are Unstoppable
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11-19-2018, 09:27 AM | #4 |
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Re: FMIA Week 11—Embedded in New Orleans: The Ritz, the Rout and the Reason the Saints Are Unstoppable
Originally Posted by AsylumGuido
This was a very good read. Aside from working hard, I think that the Saints have resurrected the formula of talent + character + intelligence. Not necessarily in that order.
I found it very interesting that Carr was effectively a concert pianist and senior class present at Northwestern. Just listening to interview with the players, they are thoughtful and eloquent across the board. Looks like this team is loaded leaders and not egos. That is a recipe for success. |
11-19-2018, 09:58 AM | #6 |
Embedded in New Orleans: The Ritz, the Rout and the Reason the Saints Are Unstoppable
“This is the first time in NFL history a play like this has been run from this formation! Ever!” jovial Saints coach Sean Payton called out to his offensive team Saturday night in a second-floor ballroom at the Ritz-Carlton on Canal Street. This was a man in love with his job.
The NFL’s state-of-the-art offense was doing a final walk-through in the Salon II ballroom before facing the Eagles on Sunday in the Superdome. (New Orleans embarrassed Philadelphia, 48-7, the worst loss ever by a defending Super Bowl champion.) Quite a sight, as the players lined up and walked/slow-jogged through the first 15 plays they planned to run. Alvin Kamara, wearing flip-flops, black socks and a red hoodie obscuring much of his face. Brees, in shorts, untied sneakers and a black T-shirt pumping his FNA co-ed flag football league. Payton, in a blue pullover, playing defense. Payton called out the name of Sunday’s bizarre play: “Q stop, G snug. Right empty. QB 38 Z Crush Alley.” On cue, Brees joined two wideouts to the left in a bunch formation (three receivers, snug to each other), while jack-of-all-trades-quarterback Taysom Hill joined the same type of bunch formation to the right. Damndest thing I ever saw: Five linemen up front. Three receivers left, three receivers right. No quarterback. As instructed, Brees trailed two bigger wideouts on the left side of the formation. The coaches lined up as Eagle defensive players. “I got Drew!” Payton said, crouching a bit across from the left bunch, like a press corner. “And don’t screw up the cadence, Taysom!” The 11 offensive guys got set, and at the last minute, Hill motioned left to a shotgun position and called out the signals. Center Max Unger snapped it to him, and Hill powered right in a slow jog behind a slew of blockers. The play would be a power run, and it would fit into exactly what Payton told his players in this meeting: “Our emphasis in this game is to run at 22 [cornerback Sidney Jones]. He’s coming off a hamstring, and we don’t think he can hold up.” No fooling around. All business, even on this weird play. Strange seeing football players practice at 30-percent speed in hoodies and jeans and whatever, with coaches playing Fletcher Cox and Malcolm Jenkins. After 15 minutes, each play run the same way, Payton said, “Let’s break it down,” and they gathered in a circle, said something I couldn’t understand, and the players went to team snack. (More than a snack, actually; it was a full-blown buffet meal.) In the wide hallway outside Salon II, I asked Payton: “How’d you think of the double-bunch play?” “Thursday night,” Payton said. “Just doodling. Just thinking. I just thought of it, and I said to the coaches, ‘Will this work?’ And [quarterbacks coach] Joe Lombardi said, ‘Why not? We can do anything we want.’ When I told Troy Aikman about it [in the FOX production meeting], he said, ‘Who’s getting the snap?’ I said, ‘No one. Yet.’ “ Payton thought for a minute, giving a John Nash look into the distance. “Part of it, really, is thinking of something that they [the Eagles] haven’t seen. That’s the job of a game-planner. You want eight heads to turn to [smart Eagles veteran safety] Malcolm Jenkins and be like, ‘What do we do?’ “ Payton took my notebook and drew out the formation. He said sometime later in the game, they’d reverse the call. It’d be Brees who’d go behind center at the last second and take a snap. Only this time it wouldn’t be a power run. Brees would throw it—maybe a quick stop route to the left, or a post from a receiver in the right bunch. By that time, the players had all relocated to the ballroom with the food. Except for one player. That player was playing a grand piano—and playing it very, very well. We looked over, and I asked Payton who it was. “Austin Carr,” Payton said. “Wide receiver. President of his class at Northwestern. He’ll be the president of the United States when he retires.” Carr played for a while, beautifully. I went over to ask him about playing. “Just relieving some tension,” said Carr, talking while his fingers moved over the keys. He said he loves the music of John Legend. This music is what you’d hear from someone coming out of Juilliard. “The song’s beautiful,” I said. “What’s it called?” “I haven’t named it yet,” he said. Lots of composers in this Saints group. read lots more here | |
11-19-2018, 11:28 AM | #7 |
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Re: FMIA Week 11—Embedded in New Orleans: The Ritz, the Rout and the Reason the Saints Are Unstoppable
I kinda like the clear frames on those reading glasses that Payton is sporting. But points deducted because Carr missed the obvious line, when asked what the song was called, he shoulda said "Lick My Love Pump."
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11-19-2018, 11:50 AM | #8 |
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Re: FMIA Week 11—Embedded in New Orleans: The Ritz, the Rout and the Reason the Saints Are Unstoppable
My goodness what an article. Fantastic work.
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