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Vikings Top Saints In Thrilling Monday Night
Game
Frerotte outplays Brees in final minutes; Bush's
two punt return touchdowns not enough
posted October 7, 2008 - print
me!
neworleansprofootball.com
courtesy neworleanssaints.com
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Head Coach Sean Payton
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In a topsy-turvy game that seemingly witnessed
just about everything, it was an ordinary 30-yard field goal
by Minnesota’s Ryan Longwell that proved to be the difference
in the Vikings’ 30-27 win over the New Orleans Saints.
Trailing 20-10 at halftime, the Saints scorched back to score
17 unanswered points in the second half to take a 27-20 lead
and by all accounts, had all the momentum on their side and a
raucous crowd on their feet, particularly after Reggie Bush tied
an NFL record with his second punt return of the night for a
touchdown. Despite the heroic effort by Bush, with 269 yards
of total yards and two scores, the Saints could not convert a
late field 46-yard field goal and watched as the Vikings did
convert their field goal opportunity en route to the heartbreaking
loss, the Saints’ third loss of the season by a combined
10 points.
With the Saints leading 27-20, Minnesota converted a third-and-16
late in the fourth quarter on a 33-yard completion for a score
on a pass from Gus Frerotte to a diving Bernard Berrian in the
end zone. “We brought an all-out blitz there and the receiver
(Berrian) made a play.”
“There were some positives tonight,” said Saints
Head Coach Sean Payton to begin his press conference, but quickly
added. “Simply put, there were too many penalties (11-102)
and too many turnovers (four) and they came back to get haunt
in the end. You can’t win football games by shooting yourself
in the foot like we did.”
Payton also said the team’s inconsistencies in all three
phases of the game were also to blame for the Saints falling
to 2-3. “Two missed field goals, one which was returned
for a score and the penalties, two fumbles, dropped passes. That
things, it is very well documented, will cause you to lose just
about every time.”
“The bottom line is that I am sick of the penalties and
some of these guys that are repeat offenders (in the penalty
department), won’t be repeat offenders much longer,” the
head coach said, an obvious reference to potential lineup changes
he may be contemplating.
“This is the weirdest game I think I have ever played
in,” said QB Drew Brees. “The turnovers and the penalties.
They rip your heart out.”
“We, collectively as a team, lost this game tonight,” said
Bush. “If we think we are an elite team, we need to way
to find a way out to win this close games.”
The Saints held one of the NFL’s elite running backs (Adrian
Peterson) to a meager 32 yards on 21 carries for a 1.5 average,
but Frerotte was efficient through the air (222 yards on 19 completions
to 36 attempts) and the Vikings lack of turnovers proved to the
difference in the highly entertaining affair.
New Orleans Saints had scored 17 unanswered points in the second
half courtesy of a 72-yard punt return for a touchdown by Reggie
Bush, 64-yard punt return for a score and a 53-yard field goal
by Martin Gramatica and led the Vikings 27-20.
The Vikings had earlier taken advantage of two Saints fumbles,
an interception and a blocked field goal returned for a touchdown
to lead the Saints 20-10 at the Superdome at halftime.
The Vikings took their first lead of the night on a four-yard
pass from RB Chester Taylor to TE Visanthe Shiancoe that gave
them a 17-10 lead early in the second quarter.
The Saints opened the scoring less than four minutes into the
game, courtesy of a perfectly thrown 17-yard pass from QB Drew
Brees to WR Devery Henderson. Minnesota, though, turned in a
big play of their own on a 59-yard blocked field goal that was
returned for a TD by CB Antoine Winfield midway through the first
quarter.
The Saints, who won the opening kickoff and elected to receive,
were buoyed immediately on a 56-yard kickoff return by second
year RB Pierre Thomas. The 56-yard return was the career long
for the Illinois product and the Saints responded in kind offensively,
marching 47 yards in eight plays in 3:51. On the drive the Saints
converted two third downs, one coming on a six-yard Brees scramble
and the second coming on a third-and-ten from the 17, which was
the scoring pass to Henderson, who got between a safety and a
cornerback on the goal-line and hauled in Brees’ perfectly
thrown pass, which following Martin Gramatica’s extra point
gave the Saints a 7-0 lead.
Minnesota began their opening drive at their own 33 yard-line
and immediately tried to work on the middle of the Saints’ defensive
line with a run up the middle by RB Adrian Peterson, which netted
two yards before Charles Grant hammered him down to the ground.
Minnesota picked up two consecutive first downs on 12 and 13
yard passes from Frerotte, but the Vikings bogged down at the
Saints’ 36 yard-line after the Saints defense stopped the
visitors, compliments of a critical third down pass rush unleashed
by DE Will Smith. Minnesota punted from the Saints’ 36,
but the ball bounded into the end zone for a touchback and a
16-yard net punt as the Saints took over at their own 20.
Brees and Henderson connected right out of the box with a 52-yard
completion after Henderson bolted through the secondary and hauled
in the pass to the Vikings’ 28. Two plays later Reggie
Bush took a toss and picked up nine yards. On third-and-one,
Bush took a pitch to the other side and appeared to pick up 15
yards but a holding call on FB Mike Karney negated the first
down. Brees and Robert Meachem couldn’t hook up on third
down along the sideline. Gramatica trotted onto the field to
attempt a 46-yard field goal, but his kick was blocked by DT
Kevin Williams and returned 59 yards for a touchdown by Winfield
and the game suddenly was tied at 7 apiece.
Winfield was penalized 15 yards for unsportsmanlike conduct
and the Vikings were forced to kick off from their own 15. Thomas
returned the ball to the Saints’ 49 and Brees completed
three straight passes to Saints tight ends (the first two to
Mark Campbell (9 and 8 yards)) and the third on a 7-yard completion
to Billy Miller. Bush then picked up 10 yards on a toss to the
Minnesota 17. But three consecutive pass attempts failed to connect
for the Saints and Gramatica was called upon to try a 35-yard
field goal, which he converted and the Saints retook the lead,
10-7.
K Steve Weatherford then attempted an on-side kick but an alert
play by TE Garrett Mills, who recovered the ball, gave the Vikings
the ball and good field possession at the Saints’ 40. A
defensive holding call on Roman Harper gave the Vikings five
more yards and a first down, but the Saints then stuffed Peterson
twice, bringing up a third-and-11 from the Saints’ 36 with
just over a minutes to play in the first quarter. Frerotte hung
in the pocket but couldn’t find a receiver as the pocket
collapsed around him and threw the pass away. K Ryan Longwell
hammered a 53-yard field goal that knotted the game at 10-10
with :53 seconds left in the first stanza.
The Saints out-gained Vikings 148 yards to 30 in the first quarter
of play and out-gained the Vikings 375 yards to 270 yards on
the night.
The Saints’ next possession ended on a third-and-five
from their own 24 when Brees was hit on a blitz and stripped
of the football by Winfield and returned to the Saints’ 5.
The Saints stopped two consecutive rushing plays for minus two
yards each. On a third-and-goal from the 9, the Saints’ Will
Smith was flagged for a neutral zone infraction, which gave Minnesota
new life at the four. On third-and-four, RB Chester Taylor took
a pitch and swept to his right and lofted a pass into the back
of the end zone for TE Visanthe Shiancoe for a TD and their Vikings’ first
lead of the night, 17-10.
The Saints then drove into Minnesota territory and advanced
as far as the Minnesota 34 when Bush was hauled down by his facemask
by LB Chad Greenway and in the process of going down lost the
football. No penalty was called on the facemask, which brought
a chorus of prolonged boos from the partisan crowd. “I
don’t think there was any doubt that it was a face mask,
but I shouldn’t have fumbled the ball,” Bush said. “It
hurts, it stings. The only way to get this pain and string out
is to figure a way out to win this week against Oakland.” Minnesota
recovered and took possession of the ball at the 35 in front
of a bewildered Superdome crowd.
Minnesota completed a third-and-five with a 15-yard completion
to the Saints’ 46 on a pass to Berrian. The Saints’ defense
stopped and the Vikings and forced another punt and the Saints
took began their next drive at their own 13. Brees completed
his first three passes of the drive, including a 22-yarder to
Mark Campbell. The Saints received one of their first breaks
of the night when a third down completion from Brees to Bush
that went for 15 yards and a first down ended with a Bush fumble
that was recovered by Billy Miller at the Minnesota 41. The Saints
through ended up losing yards on the next two plays on a 10-yard
holding and a pass play that lost four yards. On a third-and-22
Brees hit Meachem for a gain of 21 yards to the 32. The Saints
went for it on a fourth-and-one and Brees rolled out and hit
Bush for a gain of 21 yards to the Vikings’ 11. New Orleans
took their second timeout of the first half with 4:11 left in
the second quarter.
A first down run by Deuce McAllister lost a yard and on second
down misfortune struck again when a Brees pass intended for Lance
Moore bounced off of Moore’s hands and into the arms of
a diving Ben Leber at the Minnesota 13.
The Vikings picked up gains of 9 yards and 17 yards on completions
and on a third-and-one from the NO 49, Peterson picked up five
yards but appeared to fumble when he was hit by MLB Jonathan
Vilma at the 44. The officials reviewed the ball and conceded
the ball was coming loose but that Peterson still had possession
in his hand and that it wasn’t a fumble.
Taylor then picked up five yards on a carry and Frerotte picked
up five yards on a completion over the middle for the first down.
WR Aundrae Allison hauled in a 13-yard completion and a four-yard
run by Taylor picked up four yards to the New Orleans 15 with
:18 left. A pass intended for Berrian in the corner of the end
zone was defended neatly by CB Tracy Porter and ruled out of
bounds on second down and Porter broke up a pass on third down
and forced the Vikings to kick a 33-yard field goal that increased
their lead to 20-10 with only :04 left.
Starting the second half at their own 20 Minnesota with a five-yard
carry by Peterson followed by a 12-yard completion to Berrian.
Frerotte then scrambled for a six-yard gain and Roman Harper
drilled Berrian after a completion for one yard. On third down
LB Scott Shanle picked up a crossing pattern by Bobby Wade and
forced the pass to fall incomplete with tight coverage.
P Chris Kluwe and the Vikings pinned the Saints deep in their
own territory on a 49 yard punt and a minus two yard return by
Bush, which gave the Saints the ball at their own 6. The Saints
picked up a first down on a third-and-seven via an 11-yard completion
from Brees to Moore, but the Saints’ drive stalled and
the Saints were forced to punt. Minnesota was flagged for a 15-yard
personal foul call on WR Robert Ferguson, which pushed the visitor’s
starting field position to own 22. Peterson caught a nine-yard
pass to start the drive and then Wade answered with a nine-yard
completion to the 40. The Saints’ defense though once again
stiffened and forced Minnesota to punt. Reggie Bush fielded the
punt at the New Orleans five and returned it 14 yards to Saints’ 19.
After an incompletion began the Saints’ drive Brees hooked
up with Miller for an eight-yard completion and then Moore for
a four-yard gain and a first down. After a false start penalty
pushed the Saints back five-yards, Bush was swarmed under for
a one-yard loss. On second down Brees hit Henderson for a 20-yard
completion to the Saints’ 46. But the Saints went backwards
from their and suffered a negative play when a shotgun snap missed
its mark and rolled 15 yards behind the line of scrimmage before
Brees could fall on it. P Steve Weatherford uncorked a 45-yard
punt that was fair caught at the Vikings’ 22 with 3:25
left in the third quarter.
The Saints halted the Vikings on three plays and again forced
the Vikings to punt and Bush fielded the 48 yard punt and made
two players miss before heading to the sideline, where he picked
up two devastating blocks from LB Jo-Lonn Dunbar and RB Aaron
Stecker and returned the punt 71 yards for a touchdown, his second
punt return this season. After the extra point the Saints trailed
20-17.
The Saints’ defense again turned up the pressure, with
the aide of thunderous noise created by the Saints’ home
crowd. On first down Frerotte misfired for Wade and on second
down DT Brian Young swatted the ball out of Frerotte’s
hand that was recovered by Vikings offensive tackle Ryan Cook.
The Vikings then committed a false start penalty that pushed
them back five yards. A third down pass interference on Minnesota
was declined the Minnesota again punted, with Bush fielding the
49 yard punt that Bush returned 29 yards, and nearly broke it
for another score on the final play of the third quarter.
Starting at their own 49 a first down pass to Stecker was incomplete
but Brees hit Henderson for 15 yards and a first down, sending
Henderson over the 100-yard mark on only his fourth reception
of the night. A short run by Bush and a pass knocked down at
the line of scrimmage by Jared Allen on second down and a third
down incompletion halted the Saints at the Minnesota 35. Gramatica
came on and drilled a 53-yard field goal that tied the game at
20-20 with 13:20 left in the game.
New Orleans’ defense once again stopped Minnesota on a
three-and-out and Bush retreated deep and field Kluwe’s
39-yard punt. Bush ripped through a hole for 64 yards and raced
untouched for his second punt return for a touchdown of the night
and third of the season. In doing so he became just the 12th
player in NFL history to return two punts for touchdowns in the
same game, and the Saints had re-gained the lead, 27-20, with
11:36 left in the game.
Minnesota, trailing 27-20, picked up a first down on three consecutive
runs by Peterson. Frerotte then dropped back and hit Berrian
for a 36-yard completion, but took a big hit from DE Will Smith
that left the signal-caller prone on the field and in need of
medical attention. Tarvaris Jackson entered the game with the
Vikings at the Saints’ 27 yard-line and handed off to Peterson,
who was thrown for a three-yard loss by Scott Shanle and a gaggle
of Saints defenders. Frerotte came back into the game after one
play on the sideline and threw a pass to Bobby Wade who absorbed
a big hit from Harper after a short completion. Minnesota then
was flagged for their second offensive pass interference of the
night and faced a third-and-16 from the Saints’ 33.
Frerotte then lofted a pass deep down the middle of the field
an instant before being hit by a blitzing Josh Bullocks. The
pass was hauled in by a diving Berrian in the end zone that tied
the game at 27-27 with 7:10 left in the game. On the play another
Vikings receiver appeared to be going for the ball and wiped
out Berrian as he fell to the ground in the end zone.
Pierre Thomas, despite taking a vicious hit on the ensuing kickoff,
set the Saints up at their own 17 after a short kickoff return.
The Saints lost two yards on a carry by Bush and the home team
was then set back by a five yards penalty on rookie Carl Nicks
for an illegal procedure call, gained 10 yards on a reception
by Robert Meachem. On a third-and-seven Brees hit Miller, who
had slipped behind Minnesota’s linebacking crew and hauled
in a pass from Brees that he turned into a 41-yard reception
despite taking a big hit from CB Cedric Griffin that leveled
Miller at the Minnesota 39. The Saints drove to the Minnesota
28 just before the two-minute warning. Gramatica’s 46-yard
field goal missed to the left of the uprights and Minnesota took
over at their own 35 with 1:59 left in the game.
“I pulled it,” said Gramatica of the missed field
goal. “I hit it solid, but it went left. The worst thing
about it is that I let the team down. Those are the toughest
ones. You hurt the team when you miss those. These guys killed
each other for 60 minutes. They played awesome defense. It hurts
to let them down like that. It is frustrating when you have a
group of guys who are tight like this. It kills me to let them
down.”
The Vikings had both of their timeouts and picked up two yards
on a run by Peterson and a five-yard completion to Wade. On a
third-and-three at the 44 Frerotte dialed up a deep pass down
the middle of the field that drew a pass interference call good
for 42 yards and gave the Vikings the ball at the Saints’ 14.
Peterson carried for one yard and the Saints called a timeout
to stop the clock and then the Saints’ defense called their
last timeout with 1:00 after another short Peterson carry. The
second year running back then carried the ball again and the
Vikings milked the clock down so that only :16 remained in the
game and kicker Ryan Longwell drilled a 30-yard field goal on
fourth down to give the Vikings a 30-27 lead with :13 left in
the game.
Aaron Stecker fell on Minnesota’s squib kick at the New
Orleans 25. Brees then tried a Hail Mary at the end of the game
but rookie Tyrell Johnson intercepted the ball at the Minnesota
19.
Brees finished the night with 330 yards on 26 completions and
46 attempts with one touchdown and two interceptions for a passer
rating of 68.2. Lance Moore led all Saints’ receivers with
five receptions for 31 yards, while Devery Henderson’s
104 yards on four receptions were the most on the team. Reggie
Bush had five punt returns for a club-record 176 yards and two
scores and added 12 carries for 29 yards and seven receptions
for 64 yards for 269 yards of total offense.
Defensively the Saints were led by MLB Jonathan Vilma (10 tackles),
one tackle for a loss, and a pressure. S Kevin Kaesviharn, CB
Mike McKenzie, DT Brian Young and DE Charles Grant each had six
stops. The New Orleans defense had a total of six tackles for
losses on the night. On special teams rookie LB Jo-Lonn Dunbar
had a team-high three tackles.
Notes: The Saints signed DT Remi Ayodele from the practice squad
and released reserve DE Josh Savage. In another move the Saints
activated TE Buck Ortega from the practice squad and waived QB
Joey Harrington…Inactive players for the Saints for this
evening’s game were: WR Marques Colston, CB Aaron Glenn,
FB Olaniyi Sobomehin, S Chris Reis, T Jermon Bushrod, WR David
Patten, TE Jeremy Shockey and DT Sedrick Ellis.
Vikings inactives included: QB John David Booty (3rd QB), WR
Sidney Rice, S Madieu Williams, CB Benny Sapp, FB Thomas Tapeh,
T Drew Radovich, T Marcus Johnson, DT Letroy Guion. Minnesota
also announced they placed starting MLB E.J. Henderson on injured
reserve with a foot injury and activated T Bryant McKinnie from
the reserve/suspended list.
Starting Lineup Changes: Veteran Brian Young started in place
of rookie DT Sedrick Ellis at NT. WR Lance Moore started in place
of WR David Patten at wide receiver. TE Mark Campbell started
in place of TE Jeremy Shockey for the second straight game.
Aaron Back in Action: Veteran RB Aaron Stecker made his regular
season debut this evening after missing the first four games
of the season with a hamstring injury.
Are You Ready? Country music legend Hank Williams Jr. was on
the Saints’ sidelines in a Saints jersey before the opening
kickoff. Williams Jr. was handed the on-the-field microphone
and enthusiastically announced the crowd, “Hey Saints Fans!
Are You Ready for Some Football???!!!”
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