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RB Pierre Thomas and LT
Jammal Brown |
Stopped in Chicago, Saints Look
Ahead to 2008 Offseason
Hester breaks Saints, Thomas stars but not enough
posted December 30, 2007 - print
me!
neworleansprofootball.com
by neworleanssaints.com
On the same field where the New Orleans Saints’ 2006 season
came to an end, so to did their 2007 season. On a gray winter
day one day shy of the New Year, the Saints fell to the Chicago
Bears, 33-25.
“This was a very disappointing loss for us,” said
Head Coach Sean Payton. “The things that kept us from winning,
turnovers and penalties, came up today and during the season.”
“Chicago was the better team today and responded each time
we got back in the game,” said Payton. “Give them
credit. Nobody in this locker room feels good about 7-9. We have
a lot of work to do (in the off-season) and we will get started
right away.”
The Saints, who needed a win and help by Dallas and Denver in
the later games, instead fell victim to three costly turnovers
and the big-play skills of Devin Hester, who caught a 55-yard
touchdown pass and returned a punt 64-yards for a touchdown early
in the third quarter.
New Orleans received a huge day from rookie RB Pierre Thomas,
who became the first Saints player to rush for over 100-yards
and eclipse the 100-yard receiving mark in the same game. Thomas,
with 105 yards on the ground and 121 yards on 12 receptions, racked
up the third-highest yards from scrimmage total in team history
(226 yards). The Saints’ team record is 237 yards, held
by Deuce McAllister.
“I thought Pierre ran the ball and caught it very well
today,” said Payton. “He finished a lot of runs and
he played lights out.”
QB Drew Brees completed 35-of-60 passes for 320 yards with three
touchdowns and two interceptions, but was sacked 3 times. WR Marques
Colston had 8 receptions for 94 yards in the first half, but was
forced out of the game with a wrist injury suffered late in the
second quarter.
The Bears took advantage of an early interception by MLB Brian
Urlacher in Saints territory and took an early 3-0 lead and then
extended the lead to 10-0 before the Saints could rally and close
the margin to 10-7 early in the second quarter. However after
the Saints closed the gap at 10-7, the Bears struck right back
with a 7-play, 63-yard drive in 3:38, capped off by a 9-yard touchdown
pass from QB Kyle Orton to WR Bernard Berrian.
Saints WR Marques Colston caught his second touchdown of the
afternoon with just over two minutes remaining in the first half
to close the Bears lead to 17-14. But Hester struck with a 55-yard
reception from Orton two plays later and extended the Bears lead
once again to a two-touchdown advantage (24-14).
A wacky series ended the first half, as a Brees pass was intercepted
by CB Charles Tillman at the Bears goal line. Tillman attempted
to return the ball, though, and was stripped of the ball by Pierre
Thomas and the loose ball was recovered by Lance Moore with :02
left. K Martin Gramatica hit a 48-yard field goal as time expired
and the Saints had climbed back to within a touchdown, 24-17.
The Saints took the second half kickoff but started at their
own 15 yard-line and went three plays and out. P Steve Weatherford,
who had kept the ball away from Hester with pinpoint sideline,
instead hit a 48 yard punt down the middle of the field that was
returned 64 yards for a touchdown by Hester for the score, and
following Robbie Gould’s extra point, the Bears again had
a two touchdown advantage (31-17).
The scoring came to a grinding halt until late in the game when
the Bears forced the Saints into a holding penalty in the end
zone, which resulted in a safety and upped the lead to 33-17.
The Saints came back to score a late touchdown when Pierre Thomas
scored on an 11-yard pass from Brees and then scored a two-point
conversion on an inside handoff.
The Saints attempted an onside kick but Chicago recovered it.
Notes: Chicago won the coin toss and elected to receive …
RB Pierre Thomas made his first career start ... QB Drew Brees
set an NFL record for most completions in a season with his 419th
completion in the second quarter, with the previous mark having
been held by Rich Gannon (418 in 2002) ... the Saints were hit
hard with injuries, as Marques Colston (wrist), Josh Bullocks
(ankle) and Terrance Copper (concussion) all were knocked out
of the game. In addition, TE Eric Johnson needed assistance from
the field and didn’t return to action.
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