SwamiLeague.football

Saints Ground Eagles

Drew Brees grinned, paused as if searching for the right words, and even let out the beginnings of a laugh.

The Saints have made 40-point outings look routine lately, and the record-setting quarterback is trying to enjoy it without showing a hint of complacency.

“It’s a lot of points, but we have a high standard for ourselves,” Brees said. “You’re still not satisfied because you know you could have done a little bit better – but the end result is good.”

Brees passed for 363 yards and four touchdowns, and the Saints won their ninth straight with a 48-7 demolition of Philadelphia on Sunday that marked the Eagles’ worst loss by far since they won last season’s Super Bowl.

In fact, it was the worst loss by a reigning Super Bowl champion.

“I haven’t gotten my (butt) kicked like that in a long time,” Eagles defensive end Chris Long said.

Brees completed 22 of 30 passes and did not turn over the ball, giving him 25 TD passes and only one interception this season. Brees’ fourth touchdown seemed to encapsulate New Orleans’ audacious approach to the game. He hit running back Alvin Kamara in stride down the right sideline for a 37 yards on a fourth-and-7 play that gave the Saints (9-1) a 45-7 lead early in the fourth quarter.

“It’s hard to stop us,” Kamara said.

Receiver Michael Thomas said the Eagles were “just in the way, next team up. We just had to do what we had to do, regardless.”

Brees’ other touchdown passes went for 3 yards to Austin Carr, 15 yards to rookie Tre’Quan Smith and 23 yards to Thomas. Smith finished with 10 catches for 157 yards, while Thomas’ four catches for 92 yards made him the first receiver in Saints history to surpass 1,000 yards receiving in each of his first three seasons.

Mark Ingram rushed 16 times for 103 yards, including touchdowns of 14 yards and 1 yard. Kamara added 71 yards to help New Orleans finish with 546 total yards and score at least 40 for the sixth time this season.

Meanwhile, New Orleans’ defense produced a second straight dominant showing after largely stifling Cincinnati the previous week.

The Saints now have outscored their past two opponents 99-21 combined, is not easy to do in a league known for competitive balance.

“It blows my mind, too, trust me,” said Saints defensive tackle Sheldon Rankins, who had one of three sacks on Carson Wentz. “That just speaks volumes not only to the type of talent we have on this team but how locked in everybody is. I think everybody knows how special we can be and everyone knows the end goal. If everybody here isn’t thinking Super Bowl then they’re in the wrong locker room.”

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *