-
Final
ATL
LV15
9 -
Final
CHI
MIN12
30 -
Final
GB
SEA30
13 -
Final
BUF
DET48
42 -
Final
PIT
PHI13
27 -
Final
TB
LAC40
17 -
Final
NE
AZ17
30 -
Final
IND
DEN13
31 -
Final
BAL
NYG35
14 -
Final
NYJ
JAX32
25 -
Final
DAL
CAR30
14 -
Final
KC
CLE21
7 -
Final
MIA
HOU12
20 -
Final
CIN
TEN37
27 -
Final
WAS
NO20
19 -
Final
LAR
SF12
6
The Other Payton
- Updated: October 11, 2013
You want to know why the Saints went from 13-3 in 2011, to 7-9 in 2012, to 5-0 in 2013? In 2012 they only had Coach Payton’s motivational banner. Before and after, they had a visionary.
In his time away from the game, Sean Payton studied the NFL. He served as offensive coordinator for his son Connor’s sixth grade football team, trying to get those Liberty Christian Warriors to stop “looking at dandelions and picking their boogers,” he said at the time. He sought the counsel of his mentor Bill Parcells. He got himself in the best shape of his life.
Now, Payton is seeing more clearly than ever. After serving a one-year suspension as a result of the Bountygate scandal, Payton returned to the Saints last offseason with renewed focus, energy and drive. So what was intended to be a punishment for Payton and the Saints actually might end up being a punishment for 31 other teams.
One man’s impact on an organization rarely has been so evident. “I’ve been around long enough to recognize what a special head coach he is,” Saints general manager Mickey Loomis said. “But sometimes you can take things for granted. When someone is missing and you’re not successful, clearly the things he brought to the table were a large part of your success.”
Much of what Payton graces his team with is intangible, like inspiration and love of competition. This is not the type of coach who spends his days pushing buttons on a graphing calculator in a darkened room and then distributes spreadsheets that can’t be understood without an engineering Ph.D.
“He’s our leader, he’s our general,” Saints center Brian De La Puente said. “At the pivotal point in the game, whatever he is calling, you know it’s the right call.”
Said linebacker Martez Wilson, “All the guys respect him and love him as a coach. We play hard for him.”
Saints inside linebacker Curtis Lofton talks about how the Saints feel a heightened sense of accountability with the man back in the building. He said Payton does not hesitate to call out players who are not practicing, preparing or performing the way he thinks they should. Payton also is a master at stirring competitive juices by issuing challenges, pitting offense against defense, player against player. “He loves to talk crap to our defense,” Lofton said. “Back and forth, back and forth.”
This version of the Saints no longer has a problem with wandering minds. “Last year there was so much discussion and energy and anger put into off-the-field things,” Loomis said. “That didn’t allow us as an organization to focus on preparation and readiness like we should have. One of Sean’s great strengths is getting our team and organization focused on the task at hand.”
His message always seems to be on point. Listen to him talk to the team from his old high school here and then see if you don’t want to run out of the tunnel and look for someone to hit. When Payton was preparing the Saints for a trip to Chicago last week, the coach mentioned “maybe 50 times” that his teams were winless at Soldier Field, according to right tackle Zach Strief. Not anymore.
One of Payton’s recurring themes this year has been to get his men to understand the value of week-to-week flexibility in terms of approaching each opponent. They had to slug it out to beat the Bucs. Then, they lit up the scoreboards against the Cardinals and Dolphins. And in Chicago, they uncharacteristically played take-what-you-give-me offense, going the slow way to the end zone.
Payton’s words never have been more well received, in part because he is talking to a lot of fresh ears. In the offseason, he had equipment men tape names on the back of players’ helmets to help him remember who was who. Even now, 26 of the 53 players in his locker room never have been coached by him before. A lot can happen in one year.
-Dan Pompei
Dan Pompei has covered more than 500 NFL games, including 26 Super Bowls. He is one of 44 members on Pro Football Hall of Fame selectors board and one of nine members on the seniors committee. He was given the 2013 Dick McCann Award by the Pro Football Writers of America for long and distinguished reporting in the field of pro football. Follow him on Twitter @danpompei.