The Saints Are in the Super Bowl ! The 2009 New Orleans Saints Season

Many Saints fans never thought they'd never see their Saints win a Super Bowl. But the 2009 Saints did what no other Saints team had done in 43 years.

The 2009 New Orleans Saints Season

Preseason
Aug 14 Bengals W 17-7
Aug 22 Texans W 38-14
Aug 29 Raiders W 45-7
Sep 3 Miami L 7-10
Regular Season
Sept 13 Lions W 45-27
Sep 20 Eagles W 48-22
Sep. 27 Bills W 27-7
Oct 4 Jets W 24-10
Oct 11 BYE
Oct 18 Giants W 48-27
Oct. 25 Dolphins W 46-34
Nov 2 Falcons W 35-27
Nov 8 Panthers W 30-20
Nov 15 Rams W 28-23
Nov 22 Buccaneerss W 38-7
Nov 30 Patroits W 38-17
Dec 6 Washington W 33-30
Dec 13 Falcons W 26-23
Dec 20 Cowboys L 17-24
Dec 27 Buccaneers L 17-20
Jan 3 Panthers L 10-23
Divisional Playoff
Jan 16 Cardinals W 45-14
NFC Championship
Jan 24 Vikings W 31-28
SUPER BOWL XLIV
Feb 7 Colts W 31-17

13 Wins 3 Loses 3 playoff Victories **NFL Champions**
Coach: Sean Payton
First Round Draft Pick: Malcom Jenkins CB Ohio State

Hell Hath Frozen Over

Did I mention the Saints are in the Super Bowl?

You know, as it wasn’t very long after that I started my website New Orleans Saints History, that I began to ponder the possibility of the Saints in the Super Bowl. Now keep in mind, this was about 1997 and “Iron” Mike Ditka had just taken over. By 1999, I decided that I had plenty of time to think about what I would say, should that glorious day ever arrive. When Jim Haslett took over in 2000 it began to look like maybe, just maybe that day would appear. The seasons after that first ever playoff victory proved once again that I had time to ponder that thought yet again. I began to seriously wonder if the Black and Gold would ever have the honor of playing in a Super Bowl.

The Saints once again flirted with a possible appearance to the Big Dance in 2006 when Sean Payton took the reigns and with Drew Brees guiding the offense, a first ever NFC Championship game was realized. But as always, the following years had me wondering if all the superstitions and crazy talk of curses just might be a reality after all.
But here we are. February, in the year of our Lord 2010, Super Bowl XLIV (that’s Super Bowl #44), less than 36 hours away as I bang away at the keys of my keyboard, and THE NEW ORLEANS SAINT ARE IN THE SUPER BOWL!!
So here I am. Over 10 years of wondering and planning for this day. So, without further ado

 

Now, I could use the standard unbelievable statement that I’ve been a Saints fan since since birth (actually, I don’t believe people when they say this) but that wouldn’t really be true. I can vaguely remember going to a couple of Saint games in Tulane Stadium as a 4 or 5 year old, but I don’t recall much. I can say that I started paying attention to Saint Games on TV around 1977 (….not a good year). My first memory of avidly following the Saints has got to be the signing of Dick Nolan in 1978 and hearing all about his “Flex Defense” he was bringing to New Orleans. Little did I realize the amount of frustration and heartache that my fateful decision would bring me. But for the next 30 years I hoped and dreamed. Playing backyard football with the neighborhood kids had me imagining I was, you guessed it…………….Archie Manning throwing game winning touchdowns or scrambling over the goal line with time expired. I still remember playing with my GI Joes and whatever other movable Action Figures I had and pretending they were the Black and Goal terrors of the Gridiron. My favorite was the “Bionic-Man” Steve Austin figure ( FIGURE, not doll) that dwarfed the other Action Jackson and Big Jim toys. This towering Giant was always the hero of my Action-Figure/Saints/Fantasy team that went undefeated season after season……. Oh sure, there was the occasional upset every 2 or three years, but in my imagination, they triumphed Super Bowl after Super Bowl.

Let’s get back to reality, shall we?

Those mornings at the bus stop before school shall be forever burned in my mind. I shared this bus stop with a whole family of Dallas Cowboy fans. 4 brothers that subjected me to an endless tirade of smack that lasted the whole bus ride every Monday morning. I don’t think we called it “smack” back then, but it was the same thing. Old school guys will remember Dallas had that great dynasty back in the 70s that featured Roger Staubach, Tony Dorsett and that “Domesday Defense” led by the likes of Randy White, Harvey Martin, Too-Tall Jones, Bob Breunig and Charlie Waters. And the Saints had…….. well they weren’t so good. And I got to hear about it every Monday Morning usually following some humiliating Saints loss.
Then came High School. Along with all the usual interests of a teenage boy playing football, I managed to keep a eye on my beloved Saints. Bum Phillips brought a new hope after the disastrous 1-15 year of the Bagheads, but delivered more frustration. I can still feel the betrayal every time I recall reading about Archie being traded to Houston. I shake my head every time the memory of that Richard Todd trade or the signings of Kenny Stabler and Earl Campbell come to mind. At least Bum did lay the groundwork for a new and vastly improved Saints defense that would later become the legendary Dome Patrol.

Enter the Jim Mora Era. Mora finally gave us a taste of what winning was like. A nine-game winning streak and a playoff appearance in 1987, never before winning seasons in the late 80s and early 90s, 3 consecutive playoff appearances between 1990 and 1992 with a Western Division Championship in 1991. It was stuff that up until then we had only dreamed of as Saints fans. But for reason, the loser stigma seemed to stick more during these years. We never seemed to be able to win when it really mattered. No matter how much success we would have, either San Francisco or Atlanta was there to make sure it was short lived.
After Mora it was Mike Ditka, the big bad guy that had brought Chicago a Super Bowl ring, that had his turn at transforming our Saints. After 3 bizarre seasons and all of 15 victories, Iron Mike was shown the door.

Jim Haslett was next. Haslett brought a fiery emotion that hadn’t been seen in New Orleans in quite some time. After the Saints experienced the first ever playoff victory in the club’s history, many were saying that the Saints had finally arrived. With an explosive offense led by Deuce McAllister and Aaron Brooks and a more than capable defense, it looked like a Super Bowl was within reach.
Deja-vu. The explosive offense turned inconsistent and ineffective almost overnight. The stout defense went soft with no explanation. For another 4 seasons it seems our Saints would do just enough to remain competitive until the last few games of the season. Then, it was like they would just let go and throw away any hope of salvaging the year. The frustration of the Haslett years all came together in one final zenith that was the 2005 season. The year of Hurricane Katrina. The battered Saints were almost a reflection of the battered city of New Orleans.

But now, the Saints are in the Super Bowl. Just 4 short years since the devastation of Katrina. Sean Payton has been at the forefront of a “new” New Orleans Saints team. Since 2006, the very culture of the Saints has been revamped. An explosive offense that has lead the NFL in scoring this year has replaced the bumbling comedy acts of the past. Greg Williams’ defense may not be the most prolific, but one certainly has to take note of the heart and aggression it possesses. Yes. This team is not your daddy’s Saints.
Your daddy’s Saints always seemed to find some way to snatch defeat from the jaws of victory. This team is the exact opposite. Come from behind wins against the Dolphins, the Jets and the Redskins provided plenty of excitement. And, this team won when it had to. Much was made of the 3 straight losses to end the season. But all fears have been put to rest with the proof being a 45-14 trouncing of Arizona followed by the 31-28 overtime battle that sent the Saints to their first Super Bowl. No. These aren’t your daddy’s Saints.
The Saints are in the Super Bowl. I haven’t got tired of saying it yet. For someone who seriously wondered if they would ever be able to see that day, I don’t think I ever will.

I keep checking back on major media sports sites and it’s still there. Images of Drew Brees and Fleur-de-lis spread across the opening banners. Black and Gold clad revilers and the Superdome in the background. And this is on the main page, not a dedicated sub-page for the New Orleans Saints or just highlights of the week. The BIG PAGE. The one with all the upcoming events and they’re all saying the same thing.
That the New Orleans Saints will represent the National Football Conference in Super Bowl XLIV.

What? Saints? In the Super Bowl? Is it true? Hell has frozen over?

But it is true. I’m not delusional. I saw it with my own eyes, there, on the TV. I watched as my beloved Saints battled the best the NFC had to offer, stood tit-for-tat with the hated Vikings… those…guys… we could never beat when we needed to. The ones that sent us running for cover in 1987, our first ever playoff appearance and crushed us all over again in 2000, after our first ever playoff victory. I watched as our defense pile-drived the legendary Brett Farve into the Superdome turf and came up with not just one or two, but 5 turnovers to stop the Vikings offense.

I remember turning to my brother, as the Saints were moving past midfield on the opening drive of the Overtime period and saying, “Do you realize we may be about 2 minutes away from Saints going to the Super Bowl?” I watched as Garrett Hartley’s 42-yard field goal in overtime split the uprights from the couch at my brother’s house. I stood up. All I could say was, “The Saints are in the Super Bowl.” I quickly glanced back at the TV. No flags. None. Check again. Nope. No flags, no penalties. If this had happened 15-20 years ago, book it– there would have been offensive penalty that would have pushed us back past field goal range. But not this time! NO! It was clean.
It’s all good! The Saints are in the Super Bowl!
As I left my brother’s house, I didn’t go straight home. I just drove around the streets of Lafayette, letting it all sink in.
The Saints are in the Super Bowl. I drove around taking note of all the vehicles with Saints banners and flags, honking their horns, passengers cheering and waving to other joyous Saint-mobiles. I passed the Academy department store on Ambassador Caffery Parkway in Lafayette. The line of people clad in black and white jerseys stretched from the doors to almost around the entire parking lot as fans waited to get Saints NFC Championship gear.
The Saints are in the Super Bowl.
How many times have I wondered how it would feel to say that– if I would ever say that. For so long all I ever heard how it would never happen, that no matter what, the Saints would always find a way to lose. In the past that may have been true. Heck, it is true! The Saints have always been the “Charlie Browns” of the NFL. Always creating a new way to botch things up. I don’t think Hollywood could come up with a comedy that would as innovative at losing as the real Saints have been.
But you know what……….. All of that is in the past! We ain’t ‘Aint’s no more!
The Saints are in the Super Bowl!

2009 Saints Offensive Statistics
2009 Saints Defensive Statistics
2009 Season Roster

Phil
Phil

I've been following the Saints since a kid in the 70s watching the likes of Archie Manning and Tommy Myers.
We may not have as grandiose a history as some NFL teams, but there are scores of memories the New Orleans Saints have given to their fans and I have done my best to record them here at New Orleans Saints History.

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