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Payton eager for fast start

Saints coach Sean Payton watches his team as they work out at Indianapolis’ Lucas Oil Stadium on Wednesday.
Show Caption MICHAEL CONROY/AP
  • By SHELDON MICKLES
  • Advocate sportswriter
  • Published: Sep 4, 2008 - UPDATED: 12:05 a.m.

On the evening of Sept. 6, 2007, the New Orleans Saints went into their season opener against the defending Super Bowl champion Indianapolis Colts as the favorites to represent the NFC in Super Bowl XLII.

Just one month and one day later, the Saints were off to an 0-4 start and careening toward a 7-9 season in which they would fall far short of their goal of reaching the Super Bowl for the first time in franchise history.

It was a cruel slap to the face of the Saints, but especially to second-year coach Sean Payton, who steered his team to the NFC Championship Game in 2006 in his first season as a head coach at any level.

“It was really the first challenge for us,” Payton said recently. “We went through a time in 2006 where we lost three straight (actually two), but that (0-4 start) was the first challenge for us as a team under this staff. So I think all of us lost a lot of sleep over that.”

By nature, most NFL coaches don’t get a lot of sleep during the season. But that month-long stretch was extraordinary for Payton because of the high expectations his team carried into the new season.

“When you come into a season with high expectations and you get off to a start like that, it forces you to dig down,” Payton said. “The one thing about our job is that you have the ability the following week to put a good feeling in your stomach. So as bad as you may feel after a certain loss the only way I know how to get rid of that is to get back to work.

“Our players, our coaching staff, all of us collectively kind of hunkered in and the good thing was the ship never divided,” he said. “We came back and won four games in a row. So it tests you, it tests the locker room, it tests the coaching staff, it tests you. I was pleased with how we handled that test.”

The Saints were 7-7 late in the season with a chance to reach the playoffs, but two straight losses left them on the outside looking in.

But the bitter taste of 2007 didn’t linger long. Team officials were exceptionally busy in the offseason with free agency, the trade market and the draft — aiming to improve a defense that ranked 26th in total yards allowed last season.

When the Saints open the 2008 season on Sunday against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers in the Superdome, Payton will have one eye on his defense in an attempt to avoid a disastrous start like last season.

To be sure, he’s excited about the possibility of doing just that, despite spending the week preparing for the Bucs in Indianapolis because of Hurricane Gustav’s arrival in south Louisiana.

When asked what he learned most last year, Payton didn’t hesitate.

“You learn how important it is to start the season off well,” he said. “You learn how important the turnover ratio is. These are lessons that we know, yet they’re pounded in again each year when you start a season. I think we have a chance to be a better football team after some of the challenges we had a year ago.”


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