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Cigar Aficionado Online    Cigar Aficionado Forums  Hop To Forum Categories  Cigar Talk    Sean Payton named AP Coach of the Year
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Picture of Mr. E.
Posted
NFL.com wire reports

(Jan. 7, 2007) -- Sean Payton might have had the toughest coaching job in football this season, making his selection as The Associated Press NFL Coach of the Year that much more impressive.

Payton, in his first year as a head coach, didn't just lead the New Orleans Saints to a 10-6 record, the NFC South championship and a first-round playoff bye. He helped revitalize a battered city's spirit.

With New Orleans ravaged by Hurricane Katrina in late August 2005, the Saints became nomads that year, winding up 3-13 under Jim Haslett. Payton, an assistant coach in Dallas, was hired to revive one of the NFL's historically unsuccessful franchises.

Payton and his team gave the city -- indeed, the entire Gulf Coast -- something it desperately needed: a reason to smile.

And hopes for the Saints' first Super Bowl appearance.

"It's just been the right mix of guys who believe in each other," said Payton, who ran away in the balloting by a nationwide panel of 50 sports writers and broadcasters who cover the NFL. "Players putting the team ahead of everything else. I think that's the biggest thing that we've been able to do to date. That's what's most important. That's what we were looking for in the offseason: character, toughness, those are things you win with."

Payton received 44 votes in a season when there were a half-dozen outstanding coaching performances. Eric Mangini of the New York Jets, another first-year head coach, got three votes, while San Diego's Marty Schottenheimer, the 2004 winner, received two. Jeff Fisher of Tennessee got one.

"I'm honored and somewhat humbled. This is a time in our league right now where there are probably seven or eight Hall of Fame coaches currently coaching in our league," Payton said after learning of the award. "I still have tags hanging out of my Reebok gear on the sidelines."

Payton became the third Saints coach to win the award, joining Haslett (2000) and Jim Mora (1987). Last year's winner was Chicago's Lovie Smith.

No coach ever was faced with rebuilding a roster while his community was recovering from such devastation. Football might seem trivial under such circumstances, but Payton and his players understood how uplifting their success could be to those struggling to put together their lives again.

"You have to trust your gut a lot and follow your heart," Payton said. "There certainly were going to be some challenges coming into this region at this time. But I think the city is very committed to this team and it's really an amazing fan base we have, not just in New Orleans, but in this whole Gulf South area. And I'm excited we can provide a little juice for these people during the course of the week, get them excited about football."

Payton began with a tough training camp of two-a-day practices in the heat of Jackson, Miss. Many players called it one of the most demanding camps.

"He wanted to put his foot on the ground and establish that this was a new beginning," veteran wide receiver Joe Horn said. "In our profession, football, you don't start a new beginning by coming in and making it easy. It has to be hard.

"Fortunately for us we won football games. It worked out well."

So well that the Saints had their best regular season since 2000 thanks to a potent offense and strong special teams and a defense that improved markedly over last season.

Give Payton credit for those units, too. He signed free-agent quarterback Drew Brees even though Breed was coming off delicate surgery on his throwing shoulder. Brees responded with a Pro Bowl season.

Payton lucked out when Reggie Bush was bypassed at the top of the draft by Houston, and he was a dynamic rookie as a runner, receiver and punt returner.

Even more dynamic was seventh-round pick Marques Colston, a receiver from Hofstra who had a questionable work ethic and concentration lapses in college. Under Payton's guidance, Colston became an elite rookie.

Payton wisely alternated running back Deuce McAllister, coming off a serious knee injury, with Bush, and McAllister finished with 1,057 yards rushing and 10 touchdowns.

"We have a great head coach in Sean Payton, and his system," " Brees said. "I think we all believe in it, and I think it suits us all very well. I think we take a lot of pride in it."


Well deserved if you ask me.


"I am a military pacifist. In that I am willing to fight for peace." Einstein
 
Posts: 131 | Registered: November 03, 2005Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
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Alright, soapbox time.

What is the big surprise here? All we still hear in sports today is how bad N.O. had/has it in the aftermath of Katrina. You kow what, IT WAS BUILT IN A GODD**NED BOWL!!!!! When was the last time anyone here saw a bowl that didn't hold water? Spare me the f*cking pity party already. If you build on the coast then you know a hurricane is a possibility. If you build on the coast in a bowl then you know when that hurricane hits your bowl will fill up. Kindly STFU and deal with it already and move on. If you lived there, you did so by choice. Take responsibility for your own choice and quit crying about it.

I thought Mangini did a much better job considering how much more dismal the Jets seemed to be coming into the season. Everyone knew N.O. had some talent coming back and everyone knew they could be a playoff team in a weak NFC. No one thought the Jets would be worth a damn in a packed AFC. 10 wins and the playoffs with the Jets is much more impressive in my mind than getting 2 or 3 more wins out of a N.O. team that played in a weak conference and an especially weak division with so many chokers, i.e. Atl, T.B. and Car.
 
Posts: 591 | Location: Lexington, KY | Registered: May 02, 2002Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
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quote:
Originally posted by PFSGoldenEagle:
Alright, soapbox time.

What is the big surprise here? All we still hear in sports today is how bad N.O. had/has it in the aftermath of Katrina. You kow what, IT WAS BUILT IN A GODD**NED BOWL!!!!! When was the last time anyone here saw a bowl that didn't hold water? Spare me the f*cking pity party already. If you build on the coast then you know a hurricane is a possibility. If you build on the coast in a bowl then you know when that hurricane hits your bowl will fill up. Kindly STFU and deal with it already and move on. If you lived there, you did so by choice. Take responsibility for your own choice and quit crying about it.

I thought Mangini did a much better job considering how much more dismal the Jets seemed to be coming into the season. Everyone knew N.O. had some talent coming back and everyone knew they could be a playoff team in a weak NFC. No one thought the Jets would be worth a damn in a packed AFC. 10 wins and the playoffs with the Jets is much more impressive in my mind than getting 2 or 3 more wins out of a N.O. team that played in a weak conference and an especially weak division with so many chokers, i.e. Atl, T.B. and Car.


Jet's huh.

Yea maybe one day the 9-11 whining will go away also.

New York can't even fill in the hole.

Tab
 
Posts: 954 | Registered: April 22, 2006Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
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Yeah people focus on Katrina but you have to look at what Payton did. You do realize he had 34 new starters signed 2 weeks before the beginning of the season. And unless you've played football you have no idea what that does to your team. It takes a lot to build the cohesion needed to get where the saints have gotten. So forgive the people of the Gulf Coast if they finally have something to be happy about. I guess you have no compassion for all the people that live in the midwest and get ravaged by tornados, or the folks on the west coast that deal with earthquakes. I don't think payton got those votes for pity. He genuinely did a great job. the franchise is historically bad and the team could have had a mediocre season and easily blamed it on rebuilding. But they didn't. Payton took control and challenged them to be better and they did it. So PFS as for your rant, your an idiot. Your from Kentucky and you have no clue. Yeah the people choose to live there, but how long has it been since the region really got hit bad by a hurricane. I'm 27 lived there all my life and never saw one as bad as katrina. We know the risks a**hole. It's part of life down on the coast. Call us crazy, ignorant, whatever you want because you'll never understand. So sit back enjoy your bourbon and slip back into that drunken ignorant stupor that keeps you going.


"I am a military pacifist. In that I am willing to fight for peace." Einstein
 
Posts: 131 | Registered: November 03, 2005Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
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