Everything you need to know about the officiating for Super Bowl LIII, including the potential for roughing the passer flags on these aggressive defensive fronts.
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“I mean, do I really want to be in a position talking about this over and over again? No. But I have to stand up and do it because I have to represent my team, represent the ‘Who Dat nation’, and that’s my responsibility. So it’s the commissioner’s responsibility to do the same thing, and yet we don’t hear a peep for 10 days. And it’s because he has to do it now because he’s at the Super Bowl and he does his annual press conference.” Brees made similar comments on the Today show, adding, “I don’t think he really said much during most of that press conference.”
“But at the end of the day,” Brees continued, “for us as players, we can only worry about the things that we can control. So you understand that officials have a very tough job, and there’s a lot of calls that are made and not made throughout the course of a game. It’s just tough when something that meaningful happens at the end of the NFC Championship Game that arguably would’ve sent us to the Super Bowl. And the call wasn’t made, and it was a very, very obvious call.”
Brees said definitively on both ESPN’s First Take and The Dan Patrick Show that he plans to come back for a 19th season and keep playing at age 40.
He also described the loss as “arguably one of the most devastating losses for me in my career.”
Brees said his kids were crying after the game because of how invested they are, too – though he joked that his 10-year-old may have been crying because Mom had promised him a cell phone if they went to the Super Bowl.
“Listen, it’s gonna take some mental toughness,” Brees said of being able to get over the loss. “But I believe we’re up for it. I was impressed with what our team was able to do this year coming off last year (and another heartbreaking playoff loss in the ‘Minneapolis Miracle’).
Drew Brees passed for 249 yards with two touchdowns and one interception in the NFC Championship Game. Derick E. Hingle/USA TODAY Sports
“I like where we’re at as a team, I like this window of opportunity. But we are gonna have to put this behind us. We are gonna have to allow this to make us become stronger in some way, turn this into a positive somehow, some way. And that’s difficult, that’s not easy to do.”
As for the mistakes the Saints made outside of the officiating call, Brees talked at length on First Take about the Saints’ decision to try for a touchdown in the final two minutes of regulation instead of running the ball three times and settling for a field goal.
That has been the second-most hotly debated topic coming out of the Saints’ loss. But Brees said with “respect” to the Rams’ offense, the Saints didn’t want to settle for a field goal and leave them with 55 seconds remaining to try and tie the game. And he said the incomplete pass to receiver Michael Thomas on first down was “on me.”
“We knew we were gonna get all-out pressure. So we called a run play with a built-in, ‘Get it out to Mike Thomas .'” Brees said. “Listen, that’s a pass I gotta complete to him, in my mind. So I’m putting that on me, I’m not putting that on anyone else. The next play we had an opportunity to have a bigger play (on an Alvin Kamara run), we didn’t block it correctly. That’s on us.
“Then comes the third down. Man, we had a great play. We caught ’em off guard. Their nickel was out of position. He’s scrambling to cover Tommylee Lewis out of the backfield. He admitted in the press conference afterward that he intentionally hit him because that was better than giving up a touchdown. So that’s the chess match within the framework of the game.”
Brees told The Dan Patrick Show that the third-down play was ironically called “Buckhead” – named for a popular area in Atlanta, where the Super Bowl is being held.
“Yeah, it was a play that was hopefully going to get us to Atlanta, right?” Brees said.
With the Super Bowl in Miami next year, Brees added, “I can almost guarantee we’ll have a ‘South Beach’ at some point next year.”
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