Showing posts with label Saints. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Saints. Show all posts

Thursday, 7 January 2016

Sean Payton Stays with Saints


Saints coach Sean Payton said on Wednesday he’s remaining with New Orleans, ending speculation that he could be on the move after consecutive 7-9 seasons.

Payton has been with the Saints for a decade and is coming off his first consecutive losing seasons.

“I don’t envision myself ever coaching for any other clubs,” Payton said.

“I know it appeared there was a looming decision, but I think this is really me saying again: here I am and nothing’s changing and I plan on finishing my career here. I’ll be here as long as they’ll have me.”

Payton began his first and only NFL head coaching job with the Saints in 2006, the season after the team had been displaced by Hurricane Katrina.

Since then, he has gone 87-57 in the regular season with five playoff appearances and one Super Bowl title in the 2009 season.

His playoff record is 6-4. Payton’s record excludes the 2012 season, when he was suspended in connection with the NFL’s bounty investigation.

Payton spoke on Wednesday as Saints owner Tom Benson sat off to the right of the podium, with general manager Mickey Loomis and Saints president Dennis Lauscha standing nearby.

The coach said he understood the speculation about him leaving New Orleans, given that he has been with the Saints for a decade and that coaching vacancies were opening on other clubs as the season wound down.

But Payton stressed: “I knew in my heart of hearts that was not going to be something that was going to come to fruition.

“There will be a time when they don’t want you back, and that’s OK. One by one, that train stops for all of us,” Payton added, then added a line he learned from his mentor, Bill Parcells: “We’re better for having ridden, then never having been on at all.”

Payton said his contract, which runs for two more seasons and pays him about $8 million annually, remains unchanged for now.

“I’m sure at the right time, all those things will take care of themselves,” Payton said.

With Drew Brees as his quarterback, the offense Payton designed has ranked first in the NFL in five of the nine seasons he has coached, never ranking lower than sixth.

However, the Saints have often ranked near the bottom of the NFL defensively during Payton’s tenure.


Thursday, 3 May 2012

Cash for Bounty Suspensions

New Orleans Saints linebacker Jonathan Vilma was suspended without pay for the entire 2012 season by the NFL, one of four players punished on Wednesday for participating in the team's cash-for-hits bounty system.

Defensive lineman Anthony Hargrove, now with the Green Bay Packers, was suspended for the first half of the 16-game season; Saints defensive end Will Smith was barred for the opening four games; and linebacker Scott Fujita, now with the Cleveland Browns, will miss the first three games. Like Vilma, they were suspended without pay.




Thursday, 29 March 2012

Parcells Open to Saints Offer


If the New Orleans Saints asked Bill Parcells to be interim head coach during Sean Payton's yearlong suspension, the 2011 Hall of Fame finalist says he would be a "hypocrite" if he didn't at least consider the possibility.

"If the opportunity presents itself, I'll think it over and clearly I'm in some phase of the process without knowing whether it's going to become a reality," Parcells told ESPN senior NFL analyst Chris Mortensen by phone on Wednesday. "Sean's become a dear, dear friend. I'm trying to be a friend.

"You know, when I was a young coach, there were people like Chuck Noll, Chuck Knox and Tom Landry who were there for me. I think to honour those guys who helped me, you turn around and pass that legacy on to somebody else and Sean's an example of that. If he needs me and the owner and GM feel the same way, then I'd be a hypocrite if I didn't consider it."

"My heart can go one way but my mind also has to analyze all these ancillary things and determine if it's truly what's right for Sean, the Saints, what's right for those players and coaches and if I'm equipped to make it work.”said Bill Parcells

Payton, a former assistant under Parcells with the Dallas Cowboys, considers Parcells his mentor and the two have spoken several times since Payton learned last week the NFL intended to suspend him for all of the coming season -- starting this Sunday -- for his role in New Orleans' bounty program. Payton said most of those conversations concerned how Parcells might handle a similar situation, not whether he was interested in returning to the sideline in New Orleans.

General manager Mickey Loomis, who is suspended for the first eight games for his role in the program, joined those conversations Tuesday, golfing with Payton and Parcells at the league meetings in Jupiter, Fla.

"Sean is not the one doing the hiring. That's up to Mickey Loomis and [Saints owner] Tom Benson," Parcells told Mortensen. "I'm just getting to know Loomis, which is one reason we played golf yesterday. I mean, we've obviously had discussions about doing this but there are still too many hypotheticals to draw a conclusion right now."

Saints spokesman Greg Bensel said Wednesday no decisions had been made on an interim coach after Tuesday's meeting with Parcells, who will be 71 years old in August. Payton has made it clear he is hoping Parcells can help New Orleans move forward.

"There are a lot of variables, things you may call ancillary things," Parcells told Mortensen. "My heart can go one way but my mind also has to analyse all these ancillary things and determine if it's truly what's right for Sean, the Saints, what's right for those players and coaches and if I'm equipped to make it work. So we have some time here."

Payton has the option to appeal the suspension, which could buy him some time to settle on a 2012 replacement. A source in the league office told ESPN's Rachel Nichols that if Payton appeals, the hearing and ruling would come in "days, not weeks," and that any notion Payton could extend his working status through the draft in late April is inaccurate.

Should there be an appeal, the Saints would want to see whether it results in a reduced penalty before deciding whether to look within the organisation for Payton's stand-in.

"It would just be considering all options, to be fair, and really trying to do our homework on each option before making a decision," Payton said Tuesday. "There's a lot of small steps here before we would get to that point of having to make a decision."

Parcells, who has also coached the New York Jets, New York Giants and New England Patriots in addition to the Cowboys, could present an ideal quick fix for a franchise that has Super Bowl aspirations.

"I've had several people tell me 'You need to do this,' and I've had a few who have their doubts," Parcells told Mortensen. "Let's see what develops over the next couple of weeks. All I can tell you is this guy [Payton] is my friend and that means something to me. I want to be there for him but does that mean stepping in for him and coaching his team if I'm asked? I can't give a definitive answer on that right now because it's all hypothetical."

If Parcells does come out of retirement to coach New Orleans in Payton's absence, he would have to put any dreams of Canton on hold for five years. But the soon-to-be-71-year-old Parcells told Newsday that isn't a concern for him.

"That's not even a factor right now," he told the paper Wednesday, noting he has turned down two head-coaching opportunities since retiring as Cowboys coach in 2006. "I can't live my life worrying about something that might never happen. I have to be honest with myself. I don't know if that's going to happen or not. Why would you live your life worrying about something that's not going to happen? Don't assume that I don't think that's important to me because it is. But I'm not making any personal decision based on that."

As for the itch to return to a sport that he's spent his entire life involved with?

"That's been my life," Parcells told USA Today in a separate interview Wednesday. "I love the game. The NFL has been good to me. If you like competition, Sunday at one o'clock, it's there for you."

In New Orleans, Parcells would take the reins from a coach he hired as an offensive assistant in Dallas in 2003. Payton worked under Parcells for three seasons before getting his first shot as a head coach in 2006, when the Saints returned to the city after being displaced for months by Hurricane Katrina.

As for Loomis, he will be able to oversee the draft and work until the season starts. Then he is slated to serve his eight-game suspension for failing to put a stop to the bounty system in a timely way. Assistant head coach Joe Vitt, who also coaches linebackers, is facing a six-game suspension. Former defensive coordinator Gregg Williams (now with the Rams) was suspended indefinitely.

The NFL's investigation in New Orleans found Payton initially lied to league investigators about the existence of a bounty and instructed his defensive assistants to do the same. Payton twice apologized for his role in an enterprise that offered payouts for knocking out opponents, saying he takes "full responsibility" for a system that operated for three years under his watch.

As many as 27 players also could be sanctioned for their role in the scandal.

Goodell said the NFL is trying to "proceed as quickly as possible" in determining discipline for the players involved.

"I hold coaches and executives to a higher standard. ... It is clear from the information though that players enthusiastically embraced this and pushed this and that's troubling to me," Goodell said. "We'll have to look into who was involved, how much they were involved, what influence they had and I'll do my best to make a judgment on how that should be handled from a discipline standpoint."

In addition to the penalties for Payton, Loomis and Vitt, Goodell also fined the Saints $500,000 and took away second-round draft choices in 2012 and 2013.

ESPN

Thursday, 22 March 2012

Payton Pays for Unsaintly Bounty


New Orleans Saints head coach Sean Payton has been suspended for the 2012 NFL season as punishment for operating a bounty programme in which defensive players received cash bonuses for injuring opponents.

The team was also hit with a $US500,000 ($A478,000) fine.

In the most severe penalty ever levelled by the NFL against one of their teams, Saints general manager Mickey Loomis also received an eight-game suspension, while former Saints defensive coordinator Gregg Williams, who is now with the St Louis Rams, will be suspended indefinitely.

The NFL announced earlier this month that an investigation had uncovered the existence of the bounty payments, which are explicitly banned under league rules.

The NFL said Williams offered the bounties from 2009 to 2011, including a $1500 cash bonus for hits that knocked opposing players out of the game.

"A combination of elements made this matter particularly unusual and egregious," commissioner Roger Goodell said in a statement.

"When there is targeting of players for injury and cash rewards over a three-year period, the involvement of the coaching staff, and three years of denials and wilful disrespect of the rules, a strong and lasting message must be sent that such conduct is totally unacceptable and has no place in the game."

Goodell said punishment against individual players for participating in the bounty program is still being reviewed with the NFL Players Association and will be addressed at a later date.

Saints assistant head coach Joe Vitt was also hit with a six-game ban for his participation in the program.

Payton's suspension without pay will begin April 1.