The high-flying passing game of the Saints remains in fine form as the 2008 season approaches. The offense remains stocked with talent….quarterback Drew Brees, receiver Marques Colston, and all-world talent Reggie Bush form a great nucleus. The team has made great improvements on defense, which was their primary off-season focus. The team has added impact rookies Sedrick Ellis and Tracy Porter through the draft, and bolstered the rush through free agent acquisitions Jonathan Vilma and Bobby McCray. Coach Sean Payton can always be counted on for some creative play-calling. If the team can avoid injuries and shore up their defense, they should be a top challenger again in the NFC. Get your tickets to the Louisiana Superdome to see it all come together in 2008 for the New Orleans Saints!
Some New Orleans Saints history: The Saints joined the NFL as an expansion team in 1967. The new club struggled for many years, employing six head coaches, posting 12 consecutive losing records, and averaging only four wins per season from 1967 to 1978. The team's leader during much of this time was quarterback Archie Manning, who won the NFL player of the year award in 1978. The greatest moment in Saints history came on November 8, 1970, when New Orleans kicker Tom Dempsey sealed a 19-17 upset of the Detroit Lions with a 63-yard field goal—the longest in NFL history.
The Saints began playing in the Superdome in 1975, and four years later they recorded their first non-losing mark, finishing with an 8-8 win-loss record under head coach Dick Nolan. The team's woes continued during the 1980s, however, and New Orleans was never able to compile more than 8 wins in a season.
Under head coach Jim Mora, the Saints achieved their first winning record and their first playoff appearance in 1987. A former defensive coordinator for the New England Patriots, Mora was named NFL coach of the year. Running back Rueben Mayes, the 1986 rookie of the year, and wide receiver Eric Martin, a three-time 1,000-yard gainer, anchored the NFC's second-best offense.
Mora steered the Saints to three consecutive trips to the postseason from 1990 to 1992. New Orleans assembled the NFC's toughest defense in 1990 and 1991, led by one of the best linebacker units in the league. In 1992 linebackers Rickey Jackson, Vaughn Johnson, Sam Mills, and Pat Swilling all played in the Pro Bowl, and the Saints led the league in quarterback sacks. Despite its tenacious defense, the team lost in the first round each time it made the playoffs. At the end of the 1996 season, former Chicago Bears head coach Mike Ditka replaced Mora. Ditka was fired after the 1999 season. Head coach Jim Haslett held the reins through the year of the hurricane, but was replaced by Sean Payton in 2006.