NEW ORLEANS (AP) —
Drew Brees' latest assault on a prestigious NFL passing record lifted
the embattled New Orleans Saints to their first victory of the season.
Brees
broke a half-century-old record by throwing a touchdown pass in his
48th straight game, and the Saints defeated the San Diego Chargers 31-24 on Sunday night.
Brees'
40-yard pass to Devery Henderson eclipsed the mark of 47 consecutive
games with a touchdown pass set by Johnny Unitas from 1956-60.
"First
of all it's a team record, not an individual record. So many people
were responsible for this, coaches and people in the organization,"
Brees said. "Certainly the man who held this record stands for
everything great in this league. It couldn't have happened in a better
way."
Brees finished with four touchdown passes, including three
to Marques Colston, giving the seventh-year receiver a franchise-record
52 TD catches with the Saints (1-4).
At Brees' request, the NFL
allowed head coach Sean Payton, assistant head coach Joe Vitt and
general manager Mickey Loomis — all serving various suspensions in
connection with the NFL's bounty investigation — to attend the game.
They and Unitas' son, Joe, saw Brees pass for 370 yards.
"It gave
us a good mojo for sure," Brees said of Payton's presence. "I love my
coach, so glad he could be here. Mickey and Joe Vitt as well. It is
special for our team, special they could be a part of this record.
"We
finally put together a great team effort for all four quarters. I can't
say enough for the guys in our locker room," Brees said. "We have been
through a lot together. Hopefully this will lead to more wins."
NFL
Commissioner Roger Goodell, the one who suspended Saints personnel in
the bounty matter but also granted Brees' request for Payton, Vitt and
Loomis to attend the game, chimed in on social media to offer his own
congratulations.
On his Twitter page, Goodell wrote: "Congrats to
(at)drewbrees & his teammates on breaking Unitas' record. Amazing
accomplishment by great QB & leader. We're proud of you, Drew."
Philip
Rivers passed for 354 yards and two touchdowns to former Saint Robert
Meachem, but had two costly turnovers in the final quarter.
The
first was Roman Harper's interception and 41-yard return on a pass
tipped by fellow safety Malcolm Jenkins. That set up the Saints' final
score on Garrett Hartley's 25-yard field goal. San Diego (3-2) still had
a chance to tie in the final minute when defensive end Martez Wilson
stripped Rivers and recovered the fumble to seal the victory.
After
his record-setting completion, Brees galloped to the end zone to hug
Henderson. The rest of New Orleans' offense pursued and swarmed around
Brees in celebration while the jubilant Superdome crowd roared and then
howled an elongated, "Dreeeeeeew!"
Brees took the game ball to the
sideline where he continued to accept congratulations. The scoring pass
capped an 80-yard drive in which Brees completed all three of his
third-down passes, including the touchdown connection with Henderson.
Colston finished with nine catches for 131 yards, while Henderson had eight catches for 123 yards.
Colston's
second TD late in the third quarter eclipsed a franchise mark set by
Joe Horn in 2006 and pulled the Saints back within a field goal shortly
after the Chargers appeared to have gone ahead
31-14 on Demorrio Williams' interception return for a touchdown.
Williams' TD was nullified, however, by Melvin Ingram's late hit on
Brees' chin, which drew a roughing-the-passer flag and extended what
wound up to be an 87-yard scoring drive.
Vitt is expected to take
over the coaching staff when his six-game suspension ends. Loomis was
docked eight games. As the Saints headed into their bye week, the
desperately needed win offered hope, however faint, of making a playoff
run when Vitt and Loomis are back.
Rivers staked San Diego to a
7-0 lead with a 15-yard touchdown pass over the middle to Meachem,
marking the former Saints receiver's first touchdown since signing with
the Chargers as a free agent last winter.
San Diego moved ahead 10-7 on Nick Novak's 20-yard field goal, a disappointment for the Chargers
after Saints cornerback Jabari Greer was called for pass interference
against Malcom Floyd at the New Orleans 6. Novak, filling in for injured
kicker Nate Kaeding, later missed a 55-yard attempt.
Colston made
his first touchdown catch on a pass Brees lofted perfectly to the back
of the end zone. That gave New Orleans a 14-10 lead that lasted until
Meachem's 44-yard touchdown catch in the final minute of the half.
San
Diego went ahead 24-14 on Ryan Mathews' 13-yard run around left end,
capping a three-play drive that started when Henderson tipped a pass
that Brees threw behind him, allowing Quentin Jammer to intercept it and
give San Diego the ball on the New Orleans 25.
Greer left the game with what team officials said was a hip injury. He was hurt late in the second quarter and did not return.
Copyright 2012 The Associated Press.