Cool Manning and Colts face passion of the Saints

MIAMI, (Reuters) – The romantics are backing the New  Orleans Saints but experience and quality points to the  Indianapolis Colts as favourites in tomorrow’s Super Bowl.

Peyton Manning, the undisputed number one quarterback in the  game, is looking for his second Super Bowl ring after he, along  with 24 other members of the current team, won in Miami against  the Chicago Bears at the end of the 2006 season.

The Saints, in contrast, are in their first Super Bowl and  with their run coming less then five years after New Orleans was  devastated by Hurricane Katrina, they have won the hearts of  most neutrals.

Once mocked as ‘The Aints’, the story of the New Orleans  club, 43 years old this year, has been one of miserable failure  followed by mediocrity.

It took the team 20 lean years to get a winning record and a  place in the playoffs, leading some fans to famously hide their  faces behind paper bags.

New Orleans too have a masterful general in quarterback Drew  Brees but if they are to produce an upset it is likely to come  via their trio of running backs, who have dubbed themselves “The  Three Headed Monster”, with the explosive pace of the  unpredictable Reggie Bush a particular danger.

The expectation is, however, that Manning produces yet  another display of his passing genius to cement his status as  one of the greatest quarterbacks of all time.

In a curious twist in the plot, Manning is playing against  his hometown and a team where his father Archie was a favorite  in the 1970s.

The Colts move with devastating speed and efficiency down  the field with Manning operating a no-huddle attack, making  quick decisions, changing plays before the snap and delivering  the precise passes that this season produced his NFL record  10th, 4,000-yard passing campaign.

“I think he has pretty much established himself as really  one of the finest that has every played this game and he keeps  getting better each and every year,” said Colts head coach Jim  Caldwell.

UNASSUMING

COACH
Caldwell was an assistant to Tony Dungy when the Colts won  three years ago and the modest and unassuming coach has wisely  chosen continuity in his first year in charge.

His counterpart Sean Payton is a strikingly different  character, confident and chatty off the field and on the  sidelines he is one of the most animated coaches in the NFL.

“When it gets to game day he feels like he is one of the  players. He is fiery, yelling, shouting and ranting and you know  his heart is really in the game,” said Saints defensive end Will  Smith.

Since taking over in 2006, Payton has carefully improved the  roster and transformed the mentality of the team.

The Saints defensive co-ordinator Gregg Williams puts  emphasis on “stripping the ball” to force a fumble and has also  promised that Manning will receive some “remember-me hits”,  prompting some to wonder whether New Orleans will overstep the  mark in attacking the quarterback.

Certainly Manning will have watched the film of Minnesota  Vikings quarterback Brett Favre being repeatedly hit in the NFC  Championship game but the way in which Manning quickly releases  the ball so early should limit the chances of painfully  inflicted sacks.

“I expect a tough defense,” said Manning. “I expect it is  going to be a challenge to try to move the ball against them.  They have excellent players. They are very active.

“They know how to get their hands on the football. All those  characteristics combined make it a tough defense, I think we are  going to have our work cut out for us.”
An estimated 100 million people, a third of the U.S.  population, will tune in to watch the game while across the  globe hardcore fans will stay up into the night or get up early  to watch what should be a fascinating encounter.