Mardi Gras in Miami as Saints win first Super Bowl

Saints quarterback Drew Brees completed 32 of 39 passes for  288 yards and two touchdowns as he out-duelled the Colts’  Peyton Manning to help the Saints fight back from a 10-point  first-quarter deficit.

A Mardi Gras-style celebration broke out in Dolphin Stadium  when Tracy Porter picked off a Manning pass with just over  three minutes left and raced 74 yards for a score to give the  Saints a 31-17 lead. “We just believed in ourselves,” said Brees. “We knew we  had an entire city, maybe an entire country behind us. “We’re  feeling it was all meant to be. It was destiny. Mardi Gras may  never end.”

The Saints have been a ray of hope for beleaguered New  Orleans since 2005 when Hurricane Katrina slammed the Gulf  Coast, leaving death and destruction in its wake.

New Orleans had looked shellshocked to be in their first  Super Bowl as Indianapolis took a 10-0 lead at the end of the  first quarter.

Garrett Hartley, however, kicked two of his three field  goals in the second quarter and although they trailed 10-6 at  the half, the Saints were back in business.

A 16-yard scoring pass from Brees to Pierre Thomas gave the  Saints a 13-10 lead in the third quarter and the confidence  they could actually win the game.

Manning, who was hoping to guide the Colts to their second  Super Bowl crown in the last four seasons, finished with 31  completions in 45 attempts for 333 yards, one touchdown and one  very costly interception.

LAST GASP

The Colts’ last gasp expired with 44 seconds of the game  left when Manning’s pass slipped through the hands of Reggie  Wayne in the end zone, giving the Saints their first title in  their mostly moribund 43-year history.

New Orleans had entered the final quarter trailing 17-16  but Brees hit Jeremy Shockey on a two-yard scoring pass to give  the Saints a 22-16 lead with under six minutes remaining.

The quarterback, named the game’s MVP, found Lance Moore on  a two-point conversion that was ruled incomplete. But the  Saints successfully challenged the call to take a 24-17 lead.

Porter, who had a key pickoff against Minnesota in the NFC  championship, sealed the Super Bowl victory with his  interception, pointing to the end zone during the last 20  yards.

“It was … a great jump, and a great play,” said Porter.  “This means so much. Words can’t describe how much this means  for New Orleans. I am a Louisiana native and this is real big.”

New Orleans scored the first time they touched the ball as  a new franchise back in 1967. That shining moment was merely a  blip, however, as the team not only lost the game, but waited  two decades before their first winning season.

“I’m proud of this team, these coaches and everybody back  in New Orleans,” Saints coach Sean Payton told the delirious  crowd after the game.