“Thanks for the great season…”
I suppose that statement is a way for Saints fans to hide and deal with their disappointment and hurt.
But they’ve been saying it for the past 4 years.
I’m glad I’m not experiencing all those feelings this morning after yet another heartbreaking end to a season last night. Been there, done that. Every year for the past 3 years before this. I sat on the floor in a corner of the Deutsches Haus bawling my eyes out, angrily ripping off all my Saints paraphernalia one of those years. I cried all the way home and continued to cry as I went to bed. The next day at work, I was unapproachable. I was in mourning.
Three years in a row, I experienced that sorrow that a passionate sports fan can feel.
2017 – the “Minneapolis Miracle” A missed tackle by our guy, 10 seconds left when the play started, all he had to do was tackle the Vikings guy, but he didn’t. We would have won if he had just tackled him. Game over. I had been hiding my face in a corner of the room when the play started, whispering to myself “Please, please!” the whole time. Then I turned to look in the last seconds. Utter heartbreak. I almost literally fell to the floor in that corner I had been standing in. I was done. Off came the Saints necklaces and beads, the rubber bracelets that say “Bless You Boys” and “Get Crunk”. Nobody could talk to me. I was done.
2018 – the Rams in the Dome for the NFC Championship game: the infamous “NOLA No Call” pass interference on the Saints that was blatantly ignored by the refs, one of which was standing RIGHT THERE. That’s all I kept saying. From up in our perch in the terrace section of the Superdome, even from all the way up there, we saw it. “He was standing RIGHT…THERE!” We were dumbfounded.
One thing I can say about the No Call – New Orleans and Saints fans showed their true spirit and how we handle adversity and loss. On Super Bowl Sunday (or what I referred to as “Stupid Bowl Sunday”) we went to a block party Uptown and wrote down our feelings about what had happened and placed them in a wooden coffin that someone had made and put on display. We then joined hundreds of other Saints fans in a second line that started in the French Quarter and wound its way to Canal Street and back again. Chants of “We got robbed” and vocal support of our team in music and song filled the air. We were exorcising demons. It was truly therapeutic.
2019 – Vikings in the Dome, our first playoff game, the wild card game. We were salivating for revenge from two years prior. We go into overtime – and another pass interference is not called by the refs. How much more of this are we supposed to take? It’s not fair. I can’t do this anymore. Sitting in my seat in the Dome, tears flowing, anger seething. I just can’t do this anymore.
2020 was a strange year, to say the least, in so many ways. There was major political and social upheaval. Sports teams collectively, it seemed, were voicing their frustrations about the events that were happening, the things that seemed to keep occurring over and over again.
During the summer months, it seemed like everything was not only coming to a boil, but vigorously percolating, and threatening to blow the top off the pot.
It was at this point that things changed irrevocably for me.
At their first practice in preparation for the coming season – of which we were not going to be a part of due to coronavirus restrictions with regard to tailgating and inside the Dome – the Saints players decided to take “action”. They weren’t the only team doing so. Along with kneeling during the National Anthem and wearing shirts voicing their opinions, they decided to put names on their helmets of people who had been killed by police under questionable circumstances.
When I saw the name of the person that Drew Brees decided to wear on his helmet, it disturbed me to my core.
I won’t get into the details, but it affected me so much that my feelings for the man I had held up since 2006 were forever altered.
Am I perfect? Not by any stretch of the imagination. Is Drew Brees perfect? You know – I really used to think he was. I defended him up, down, and sideways every time anyone tried to discredit him. You can’t say anything bad about Drew Brees. Because there is nothing. There’s not one bad thing you can find on him.
Is that mostly true? Yeah, I suppose it still is. But this was a man who always stood up for what he believed in, no matter what. Or so I thought.
Other things happened over the summer of 2020 in which I felt that Drew was going against his convictions. Were there extenuating circumstances in some cases? Yes, I think there were. But I have always believed that a person should stand up for what they believe in, never buckle, never knuckle under. No matter what.
Had I set too much store in this man? Placed him on a pedestal, never to pull him down? And yet, who the hell was I to be judge, jury, and executioner on this man? Or anyone else? Who the hell do I think I am?
But I was just simply disillusioned by the things I was seeing and hearing. Drew backpedaled on his assertion that nobody should ever kneel for the National Anthem. And he did so because he was getting backlash from his own teammates. That was so wrong on their part. But, Drew – why didn’t you stick to your guns?
Who the hell am I to judge Drew Brees and think I’m better than him, or anyone else? Have I ever gone against my convictions? You know what? I’m not perfect. But no – I don’t believe I have.
I was just disappointed in the man I had admired for so many years, not just as a football player, but more importantly as a human being. When he decided to put the name of a rapist on his helmet, I was stunned.
In good conscience, I could not support such actions. By Drew or the rest of the team. Believe what you want. I just don’t think the football field is the place to bring that in. It brings a lot of tension and angst to something that’s supposed to be fun.
Drew Brees is still an exceptional person. And he is an outstanding football player. I always thought he never received the recognition he deserved. He was constantly being overlooked. The records he has broken in his professional career, many of which I was lucky enough to witness in person, are going to place him on top in the NFL Hall of Fame.
As a human being, Drew has done more for this city than its elected officials. He came here to join the Saints during a pivotal time in our city’s history. 2006, and New Orleans was still in a state of destruction and despair. Drew and his wife were driven around by Sean Payton to witness the devastation caused by the Federal levee breaches. Who in their right mind would consciously choose to make their new home in this place?
Drew Brees did.
I will never forget everything he did for the city of New Orleans. No one will. Can I forgive him for what I suppose could be a momentary lapse of reason in a sea of good deeds? Yes, but again – who the hell am I to be so self-righteous? We all make mistakes.
But my view of professional sports was changed by the events of the summer of 2020. And my view of our quarterback was questionable. He was instrumental in bringing the Saints their first Super Bowl. It was a glorious time. I am so blessed to have been a part of that. Because it wasn’t just about football. It was about soul. And spirit. And unity.
Football for me now is about division. And that’s not how it’s supposed to be. It’s supposed to be fun. It’s supposed to be an escape from all that other stuff that we get shoved down our throats on a daily basis it seems all the time now.
From the beginning of this season, all I kept thinking and saying was, “I hope Drew and the Saints get what they are looking for.” Drew is 42 years old. He’s older than Brett Favre was back in 2010 when Drew played against him in the NFC Championship game that brought us to the Super Bowl. The game in which I kept yelling at Favre, “It’s football, and you’re the quarterback, old man!”
And now, last night was most likely Drew’s final ever game in the Mercedes Benz Superdome. Should a quarterback of such prolific talent have won another Super Bowl in the past 4 years? Probably. He should have gotten the chance for another ring. When he ran off the field last night after losing the game, he looked up at the few fans who had been allowed in the Dome, he waved and blew kisses. And then, as he ran into the tunnel exiting the field, he turned around and looked behind him, for what everyone is saying was probably the very last time. Drew will be retiring.
If the past year had been different, if the season had been different, we would have been in the Dome, and I probably would have been devastated and in tears again like I was the previous 3 years.
But it wasn’t, and I wasn’t, and all season long, I really didn’t watch the games. And when I did, I really wasn’t paying attention. I wasn’t emotional and invested like before.
And last night, I would have been screaming and yelling til I couldn’t scream anymore, and getting angry and frustrated. And I would have cried my eyes out again. For us. For Drew. For the team.
I’m sorry they didn’t get what they set out to achieve. I’m sorry they didn’t get what they wanted. I’m sorry that what is pretty much undoubtedly Drew’s final season ended the way it did for him.
But I’m not sorry that I’m not more emotional about it all. If I learned anything from the past year, it’s that when it really comes down to it, it is JUST a football game. And I have other things that could potentially be more devastating. More important things that could take my feelings and emotions and effort when I have nothing left to give.
I’ve missed being in our section in the Dome. I’ve missed our tailgates and seeing all of our wonderful friends there. I don’t know if we will be back in our seats again any time soon. But if and when we are, I can say for certain that it will definitely never be like it was. I will attend a football game for hopefully just the fun, and not all the other stuff. And the camaraderie.
And that doesn’t make me, or my husband for that matter, “fairweather fans”. We are and have been anything but. What we’ve experienced up until this point and what we’ve chosen to continue to endure is proof of that.
And regardless of what happens in the future, we will always have Super Bowl 44 and the glory days of that time. That they can never take away from us.
Thanks for everything you did, Drew. I will hold those past days in a special place in my heart forever and will always smile when I think of them. I wish you peace and discernment and clarity in all the things that are important to you.