May 21, 2013

NFL: NFL lifts Payton’s suspension

fc2879465acffa5702464d46949a8620 NFL: NFL lifts Payton’s suspension
Team owner of the and the Tom Benson shakes hands with head during a game between the New Orleans Hornets and the Toronto Raptors at New Orleans Arena on December 28, 2012 in New Orleans, Louisiana.
(December 27, 2012 – Source: Chris Graythen/ North America)

NEW YORK (AP) — Sean Payton is back as coach of the New Orleans Saints.

Payton’s season-long suspension for his role in the Saints’ was lifted by NFL on Tuesday, nearly two weeks earlier than expected.

The decision allows Payton to attend the Senior Bowl in Mobile, Ala., on Saturday, where some of the top college players available for the will be competing.

Payton, along with Joe Vitt, general manager , and four players including , was suspended after an investigation found the club had a performance pool offering cash rewards for key plays, including big hits. The player eventually were overturned.

“I clearly recognize that mistakes were made, which led to league violations,” Payton said in a statement. “Furthermore, I have assured the commissioner a more diligent protocol will be followed.”

The suspension was scheduled to end after the Super Bowl on Feb. 3, but was moved up after Payton and Goodell met on Monday.

“Coach Payton acknowledged in the meeting his responsibility for the actions of his coaching staff and players and pledged to uphold the highest standards of the NFL and ensure that his staff and players do so as well,” Goodell said in a statement.

“’Sean fully complied with all the requirements imposed on him during his suspension.

“More important, it is clear that Sean understands and accepts his responsibilities as a head coach and the vital role that coaches play in promoting and setting an example for how the game should be played at all levels.”

Saints welcomed back his coach.

“We are all thankful that Sean Payton has been reinstated,” Benson said. “We have a lot of work to do and we are in the middle of it right now.”

Payton also needs to fill a key position on his coaching staff following the departure last week of offensive line coach and coordinator Aaron Kromer, now the offensive coordinator in Chicago.

and Vitt are in Mobile evaluating players. said he was caught off guard by the news of Payton’s return. But he said having Payton back sooner than expected will help the Saints.

“Every day makes a difference. We’ve certainly missed Sean in terms of the team and all the things that go with our business and the game. But look, I miss his friendship. We all miss his friendship. We miss him as a person. I’m excited that he’s going to be back here and fired up that he’s back.”

Vitt said he talked to Payton Tuesday morning and that he should join the Saints’ contingent in Alabama on Wednesday.

“We just found out on the way to practice,” Vitt said. “Mr. B called and we’re all excited. Sean went and spent the day in New York (Monday). He just got back in Dallas. I talked to him on the phone about 5 o’clock this morning. He’s packing his bags so we’ll expect he’ll be here some time” Wednesday.

Vitt agreed with Loomis that the timing of Payton’s return is good for the team.

Payton is “going to hit the ground running with both feet. His jaw is going to be set. He’ll have a note pad full of thoughts and ideas and he’s going to have to get himself caught up with the evaluation process of our team and looking at film, which he’ll do. This is perfect, getting him back now, because he’s going to be here for the readings of our players. He’s going to be here for the readings of these college seniors. We start handing out unrestricted free agent tape on Thursday and Friday of this week.

“This is where you’re building the foundation of your football team, with the evaluation process of these draft eligible juniors and seniors and the free agents that are out there.”

There remains one outstanding issue for the Saints stemming from the bounty probe: What will become of the Saints’ second pick next spring. As part of the bounty punishment, Goodell fined the Saints $500,000 and took away second-round picks in 2012 and 2013. However, Goodell left open the possibility of restoring the 2013 second-rounder and instead docking the team a later-round pick if he is satisfied with the club’s level of cooperation in the bounty matter.

What the Saints do know is that the 49-year-old Payton is set to return to New Orleans for the next five seasons. Earlier this month he signed a contract extension running through the 2017 season.

The coach is the last person punished in the bounty probe to return to work. Before Tuesday, Payton had not been at work since mid-April, when Goodell rejected the coach’s appeal of his suspension.

Loomis was suspended for , Vitt for six and former defensive coordinator Gregg Williams remains suspended indefinitely

Vilma and current Saints defensive lineman Will Smith, along with former Saints Scott Fujita and Anthony Hargrove, were given suspensions of various lengths, but never served a game. Their punishments were overturned after lengthy appeals which also coincided with exhaustive litigation in federal court.

The litigation included Vilma’s defamation lawsuit against Goodell, which was dismissed by U.S. District Judge Ginger Berrigan last week.

Payton’s reinstatement is one more step for the Saints to return to normalcy, but for Vitt, said it doesn’t bring closure to the bounty scandal.

“It doesn’t for me. You’re going to have ask Sean that question, Mickey that question, Vilma that question. It certainly doesn’t for me. I can forgive. I’m not going to forget. It is what it is.”

NFL: NFL lifts Payton’s suspension is a post from: PhatzRadio.com

 NFL: NFL lifts Payton’s suspension  NFL: NFL lifts Payton’s suspension  NFL: NFL lifts Payton’s suspension  NFL: NFL lifts Payton’s suspension  NFL: NFL lifts Payton’s suspension

 NFL: NFL lifts Payton’s suspension

NFL: Sean Payton, Saints agree to contract extension

19a468c39af3f9db1b0bc35af85979df NFL: Sean Payton, Saints agree to contract extension
Here’s owner Tom Benson (left) shaking hands with during Friday night’s Hornets-Raptors game. Earlier Peyton and the Saints agreed to a that will keep him in New Orleans.(: Chris Graythen, )

Story Highlights

Payton’s new deal reportedly is for five years
Payton’s original extension was voided by the in the wake of the bounty

The New Orleans Saints’ disappointing season will at least end on a by getting their back for 2013.

The team on Friday agreed in principle on a new contract with Sean Payton, according to a person informed of the progress of negotiations. The person spoke to on condition of because the deal hadn’t been signed and finalized.

FoxSports.com initially reported that the five-year agreement was in place.

“He’s always been our head coach,” Saints owner Tom Benson said, via The Times-Picayune. “I never had any doubt about that.”

Payton’s original contract extension, which was signed in 2011, ran through the 2015 season. The NFL voided the deal because of language that would’ve prevented Payton to leave the Saints if general manager Loomis was suspended, fired or left the organization.

It’s unclear whether the wording in the new contract will be altered or deleted. The new deal would be subject to once signed.

Payton’s return will be for the Saints, who have suffered through a 7-8 season that was affected by the player suspensions resulting from the bounty situation – rulings that have since been vacated by former .

Payton was suspended for a full season, a ruling over which Tagliabue had no say.

There was speculation Payton, a Dallas resident, could land with the Cowboys if was fired. Last week, Cowboys owner Jerry Jones said he wasn’t contemplating a , though the team still has one more game to play Sunday against the for the NFC East title. In other words, stay tuned on that front.

Even so, it seems Payton won’t be available for that job or any others for which he’d been rumored (i.e. the ’).

USA TODAY Sports’ Jarrett Bell contributed to this report.

NFL: Sean Payton, Saints agree to contract extension is a post from: PhatzRadio.com

 NFL: Sean Payton, Saints agree to contract extension  NFL: Sean Payton, Saints agree to contract extension  NFL: Sean Payton, Saints agree to contract extension  NFL: Sean Payton, Saints agree to contract extension  NFL: Sean Payton, Saints agree to contract extension

 NFL: Sean Payton, Saints agree to contract extension

NFL: Sean Payton, Saints agree to contract extension

19a468c39af3f9db1b0bc35af85979df NFL: Sean Payton, Saints agree to contract extension
Here’s Saints owner Tom Benson (left) shaking hands with coach during Friday night’s Hornets-Raptors game. Earlier Peyton and the Saints agreed to a that will keep him in New Orleans.(: Chris Graythen, )

Story Highlights

Payton’s new deal reportedly is for five years
Payton’s original extension was voided by the in the wake of the bounty scandal

The New Orleans Saints’ disappointing season will at least end on a by getting their back for 2013.

The team on Friday agreed in principle on a new contract with Sean Payton, according to a person informed of the progress of negotiations. The person spoke to on condition of because the deal hadn’t been signed and finalized.

FoxSports.com initially reported that the five-year agreement was in place.

“He’s always been our head coach,” Saints owner Tom Benson said, via The Times-Picayune. “I never had any doubt about that.”

Payton’s original , which was signed in 2011, ran through the 2015 season. The NFL voided the deal because of language that would’ve prevented Payton to leave the Saints if general manager Mickey Loomis was suspended, fired or left the organization.

It’s unclear whether the wording in the new contract will be altered or deleted. The new deal would be subject to once signed.

Payton’s return will be for the Saints, who have suffered through a 7-8 season that was affected by the player suspensions resulting from the bounty situation – rulings that have since been vacated by former .

Payton was suspended for a full season, a ruling over which Tagliabue had no say.

There was speculation Payton, a Dallas resident, could land with the Cowboys if was fired. Last week, Cowboys said he wasn’t contemplating a , though the team still has one more game to play Sunday against the for the NFC East title. In other words, stay tuned on that front.

Even so, it seems Payton won’t be available for that job or any others for which he’d been rumored (i.e. the ’).

Sports’ Jarrett Bell contributed to this report.

NFL: Sean Payton, Saints agree to contract extension is a post from: PhatzRadio.com

 NFL: Sean Payton, Saints agree to contract extension  NFL: Sean Payton, Saints agree to contract extension  NFL: Sean Payton, Saints agree to contract extension  NFL: Sean Payton, Saints agree to contract extension  NFL: Sean Payton, Saints agree to contract extension

 NFL: Sean Payton, Saints agree to contract extension

NFL: Saints owner Benson meets with Goodell in NY

8f0b9cc6f2da65ebe95bbeb19b39020b NFL: Saints owner Benson meets with Goodell in NY

METAIRIE, La. (AP) — met Tuesday with NFL commissioner Roger Goodell in New York to discuss matters concerning both the team and the league.

The meeting came amid a backdrop of lawsuits filed by current and former Saints players who’ve challenged the findings of the NFL’s bounty investigation. Benson also has hired the firm of Freeh to investigate the accuracy of the league’s bounty probe.

It also came on a day after announced had found no evidence to back allegations made in an April news report that wiring was rigged so general manager could eavesdrop on opposing coaches’ radio communications between the 2002 and 2004 seasons.

While the NFL and the Saints provided very few details about the meeting, Saints spokesman Greg Bensel described it as productive and added that Benson “looks forward to having many more discussions with the commissioner on specific Saints-related issues as well as league-wide issues.”

NFL spokesman said the league generally does not discuss meetings with owners, adding that the commissioner meets with owners all the time to discuss wide-ranging matters.

Goodell has used the NFL’s findings as the basis for season-long suspensions of Saints head coach and defensive captain , as well as a half-season suspension for general manager Mickey Loomis, a six- for assistant Vitt and a four- for defensive end Will Smith.

Two former Saints who are still active also were suspended: Green Bay defensive end was docked and Cleveland linebacker Scott Fujita three games.

During a hearing last Friday on the NFL’s motion to dismiss lawsuits by Vilma and by the on behalf of the other three suspended players, U.S. District Judge said she found the process by which the NFL disciplined the players to be unfair and the punishment excessive. She said she was inclined to rule in favor of Vilma’s request for a temporary restraining order allowing him to rejoin the Saints while the case proceeds, but she said she would need more time to seek clarity on whether she had jurisdiction to do so.

The judge then urged all sides to try to settle the matter with the help of a magistrate before the court has to rule.

The NFL’s initial bounty reports made public in March described Saints players taking part in a bounty pool that paid Saints defenders for injuring opponents from 2009 through 2011. The reports also said the Saints specifically targeted several star players for injury, including quarterbacks Brett Favre and Kurt Warner in the 2009-10 playoffs.

However, as the players’ lawsuits have played out in federal court, seven current or former Saints, along with Vitt, have testified under oath that there was no pay-to-injure program.

They have said they only took part in a pay-for-performance pool that provided cash bonuses primarily in the hundreds for big plays such as sacks, forced fumbles and interceptions, and collected fines for missed assignments and penalties including unnecessary roughness.

They have also testified that violent sounding terms coaches used to track pool payments, such as “whacks, knockouts and cart-offs,” were all for clean tackles.

However, the players did testify that “cart-offs,” while legal, described hits that caused tackled players to take themselves out of games, at least briefly, to gather themselves or be checked by trainers. Citing that testimony, Goodell said during the weekend of Pro Football inductions that players have essentially acknowledged the Saints’ performance pool paid for injuries.

“When you reward players for injuring other opponents, that’s a bounty,” Goodell said.

Notes: With temperatures in the 90s, the heat got to several Saints players during Tuesday’s practice. WR Courtney Roby, LT Jermon Bushrod and LB Curtis Lofton were all taken by trainers to the locker room before practice ended with what Vitt described as heat-related ailments. RB Pierre Thomas also required a break during which trainers cooled him down with sponges. Saints LB Chris Chamberlain later tweeted: “Practice was a beast today! Never seen so many guys have to get IV’s in my life…this New Orleans weather is undefeated!” … The Saints’ first-team defense intercepted QB Drew Brees twice during 11-on-11 drills in Tuesday’s practice. Safety Malcolm Jenkins made one on a pass intended for Marques Colston and LB Jonathan Casillas snagged a pass over the middle intended for TE David Thomas. When asked about a recent spate of interceptions in practice, including a pair against Brees on Monday, Vitt said he hoped it was because the defense is thriving under new coordinator Steve Spagnuolo. “That is what we hope for in the games. … The variety of coverage that Spags has brought to our defense, with the pressure, makes us see hesitancy in the quarterback and his throws.” … LB Aaron Tevis missed practice with a knee injury. Vitt declined to say which knee.

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State Police: No evidence of Saints wiretapping

ef79c7c07adf1f20e6c03ff0d68c3dd5 State Police: No evidence of Saints wiretapping

NEW ORLEANS (AP) — have found no evidence that the or general manager rigged wiring so opposing coaches’ could be intercepted.

“This has been an intensive investigation, and after numerous interviews we have determined that there is no evidence that have been violated,” State Police Col. Mike said Monday after meeting with Saints in New Orleans to brief him on the status of the probe.

State police investigators have been working in with the since the eavesdropping surfaced in in April.

said he cannot comment on the status of related federal probes. He also noted that State Police will reopen their investigations if new allegations surface.

“This is based on what we know today. If any new allegations would come up we would certainly pursue that,” Edmonson said. “This is not anything to do with the FBI or the U.S. Attorney’s office. We find out whether or not there’s any evidence to show and base it on state law.”

Loomis and the Saints have emphatically denied the allegations, and the Saints have hired the firm of former FBI to do its own investigation.

When informed of Edmonson’s comments, Loomis said he did not have anything to add at this time.

The FBI has so far declined to comment on the investigation.

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009b06f38695de0d0d383c24bf894a9e State Police: No evidence of Saints wiretapping
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1df4af0e6e8f900d91267ca68edfd555 State Police: No evidence of Saints wiretapping
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7f14bbf0b0c13fca3af83ff82c0b71ca State Police: No evidence of Saints wiretapping
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7c7d24e16ce9807a51c9caae4d336d4f State Police: No evidence of Saints wiretapping
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325472601571f31e1bf00674c368d335 State Police: No evidence of Saints wiretapping

325472601571f31e1bf00674c368d335 State Police: No evidence of Saints wiretapping

Saints Bounty Scandal: Saints defiant in return to action after bounty scandal

ba92c6ffac2d3039e57fe585dfb623ac Saints Bounty Scandal: Saints defiant in return to action after bounty scandal

(PhatzRadio / ) — METAIRIE, La. – Step one foot inside the indoor practice facility, and you cannot miss the larger-than-life impression.

It’s Sean Payton, suspended coach and in-house martyr, grimacing during a game with an intense stare the players know too well. He looms over the field on a 30-foot-by-30-foot banner. At the bottom of the image are the words Payton uttered to his team in April before starting the year-long ban imposed by as punishment for the bounty .

Do your job.

“It is a little bit creepy,” Lance Moore says. “I feel like he is looking right at me.”

That’s the point. Saints came up with the idea, hoping Payton’s presence would serve as a motivational reminder with the coach prohibited from virtually all contact.

When the Saints saw it Friday, the banner quickly stirred debate about when the photo was shot. They seem to agree there are too many possibilities to be sure.

“Somebody probably got a penalty on that play,” safety Roman Harper figures.

Joe Vitt, the interim coach who also handles , says, “That’s ’s catch in the Super Bowl, and he’s looking at me.”

Adds center Brian de la Puente: “Everybody has gotten that look at some point if you have been here. It is like having him here. I like it up there. It keeps you in check.”

Paying price

If you’re wondering how the Saints would approach their return to the field after being embroiled in one of the most disgraceful offseasons in NFL history, the in-your-face banner of Payton sends a message on several levels.

They are still defiant, denying the existence of a the NFL says operated from 2009 to ’12 and former told league existed. Instead, the Saints contend they are being punished for the type of pay-for-performance pool many have had — although players have admitted New Orleans’ program indeed included incentive for “cart-offs” of injured opponents.

“Up in New York, they know how I feel,” Benson tells Sports. “The worst part of the problem, as you look back, is that it was blown out of proportion.”

Another persistent message as camp opened: They are thrilled to be back at work and to have games on the horizon. The Saints and Arizona Cardinals play Sunday in the Pro Football Game in Canton, Ohio, to open the NFL’s preseason. New Orleans’ regular season begins Sept. 9 vs. the at the Mercedes-Benz Superdome.

“You’re never going to be able to block out what all has gone on here,” linebacker Scott Shanle says. “But the best thing that has happened was that we got back on the football field. And when you’re out there running plays, trying to learn a new defense, you’re not worried about anything else.”

The fallout from the bounty will linger, providing the backdrop for whatever happens this season.

Will it provide motivational fuel? Or will it be too big of a distraction?

“Sean has said this for a long time: This team is built to last, it’s built to weather storms, it’s built to withstand adversity,” says Vitt, who will start his own six-game suspension when the regular season begins. He will be joined by general manager Loomis, who is facing an eight-game ban.

Meanwhile, middle linebacker Jonathan Vilma is suspended for the entire season and defensive end Will Smith benched for four games for their alleged roles in the bounty scandal.

It is unclear who will serve as interim coach after the season starts, although it appears likely Benson will pick from within, with offensive line coach Aaron Kromer and offensive coordinator Pete Carmichael the top candidates.

“Nobody is saying this is going to be easy or it’s the status quo. It’s not,” Vitt says as he sits on a bench outside the locker room. “But we don’t have problems here. We have challenges. This organization’s been through a lot, and there are a lot of people looking at us. We’re going to give this our best shot.”

No shortage of talent

Vitt maintains the current squad is the most talented the Saints have had since he arrived in New Orleans with Payton in 2006. That would be better than the 2009 team that won Super Bowl XLIV.

The foundation is surely in place. The Saints’ 37-11 regular-season mark over the last three years is tied for the best in the NFL. And , who set the NFL single-season record in 2011 by passing for 5,476 yards, is back in place after his prolonged contract stalemate was settled in mid-July with a five-year, $100 million contract.

“With all this stuff swirling around us,” Brees says, “all we can worry about is what we can control. Focus on the process, and the result will take care of itself.”

While the defense installs a new system with more zone packages under new coordinator Steve Spagnuolo, the former St. Louis Rams coach, this is still a team that rides the razor-sharp arm of Brees. The Saints ranked second in the NFL in scoring last season and averaged 41 points at home.

Brees says it seems the Saints received a blessing in disguise last season when Payton suffered a torn knee ligament during a sideline collision in mid-October. The injury forced Payton to miss some team meetings during the week as he rehabilitated, and he worked three games from an upstairs booth rather than from the sideline, including a 62-7 victory vs. the Indianapolis Colts.

“They can still win 11 or 12 games,” says Bobby Hebert, the former Saints quarterback who is a talk show host in New Orleans. “The offense will put up points. There may be one or two things that come up in every game where Sean Payton could make a difference, but the system is in place.

“Remember the game last year when they scored 62 points against the Colts? Coach Carmichael called every play.”

Of course, as he rehabbed last season, Payton was still in the mix and able to communicate with the team. Payton’s absence now is like having “a hole in my chest,” Vitt says.

Brees says the aim is to operate as they would with Payton, and Vitt says to that end the camp schedule is identical to the structure under Payton.

“It’s a void, but we’ve got a tight-knit group with a lot of guys who have been here,” says Harper, entering his seventh season. “We know how to win. We know what it takes.”

Even so, Harper can’t deny the surreal cloud that came with the start of camp because of the bounty scandal.

Thursday, when the Saints began practices, Vitt, Harper, Shanle, defensive tackle Sedrick Ellis and linebacker Jonathan Casillas spent part of the day in a downtown federal courthouse. They testified on behalf of Vilma, who is seeking a temporary restraining order that would allow him to return to work while pursuing a defamation case against Goodell. U.S. District Judge Helen Berrigan has yet to rule.

In addition to vouching for Vilma’s character, the players denied the existence of a bounty program. Arguments from NFL attorneys included the position that Vilma did not fully exhaust his ability to appeal his suspension under the collective bargaining agreement and that Berrigan doesn’t have the jurisdiction to rule on a labor issue.

“I’d never been in court before,” Harper says. “I thought it was going to be more like Judge Mathis. It was so different from that.”

That Vitt and several players agreed to support a team captain with their court appearances demonstrated the sense that the bounty scandal had strengthened a bond.

“It was an unusual way to start camp,” Shanle says. “But to go for J.V., there was no question about it.”

The Saints on Friday had another unifying experience. They participated in a ceremony to unveil a 9-foot sculpture outside the Superdome that depicts the blocked punt by former safety Steve Gleason. The play set the tone for the team’s 2007 victory against the Atlanta Falcons in the first game in New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina.

Gleason, battling ALS, has remained close to the franchise. The players wore T-shirts on Friday with a slogan, “No White Flags,” that seemingly symbolized his determination — and the mind-set of the Saints.

“This team is truly circling the wagons,” Hebert says. “You know how sometimes you invent a chip on your shoulder? Well, I think they’ve embraced this situation.”

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Davis to Big Easy? Hornets win lottery for NBA’s No. 1 draft pick

2a98737b0539fc7d5c13bdf376cd0450 Davis to Big Easy? Hornets win lottery for NBA’s No. 1 draft pick

NEW YORK (AP) — New owner, and now a new star player. The future suddenly looks bright for the .

Meanwhile, it was yet another loss – in a historic season full of them – for Michael Jordan and the .

The Hornets, recently sold by the NBA to , won the NBA’s Wednesday and the No. 1 pick overall – which they almost certainly will use to pick Kentucky star Anthony Davis.

At least that’s what the consensus college player of the year is expecting. Moments after the Hornets won the lottery, Davis said he was looking forward to playing professionally in the place where he led the to a national championship in April.

The good news for the Hornets comes after a in which they traded All-Star Chris Paul and a couple of years in limbo where they couldn’t do much to upgrade the roster while the league was looking for a buyer.

“Just a first step for us to winning it all,” Benson said in a TV interview after the lottery.

The Hornets moved up from the fourth spot, where they had a 13.7 percent chance, to earn the pick.

“Everything was surreal once they announced the fourth pick,” said Hornets coach Monty Williams, who represented the team on stage. “I said `This is pretty cool.’ I knew were home praying that things would go well and they did.”

The Bobcats, after going 7-59 for the worst winning percentage in , fell to the No. 2 pick. Washington will pick third and Cleveland fell one spot to fourth.

Charlotte had a 25 percent chance of grabbing the No. 1 pick, but instead will have to take the best player after Davis, possibly his teammate, -.

The team with the worst record hasn’t won since Orlando drafted in 2004.

“We will still take the best player available and when you win you have a lot of holes,” Bobcats general manager Rich Cho said. “From a competitive standpoint and for anyone who has played sports or been competitive, you want to win and be No. 1. We know we’re still going to get a good player.”

Cho and team vice chairman Curtis Polk said they hadn’t heard from Jordan, the Bobcats owner.

“Being No. 2 isn’t terrible. We’ll be fine,” Polk said.

The league bought the Hornets from owner George Shinn in December 2010 and the sale to Benson was completed in April. The NBA was criticized for the conflict of interest of a league owning a franchise, particularly when Commissioner David Stern blocked a trade that would have sent Paul to the Lakers in December, then approved another that landed Paul with the Clippers.

The ownership uncertainty hindered the Hornets, but they were in a celebrating mood Wednesday after earning the No. 1 pick for the first time since 1991, when they were still in Charlotte and took Larry Johnson.

General manager Dell Demps said he pumped his fist in the room where the drawing took place after seeing that the balls had been drawn in the Hornets’ favor.

“When our combination came up, it was an exciting feeling,” he said. “I got an incredible rush. … We knew what the odds were. We hoped for the best. It was nothing we could control. We’re just happy.”

The Hornets, who went 21-45, also have the No. 10 pick. They played hard at the end of the season even as it reduced their lottery odds, winning eight of their final 13 games with a young roster.

“Obviously, we’re very excited,” Demps said. “This is a great day for the city of New Orleans, our fans. … This is the start of a new beginning.”

Though they didn’t officially say it, it’s expected to start with Davis, one of the most dominant defensive college players in years who was Most Outstanding Player of the Final Four even as he went 1 for 10 from the field in the championship game. He blocked a record-tying six shots and had 16 rebounds and three steals in the Wildcats’ 67-59 victory over Kansas.

“Davis is not LeBron. He’s not Tim (Duncan). But they were young once and Tim had four years of college,” Williams said.

The Nets were the other big loser when they stayed in the No. 6 spot. They owed their pick to Portland for this season’s Gerald Wallace trade unless they moved into the top three.

The Cavs beat the odds last year and moved up to take Kyrie Irving, the eventual Rookie of the Year, and tried to follow the same formula. Nick Gilbert, the 15-year-old son of owner Dan Gilbert, was back on the podium in his bow tie, and the Cavs’ traveling party that included Dan Gilbert, and former Browns quarterback Bernie Kosar and current Browns players Josh Cribbs and Joe Haden sported the same dress.

But there was no repeat, as the Cavs went backward this time.

“Still feel very good about (number)4 pick,” Dan Gilbert wrote on his Twitter page. “We are getting a great player there and good additions w/our other 3 picks. I believe.”

Sacramento rounds out the top five of the draft, to be held June 28 in Newark, N.J.

The Golden State Warriors stayed at No. 7, meaning they get to keep their pick instead of having to trade it to Utah. The Trail Blazers will also have two lottery selections, the Nets’ and their own at No. 11.

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 Davis to Big Easy? Hornets win lottery for NBA’s No. 1 draft pick

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Report: Saints Guarantee Long-Term Extension For Drew Brees Will Happen

21f52decf7951886ec1729b764c20fcc Report: Saints Guarantee Long Term Extension For Drew Brees Will Happen
Quarterback walks out after a “paddle out” in honor of Junior Seau on May 6, 2012 in Oceanside, California. Seau, who played for various NFL teams including the San Diego Chargers, and was found dead in his home on May 2nd of an . Family members have decided to donate his brain for research on links between concussions and possible depression.
(May 5, 2012 – Source: Sandy Huffaker/ North America)

(PhatzRadio / NFL.com) — Multiple sources have corroborated today that the New Orleans are guaranteeing a multi-year deal will happen with quarterback , according to NFL.com.

Saints general manager and are both hard at work on hammering out a lengthy extension for Brees, who finished out a six-year, $ contract last season and was franchised in March. The interest is mutual between Brees and the Saints in working out a contract, but the .

“Look, we love Drew Brees, every fan of the New Orleans Saints loves Drew Brees. So do I,” said. “No one wants to get him signed more than I do. … But we also want to have the best team we can have on the field. … We’ve just got to get it right.”

Under the , the Saints have the exclusive rights to Brees’ services next season for $16.371 million. But Brees has been rumored to have interest in a much bigger contract, comparable to the $23 million per season that is earning with the .

“I feel for him. I feel with him. He wants to be here right now. I want him to be here right now, and we’ll work hard to get that accomplished,” Loomis said. “It’s important to Drew, but it’s important to our team. The magnitude of this contract is going to impact our team for a long period of time, so we’ve got to get it right. It’s got to be right for Drew, but it’s got to be right for our team as well.”

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 Report: Saints Guarantee Long Term Extension For Drew Brees Will Happen

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NFL: No decision made on New Orleans Saints’ interim head coach

7531cde895b85b70e8ca3ca39d92f387 NFL: No decision made on New Orleans Saints’ interim head coach
left the NFL’s annual meetings early to return to his team in the wake of the season-long suspension of Sean Payton for his involvement in a . (Ronald Martinez/)

(PhatzRadio / CBC Sports) — Saints owner Tom Benson left the Wednesday and headed back to New Orleans, where his team’s top brass had major matters to discuss during what could be Sean Payton’s last week of work in 2012.

Team spokesman Greg Bensel said no decisions had been made on an after a meeting Tuesday with . Payton has made it clear he is hoping Parcells can help New Orleans move forward whether he wants to get back into coaching or not.

Payton considers Parcells his mentor, and has spoken with him several times since learning last week that the NFL intended to suspend him for all of the coming season — starting this Sunday — for his role in New Orleans’ bounty program. Payton said most of those conversations concerned how Parcells might handle a similar situation, not whether he was interested in returning to the sideline in the Big Easy.

Yet when asked why Parcells, a finalist for the this season who turns 71 in August, would make a good fit as , Payton had some definite ideas.

“He’s a great teacher,” Payton said Tuesday at the NFL owners meeting in . “Certainly I’m biased, having worked with him. But he’s a Hall of Fame . And I would also say there’s some things probably set up in the framework of our program that would be exactly how he would have set those things up had he been the [in New Orleans] in ’06. So there’s some carry-over that way.”

The Saints’ overshadowed much of the business discussed at the NFL owner’s meetings.

“It’s definitely necessary to mention it,” said , whose play the Saints twice a year in the NFC South. “The precedent has been set by the commissioner and they need to understand that and it is not to be broached again. Going forward, we won’t have to go over these things again.”

The Saints are still trying to figure out to regroup from the fallout.

It could be a few days before Saints, who are looking to make the playoffs for a fourth straight season, decide on an interim coach.

Payton said he has not decided whether to appeal and has until Monday to so, a move that could give him a little more time at work. However, has said he would expedite such an appeal, meaning Payton’s suspension might not be delayed for long.

Should there be an appeal, the Saints would want to see whether it results in a reduced penalty before deciding whether to look within or outside of the organization for Payton’s stand-in.

“It would just be considering all options, to be fair and really trying to do our homework on each option before making a decision,” Payton said. “There’s a lot of small steps here before we would get to that point of having to make a decision.”

If Parcells does decide to come to New Orleans, he would take the reins from a coach he hired as an offensive assistant in Dallas back in 2003. Payton worked under Parcells for three seasons before getting his first shot as a head coach in 2006, when the Saints returned to the city after being displaced for months by Hurricane Katrina.

There are also three strong candidates among Saints assistants to take over as interim coach: offensive co-ordinator Pete Carmichael, defensive co-ordinator Steve Spagnuolo and offensive line coach Aaron Kromer. Payton expressed confidence in the abilities of his own assistants to compensate for his absence, but also voiced some misgivings about saddling those coaches with additional responsibilities.

“We feel like we’ve got a number of good candidates” on the staff, Payton said. “The trick then is what it does to affect their roles that they currently have.”

Payton spent only Tuesday at the NFL meetings and planned to be back at work in New Orleans on Wednesday, trying to tie up as many loose ends as he could in the next few days.

“I’ve got a lot of to-do things right now specific to ,” Payton said. “The off-season calendar, all of that has been laid out already. Everything has been basically planned all the way up to the Hall of Fame game. … Between now and then, there’s a lot of little things that I’ll try to make sure we get covered and handed over to our coaches so that they have a pretty good understanding as to what I’m looking for.”

General manager Mickey will be able to oversee the draft and work up until the season starts. Then he is slated to serve his eight- for failing to put a stop to the bounty system in a timely way. Assistant head coach Joe Vitt, who also coaches , is facing a six-.

The NFL’s investigation in New Orleans found that Payton initially lied to league investigators about the existence of a bounty and instructed his defensive assistants to do the same. Payton twice apologized for his role in an enterprise that offered payouts for knocking out opponents, saying he takes “full responsibility” for a system that operated for three years under his watch.

As many as 27 players also could be sanctioned for their role in the scandal.

Payton said he didn’t want the scandal to “taint or tarnish” his team’s recent success.

“We’ll get through this,” he said. “This will be a challenge. … You know, we’ve gone through a lot of adversity and we’ve won a lot of games in really a short window of time. And I know our players are leaders both within the locker room and the coaching staff will look at this as a challenge and a little bit as an opportunity.”

In addition to the penalties for Payton, Loomis and Vitt, Goodell also fined the Saints $500,000 and took away second-round draft choices in 2012 and 2013.

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 NFL: No decision made on New Orleans Saints’ interim head coach

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NFL: Bill Parcells feels ‘obligation to help’ Payton

1193105d628264a9129df08a898e0bd1 NFL: Bill Parcells feels ‘obligation to help’ Payton
Executive Vice President of Bill Parcells watches practice on during Mini Camp on June 6, 2008 at the Dolphins practice facility in Davie, Florida.
(March 7, 2008 – by / North America)

, Fla. – Bill Parcells ’t decided whether to return to the coaching ranks to take over the scandal-ridden on a temporary basis because that job has yet to be formally offered.

Yet the larger-than-life Parcells won’t rule out the possibility of guiding the Saints while protege serves a one-year suspension that is set to begin April 1.

“I don’t know because I don’t know what this consists of,” Parcells told USA TODAY on Wednesday, a day after meeting with Payton and Saints general manager Mickey Loomis.

COLUMN: Should Parcells coach the Saints?

Payton has until Monday to appeal the suspension. In that case, would likely rule by the end of next week on whether to uphold or modify the length of the banishment, which stemmed from a administered by former Gregg Williams.

“I don’t know what the end result will be and whether or what in fact (the Saints) want to do,” Parcells added during a 17-minute . “None of this has been discussed or decided. We’re a long way off.”

Parcells, who has a home in Jupiter, Fla., about a half-hour from the site of NFL owners meetings this week, played golf Tuesday afternoon with Payton, Loomis and team executive Greg Bensel.

“We had fun,” he said.

He characterized the time spent with Loomis as a “get-to-know-you” opportunity.

“He knows that I am close to Sean,” Parcells said of Loomis, “but we don’t know each other well.”

Loomis is facing a suspension, too, of , due to begin in September.

That Payton and Loomis have reached out to Parcells with the appearance that they could choose a temporary coach, doesn’t bother Goodell. Saints wasn’t present at Tuesday’s meeting with Parcells.

“Ultimately, the owner will make the final decision,” Goodell said.

Parcells, 70, last coached in 2006 with the Dallas Cowboys, before moving on to head operations for the . Payton was an assistant under Parcells with the Cowboys, and the two have remained close.

That friendship and support, Parcells maintains, have been the driving forces behind his contact with Payton in recent weeks.

“I know people are thinking, ‘There’s a deal already done,’ ” Parcells said. “But really, he’s my friend. That’s the first thing this is about.

“I feel an obligation, a responsibility to help him.”

Parcells says he has talked extensively with Payton about the team and the players, but, “we really haven’t talked about the job.”

In addition to discipline for Payton and Loomis, Williams, now the St. Louis Rams defensive coordinator, has been suspended indefinitely and Saints assistant Vitt has been banned for six games. The team lost its second-round draft picks in 2012 and 2013, and was fined $500,000.

Goodell, seeking input from the players union, has yet to levy discipline on any of the players involved in the scandal. He expects to confer with NFL Players Association executive director DeMaurice Smith by the end of the week, and rule shortly afterward.

How player discipline will affect a potential offer to Parcells is unclear.

“There’s things still going on that are unanswered, and a lot of ancillary things that need to be addressed,” Parcells said. “That’s for down the road, I swear to it.”

Does Parcells have the itch to coach again?

“That’s been my life,” he said. “I love the game. The NFL has been good to me. If you like competition, Sunday at one o’clock, it’s there for you.”

Beyond the competitive juices, he understands the grind attached to coaching — even with a ready-made contender such as the Saints.

“Being realistic is also involved,” he said. “I would not want to do something that I’m not sure I’d give my all to doing.”

Parcells is undeniably struck by the buzz about his possible return.

“There are people who say. ‘Well, Parcells like attention,’ ” he said. “Well, I didn’t do anything to create this.”

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 NFL: Bill Parcells feels ‘obligation to help’ Payton

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325472601571f31e1bf00674c368d335 NFL: Bill Parcells feels ‘obligation to help’ Payton