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Brady and Brees meet at the top of their games

Provided by Written on November 27, 2009

By BRETT MARTEL
AP Sports Writer

NEW ORLEANS — Drew Brees doesn’t see himself in quite the
same class as Tom Brady.

Not yet, anyway.

Brees subscribes to the philosophy that quarterbacks are
remembered more for victories than passing numbers. So while the
Saints’ prolific quarterback is one of only two players in NFL
history – Dan Marino being the other – to throw for more than
5,000 yards in a season, Brees judges Brady by his three Super
Bowl wins.

“It’s an honor to be put anywhere near the same category as
him,” Brees said of the Patriots quarterback, with whom he’ll
share the Louisiana Superdome stage Monday night when New
England visits the unbeaten Saints. “He will go down as one of
the best of all time.”

Brady and Brees have some obvious differences, starting with
their height. Brady stands tall in the pocket at 6-foot-4,
exuding that California cool as he slides up to avoid pressure
and dissect defenses with an array of precision throws. Brees is
4 inches shorter and a little scrappier. The blue-collar Texas
native doesn’t share Brady’s cover-boy image.

“If you just stood the two of us next to each other, we wouldn’t
look anything alike, so maybe you’d say that our styles are a
little different,” Brees said. “But in the end you want the
result to be the same: you win football games and you win
championships. Obviously he has three (NFL titles) and I’m still
trying to get that first.”

Despite the disparity in titles, the respect is mutual. Brady,
who played at Michigan, remembers Brees’ success at Big Ten foe
Purdue. They’ve faced each other twice in the pros, both
victories by San Diego when Brees was with the Chargers.

Brady sees Brees as a player who “really loves the game, throws
a great ball, is really good mechanically, has good footwork, is
a great worker.”

While superficial differences abound, the quarterbacks share
some of the same intangibles typically associated with
greatness, according to those who’ve been able to catch passes
from both.

“You see the success they have on Sundays and when you’re around
them during the week you see why,” said Saints tight end David
Thomas, who was traded from New England to New Orleans just
before the start of the regular season. “They’re such
hard-working guys, taking care of their bodies, getting their
mind ready for the game and just the meticulous way that they
prepare every week.”

Saints coach Sean Payton sees similarities in each quarterback’s
accuracy and decision-making.

“They’re obviously built differently; guys are wired differently
and there are a lot of different characteristics, but generally
if you’re getting good quarterback play, you’re getting a guy
that is accurate throwing the ball,” Payton said. “They’re
generally good decision-makers and they generally can decide
fairly quickly where they want to go with the football based on
the looks they’re getting. Those are certainly traits that you
would see with both of these quarterbacks.”

Brady and Brees will be among the first to say that their highly
anticipated showdown is not so much about them as their
playoff-contending teams. The Patriots are trying to solidify
their hold on the AFC East and perhaps preserve their status as
the only franchise to go 16-0 in a regular season.

The Saints remain in pursuit of perfection and want to stay
ahead of Minnesota for the top playoff seed in the NFC.

Yet Brady and Brees know much of the focus will be on them. They
are playing as well as any two quarterbacks in the NFL.

Each has thrown for more than 300 yards at least five times this
season. New Orleans’ offense leads the NFL, while New England’s
is second.

Brady has surpassed 300 yards in five straight games. If he
makes it a sixth in New Orleans, he’ll tie an NFL record shared
by Steve Young, Kurt Warner and Rich Gannon.

Meanwhile, Brees and the Saints are on pace to score 590 points
this year, threatening the record 589 Brady and the 16-0
Patriots put up in 2007.

Brady said he wouldn’t be surprised to see the 2009 Saints go
down as the highest-scoring team in regular-season history.

“There are always going to be great receivers and quarterbacks
that finally come together under a coach that’s been with them
for a few years that really understands the strengths and
weaknesses,” Brady said. “The schedule aligns right and the
scores of the games come out a certain way, so (offensive
records are) always going to be broken.”

Brees won’t deny he enjoys the sense of accomplishment that
comes with setting records. He was only 16 yards short of
eclipsing Marino’s single-season passing mark of 5,084 yards
last year.

Yet Brees said records matter more when they come as a result of
winning. Last year, the Saints went 8-8 and missed the playoffs.
This season, Brees’ average for yards passing is down from 317
to 275, yet the Saints, thanks to a stronger running game and a
defense that produces more turnovers, are 10-0 for the first
time in franchise history.

“I’m certainly not trying to make it quarterback against
quarterback,” Brees said. “My offense is trying to score more
than his offense … but it is exciting to share the field with
guys like that.”

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written on November 27, 2009 Sports

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