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Even though Brees made two huge mistakes, the Falcons were lamenting all the times he got away with a dip here, a step there.
"We can't keep getting close," Abraham said. "It's not enough, especially with a guy like (Brees). He's not going to just go down. If you get close like that, he's still looking at his receivers. He's third-and-short, he's third-and-long, we've got him right where we want him and he's completing passes for first down."
All around, the Falcons didn't play their typically clean game.
An errant snap by Todd McClure out of the shotgun was recovered by New Orleans, setting up Thomas' 2-yard touchdown run that gave the Saints a 10-0 lead and breaking Atlanta's streak of seven straight games without a fumble.
Ryan connected with Roddy White on a 7-yard touchdown pass that made it 10-7 at halftime, but Atlanta squandered another chance when Michael Turner fumbled the ball away on second-and-goal at the New Orleans 1. It was Turner's first fumble of the season.
Brees completed 35 of 49 for 302 yards, easily winning the duel with Ryan (15 of 29 for 148 yards) on a night when both teams struggled to run the ball effectively.
But Brees left the door open for the Falcons twice.
Trying to avoid a sack, he got away with a flip back to Thomas in the third quarter. The move backfired when Brees tried it again in the fourth.
With Jonathan Babineaux bearing down on him, Brees attempted to backhand a pass to a receiver standing at least 15 yards away. Bad move. The ball fluttered right into the arms of the 271-pound Davis, who rumbled the other way for his first career touchdown with 14:14 remaining.
After the ensuing kickoff, Brees drove the Saints right down the field, appearing to put them ahead with a 25-yard strike over the middle to Marques Colston. But the play had been whistled dead because of a false start by Jermon Bushrod, wiping out the score.
Then, on the very next play, Brees made another huge mistake. Or, it might be more appropriate to say, Abraham pulled off a tremendous play.
The 32-year-old defensive end rushed in on Brees untouched and swatted the ball up in the air when the quarterback tried to hurriedly throw it away. It came down right in Abraham's arms for his first career interception.
Despite the miscues, the Saints were the ones celebrating at the end. A few of them even trotted back on the field after it was over, whopping it up and posing for pictures on the Falcons logo at midfield.
"We've got to take a long look at ourselves," Abraham said.
[Associated Press;
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