I was born and raised in Slidell, LA. Some of my first memories were watching the New Orleans Saints with my dad and brothers. Unlike most Saints fans, my first memories of them were when they were winning. I remember players like Bobby Hebert, Eric Martin, Dalton Hilliard, and Quinn Early. I vividly remember the Dome Patrol defense with Pat Swilling, Ricky Jackson, Sam Mills, and Vaughn Johnson. I remember Wayne Martin, the most underrated player on the entire team.
We used to go to at least one Saints game a year. The most memorable game for me was a Monday nighter when the New York Giants were in town. I was a young boy then. Wade Wilson was our quarterback. He had rather large shoes to fill, because Bobby Hebert was so good, and so beloved for such a long time, and it was obvious that Wade wasn't as good. The team was having a rough year, by the high standards that were set by those very good Saints teams in the late eighties and early nineties.
It was that year that Jim Finks decided to tear the team down, and rebuild. I remember, from the nosebleed section of the Superdome, watching Wade Wilson get absolutely pummeled in a sack by some random New York Giants defenders. He didn't get up. He injured his knee, if I remember correctly. The Superdome erupted with applause, because Saints fans were tired of Wade Wilson's subpar play, and they blamed the Saints losses on him.
I remember the Saints losing that particular game, and we parked in the Superdome parking garage. We waited in the never ending line of cars to exit. Sometimes it took a couple of hours, or at least it seemed like it did. As we did so, I remember waiting for Buddy D's show on WWL 870am to come on. We listened to the post game press conference. Head coach Jim Mora was livid. He was angry with Saints fans for how they treated Wade Wilson. He said very passionately and angrily, "YOU PEOPLE ARE SICK! SICK! SICK! SICK!"
I will never forget that, and for some strange reason, that is my most memorable moment as a Saints fan, with the exception of their Super Bowl win, which will always be one of the greatest moments of my life.
I am a graduate of LSU. We won the national title in 2003 during my third year there. I still say that that was the funnest year of my life. We would start partying on Wednesdays, because Wednesday night was dollar calls night at Bogeys. I remember seeing players like Justin Vincent regularly there. Thursday nights was when everybody at LSU was out, so naturally, my friends and I were also. We were either at Freds in Tigerland, or at Bogeys again. On Fridays, everybody in the US, maybe the world, partied, so we were out again. And Saturdays was game day. It was awesome watching Nick Saban's Tigers led by Matt Mauck and Chad Lavalais dominate the SEC.
It brought about a lot of pride in my university, Louisiana, and where I came from. When LSU football is strong, LSU is strong as a university, and Louisiana is strong as a state.
I regret not working harder at LSU. Technically, my major was history, but my real majors were partying and LSU football, because that was all I cared about.
Also while at LSU, the Charlotte Hornets moved to New Orleans. I was really excited about that also. As a kid, my older brother loved Michael Jordan, and for some reason, that made made me hate him, so Pat Riley's New York Knicks became my favorite team. I used to despise it when Jordan would win championships, but nevertheless, I grew up loving NBA basketball, even though New Orleans didn't have a team.
Naturally, I was really excited when New Orleans got the Hornets, because I now had a real team to pull for, and I didn't have to jump on any bandwagons. The Hornets were bad. I remember watching games with Dan Dickau, JR Smith, and PJ Brown. The basketball was terrible, but I was still happy, because New Orleans had a team. I didn't care that they were losing.
Now that they are named the Pelicans, and now that I feel like the team is truly our own, I have even more of a vested interest in the team. I care about them.
I care about all three teams for different reasons, but the one commonality that I have is they are all from Louisiana. I grew up loving the Saints. I grew up loving LSU. It's my alma mater, so the ties are pretty strong. I grew up loving NBA basketball, and if New Orleans had always had a basketball team, my ties to the Pelicans would be just as big of a part of my life as LSU and the Saints. But now that they are a part of New Orleans, I look forward to them becoming just as big of a part.
I make no bones about the fact that I am biased towards those teams. This blog is for fans of those three teams. This blog is for New Orleanians and Louisianians. Fans are tired of "unbiased" journalists who attend cliched press conferences, and hear cliched quotes from coaches and players. Many of these journalists base their writings on that, and not their passions.
My information will not come from that which is cliche. It will come from that which always remains constant, and that which is the source of the most significant info, the games themselves. My info will be based on the actions of executives, the coaches, and the players, instead of their words, because many times words can be "smoke screens."
Allow me also to take this moment to give my definition of the word, fan. Many people associate the word with someone who blindly cheers whenever his team does something good on the field. I am not one of those. I want my team to win as many games as possible. I want to cheer for my team as much as possible. And when I see a coach make a decision that prevents that from happening, I will criticize him. If I see an executive make a decision that inhibits the number of times us fans cheer, and will ultimately make the teams that I love worse, I will criticize him/her. I am a fan who tries to see the big picture. My writings will have the big picture in mind. I will criticize a player, coach, or executive who does something that I disagree with. I will also praise them when they do something that I love.
I look forward to serving you. I hope you find my writing to be enlightening, and inspiring. I will unabashedly share my opinions about the teams, and many of you will disagree with me, but nonetheless, I thank you for reading, and I hope that, despite your disagreement, you will know that I love the teams almost as much as you do.
I love the Saints, LSU football, and the Pelicans. I love football and basketball. They are both beautiful games. My promise to you is that it will show in my writing.