METAIRIE, La. -- Sean Payton still hadn't gone home yet when the New Orleans Saints returned to work the day after the biggest victory in franchise history.
Drained after an emotional overtime triumph that set off celebrations all across the city, Payton joined family and friends for dinner downtown, then relaxed in a hotel.
"There was just so much emotion," Payton said Monday at the team's suburban training center. "You know, when you finish with the locker room ... you just try to find your family. My son's concern is the confetti's going to keep us from being able to play catch on the field. That was his concern. It was just good to hug them and be around the family and enjoy the time. There never seems to be enough of it."
"For them to have a chance to be part of it, I think it makes it really special," Payton continued. "Obviously, the same goes for this upcoming game."
The upcoming game happens to be the first Super Bowl involving the Saints in the franchise's 43 years of existence.
This is just the ninth winning season the team has had. The 31-28 overtime victory over the Minnesota Vikings on Sunday night marked the first time the Saints had hosted an NFC Championship Game. So when it was over, fans in the Louisiana Superdome and residents of a city that already acts on any excuse for a party spilled into the streets and toasted the Saints' success.
Bourbon Street was mobbed with revelers in Saints jerseys letting out high-pitched howls of delight and stirring up impromptu chants of "Who dat say dey gonna' beat dem Saints!" Some exchanged watery-eyed embraces after watching their team pull out a high-stakes thriller that appeared to be going the Vikings' way before Tracy Porter intercepted Brett Favre's pass in Saints territory in the last minute of regulation.
"It was crazy. It was almost like Mardi Gras," said Porter, who would know because he grew up in south Louisiana.
A number of players, including Porter and fellow defensive back Darren Sharper, said they wanted to go out on the town and join in the celebration, but they were so tired that they ended up just staying home and watching footage of the citywide party on the local news.
"When I got outside this morning, I saw the city was still standing, so that was a good thing," Sharper said. "I didn't get a chance to go out and celebrate last night because I was a little bit too sore to enjoy myself. I couldn't have been celebrating if I couldn't move my head to see who was around me."
Saints defensive players were bound to be exhausted and sore. The Vikings had the ball for nearly 37 minutes and ran 82 offensive plays to the Saints' 55, including overtime, when only New Orleans had the ball and ran 10 plays on its winning drive, which was capped by Garrett Hartley's 40-yard field goal.
Hartley wasn't about to live a young kicker's dream without celebrating a little. He joined friends and stayed downtown for a while, shaking hands with countless appreciative fans, many dressed in Saints-themed costumes.
"It was absolutely crazy. It was awesome," Hartley said. "Everybody, from the way that they're dressed to the way that they're acting and just coming up to me and thanking me."
The team gathered Monday for meetings, some light workouts and treatment for players who were banged up. Payton said there didn't appear to be any serious injuries. He said kick returner Courtney Roby's right knee was "dinged," running back Lynell Hamilton's left ankle injury appeared minor and tight end Jeremy Shockey didn't have any setbacks with his bruised right knee.
Payton also gave players Tuesday and Wednesday off to rest before they return Thursday to prepare for the next biggest game in Saints history against native son Peyton Manning and the favored Indianapolis Colts.
"That's a tough history to have," Sharper said. "That's part of the reason why they embrace it so much because they know it's hard to come by. They've been through so many tough times, and now it's a time for us to pretty much rejoice and appreciate us being at this point. We're going to make the most of it, believe that."
Copyright 2010 by The Associated Press