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In 2012, ESPN reported that former New Orleans Saints defensive assistant Mike Cerullo contacted the NFL regarding a bounty program after the 2009 postseason. [19] Cerullo was released after the 2009 postseason for poor performance and lying about personal leave according to the New Orleans Saints. [ 20 ]
New Orleans eventually lost in overtime to the Rams. Asked why he waited so long to address the controversy publicly as fans in New Orleans boiled, Goodell not-so-subtly appeared to point the ...
The Saints nearly fell victim to the very rule spawned by last year's pass interference controversy in the NFC championship.
Incidents included the week one Seattle Seahawks–Arizona Cardinals game, where the Seahawks were given an extra timeout, [138] week two where side judge Brian Stropolo was removed from the New Orleans Saints–Carolina Panthers game for being a Saints fan, [139] and the controversial ending to the Green Bay Packers-Seattle Seahawks game in ...
The Saints received ball to start the game, and drove 56 yards before a 37-yard Wil Lutz field goal gave them an opening 3–0 lead. On the ensuing drive, Rams quarterback Jared Goff's check-down pass went through the hands of running back Todd Gurley and was intercepted by Saints linebacker Demario Davis at Los Angeles' 17 yard line.
On 4th-and-3 with 17 seconds left, Saints quarterback Spencer Rattler threw a pass to Foster Moreau for the conversion. The pass got New Orleans to Washington’s 1-yard line.
New Orleans Saints bounty scandal (2012) – the NFL discovered that the New Orleans Saints had operated a secret slush fund from 2009 to 2011 that paid "bounties" to defensive players for big plays during games, most controversially for injuring opponents.
If the Saints were to cut Kamara prior to June 1, 2025, New Orleans would carry $10.1 million on the salary cap in dead money but would save the remaining $18.9 million.