METAIRIE, La. -- Sean Payton didn’t spend his Monday installing phone booths inside the New Orleans Saints practice facility.
“Look, we’ve got this roster right now, and Clark Kent’s not walking in the door,” said Payton, who wasn’t ready for a big-picture discussion Monday about whether the Saints’ roster has lost too many players in recent years to compete for championships.
Instead, Payton was harping more on things like turnovers and penalties that have doomed them during their 0-2 start.
“We’ve gotta clean up some of the mistakes that are keeping us from winning games,” Payton said when asked about the draft picks the Saints lost to Bountygate in 2012 and 2013 and the veterans they’ve let go via trade or salary-cap cuts.
“I understand the question, and yet we’re focused on Carolina.”
Payton made those comments before the specific details emerged on the status of his Superman quarteback Drew Brees' shoulder injury on Monday afternoon.
Brees was diagnosed with a bruised rotator cuff after taking a big hit to his throwing shoulder in this past Sunday's 26-19 loss to the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, according to ESPN NFL Insiders Ed Werder and Chris Mortensen. The Saints are hoping Brees can play this Sunday at the Carolina Panthers if he responds well to treatment.
But with or without Brees in the lineup, Payton stressed the need to improve the specific details that have cost the Saints even when he has been on the field these past two weeks.
Payton was mostly frustrated by the turnovers -- three on Sunday, plus three other fumbles the Saints recovered -- and penalties (10 for 115 yards). But there have been plenty of other issues.
“It’s not one big thing. It’s not as easy as saying, ‘Hey, this is the one thing we gotta fix,’” Payton said. “It’s generally a handful of things you’ve got to be a little more efficient at.”
Unfortunately for the Saints, those problems have changed on a rotating basis.
In Week 1 at Arizona, three of the Saints’ biggest issues were going 1-of-4 in the red zone, forcing zero sacks on defense and breaking down defensively a handful of times in the middle of the field. All three areas improved in Week 2 while others faltered.
The Saints’ run game was stagnant for the first six quarters this season. Then when it finally got going in the second half Sunday, the Saints turned the ball over three times (a Brees interception and fumbles by Willie Snead and Mark Ingram).
Kicker Zack Hocker, who went 4-for-4 in field goal attempts in Week 1, missed a field goal and had an extra point blocked in Week 2.
The Saints made one notable lineup change during the second half Sunday, replacing veteran defensive end Akiem Hicks to create some more juice in the pass rush. And Payton said it was effective.
But Payton stressed that you don’t want to “go reaching for wholesale changes.”
“I think you can cause yourself a lot of mistakes and harm by doing that,” Payton said. “I think you’ve gotta look closely at what it is that kept you from winning a game. And half the times in this league, a team loses and coaching staff and Monday starts up and they still don’t know why they lost.”
An 0-2 start is the last thing the Saints needed after they started 0-4 last year and collapsed in the end to finish 7-9. Payton made starting faster a point of emphasis in the offseason.
But both Payton and players expressed confidence in the overall attitude and camaraderie of the team so far. Those were big issues in the locker room last year and led to a major roster overhaul this season. Just last week, Brees stressed that he thinks the Saints are a better team now because they have “better people.”
“Nobody’s fighting at all. We’re a close-knit team. Nobody’s pointing fingers. There’s no small groups,” Saints safety Kenny Vaccaro said. “I think we’ve got a good group of guys in this locker room that can handle adversity. I think we’re closer as a team. I know the DBs are really close. We talk about our mistakes, we’re critical and then we move on.
“It’s frustrating. But we knew it was gonna be a dogfight. It’s always close no matter how people view Tampa Bay, how people view us. A divisional opponent is always hard. It kind of goes back to 2013, we could have easily lost those two (during a 2-0 start). They’re always dogfights. So we just gotta get over that hump and win those in the final moments.”