Gift Guide To Seasonal Family Books From Small And Indie Publishers

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'Thank you for your prayers': New Orleans Saints thank Pope Francis for his accidental blessing



Pope Francis left readers confused after a social media post accidentally generated support for the New Orleans Saints football team.

The leader of the Catholic church, Pope Francis (born Jorge Mario Bergoglio), issued a thoughtful message through his social media platforms about why saints are an illustration of the good in humanity.

"The #Saints are precious pearls and are always living and relevant because they provide a fascinating commentary on the Gospel," the pope's post began.

The pope's message continued, "Their lives are an illustration of the Good News that Jesus brought to humanity: God is our Father, who loves everyone with boundless love."

However, little did the pope know that his use of the hashtag "#Saints" on X would produce the NFL team's logo, the fleur-de-lis.

— (@)

Fans quickly jumped on the harmless error and connected it to the Saints' recent firing of Coach Dennis Allen.

"Even the Pope is excited we fired Dennis Allen," a fan quickly replied.

Even the Pope is excited we fired Dennis Allen
— Jono Barnes (@JonoBarnes) November 5, 2024

"Losing to the Panthers was so bad that they had to call up the Pope," another fan wrote.

A third fan excitedly suggested that the pope's blessing "might turn their season around."

Losing to the Panthers was so bad that they had to call up the Pope
— Jonny Mondo  (@jmondo13) November 5, 2024

The Saints themselves weren't going to let this opportunity go to waste. They soon shared the post and offered their thanks.

"Thank you for your prayers, Pontiff. We need them," the Saints' X post said.

Attached was a photo of Gayle Benson, owner of the football team, gifting Pope Francis his own Saints jersey that read "Papa Francesco" on the back.

Benson presented the jersey to the pope earlier in 2024 during a trip to Italy and Germany. The owner was meeting with Italian leaders in economic development and tourism to promote business opportunities in New Orleans and Louisiana as a whole.

The Saints are just 2-7 in 2024, sit dead last in the NFC, and are tied for last overall in the NFL.

Their season will not get any easier when they play the Atlanta Falcons Sunday, November 10; the Falcons lead their division with a 6-3 record.

New Orleans Saints fans dress up as the pope at FedEX Field in Maryland.Photo by Randy Litzinger/Icon SMI/Icon Sport Media via Getty Images

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Saints coach Dennis Allen apologizes to now-fired Falcons coach for players' insubordination: 'That's unacceptable'



The New Orleans Saints crushed the Atlanta Falcons Sunday, marking a bitter end both to the Falcons' season and to Arthur Smith's tenure as the team's head coach. Afterwards, Saints head coach Dennis Allen apologized to Smith — not for New Orleans' decisive victory, but for his players' last-minute insubordination.

The Saints were leading the Falcons 41-17 when New Orleans safety Tyrann Mathieu intercepted a pass by Falcons quarterback Logan Woodside and ran it down the field to the 1-yard line. Allen and Saints offensive coordinator Pete Carmichael wanted their players to take a knee and run out the clock, with just 1:13 remaining. However, a link broke in the chain of command.

Backup quarterback Jameis Winston, tasked with taking the final snap in victory formation, evidently did not care much for his coaches' sportsmanlike instructions. Rather than take a knee, he handed off the ball to Jamaal Williams, who secured another touchdown.

Take it away Jamaal \xf0\x9f\x98\x8f\n\n#Saints | \xf0\x9f\x93\xba: CBS
— (@)

Coach Smith was visibly apoplectic, storming over to Allen to stress the apparent effort to rub salt in he Falcons' wounds was "f***ing bull****."

Smith also skipped the postgame handshake.

— (@)

"They can do whatever they want," Smith told reporters after the game, when pressed about the last-minute touchdown. "There are no rules against it. Like I said, we didn't stop them in the second half, and they can do what they want. It is what it is."

"Hats off to them, they kicked our you-know-what in the second half and made us pay," continued Smith. "That's their prerogative. It's also my prerogative to tell them how I feel. Whether people like that or not, oh well. Credit to them. They can do what they want there."

The last-minute touchdown was not, however, what the Saints coaches wanted.

Allen stressed after the game, "That was not a play that we intended to run down there to finish off the game."

Nola.com characterized the insubordination that concluded the 48-17 game as a "difference of opinion," indicating the 11 men on the field reached a collective decision to give Williams his first and only rushing touchdown this season. Williams succeeded in securing touchdowns with the Detroit Lions but has not replicated that success since joining the Saints as a free agent in the spring.

"We made a collective decision that we wanted to get one of our guys who they fight with — blood, sweat and tears, every game — in the end zone," said Winston. "And I'm going to feel good about that."

"The intention was never to be disrespectful," said center Erik McCoy. "I understand them being pissed off, that makes sense. But for us, it was about getting one of the most selfless players in our locker room — that essentially moved to fullback when Adam Prentice went down and is going through blocking linebackers, busting his ass for this team since the day he got here and came in with a positive attitude — a touchdown."

ESPN reported that Allen was made aware of the players' feelings on the matter but overruled them.

"We put victory [formation] out there, and guys kind of wanted to get him a touchdown. They did that on their own, and that's unacceptable," said Allen.

"That's not who we are," Allen said of Winston's decision. "That's not how we operate. We should have taken a knee, so I want to apologize to them. We have a good rivalry, and it's a heated rivalry, but there's a way we go about doing our business. I wasn't happy about that."

Dennis Allen started off his presser by apologizing to Arthur Smith for the end-of-game TD. The play was supposed to be a kneel-down \xe2\x80\xa6 but the players were committed to getting Jamaal Williams a touchdown. Bizarre situation, to say the least. #Saints
— (@)

Winston later gave a pseudo-apology to his coach but indicated he had no regrets.

"This is the thing: This is about the team. It's not about regrets. It's not about anything else. It's about us as a team making a collective decision. But I do apologize to Dennis," said Winston. "That was not his call."

Regardless of whether the Saints put 48 or 41 on the board, the outcome was the same for Smith.

The Falcons released a statement Monday morning indicating Smith had been dismissed as head coach following a meeting Sunday night with the team's owner and chairman, Arthur Blank, and the team's CEO, Rich McKay.

"Decisions like this are never easy and they never feel good," said Blank. "We have profound respect for Coach Smith and appreciate all the hard work and dedication he has put into the Falcons over the last three years. He has been part of building a good culture in our football team, but the results on the field have not met our expectations."

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