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http://www.nola.com/sportsflash/lou...12/1180998583115330.xml&storylist=nola_sports
Have a good year DP, wipe that 'skins stain off and do it right.David Patten leapt high in the air, his body twisted and his arms stretched above his head. He clamped his hands firmly on the spiraling ball, then acrobatically touched his feet down in the back of the end zone before crashing out of bounds on the Louisiana Superdome turf.
That was February 2002, when Patten wore a Patriots uniform in New England's first Super Bowl triumph.
Patten would like to spend more time touching down in that same end zone this season with a fleur-de-lis on his helmet.
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Payton also has made it clear that he hopes Patten will provide veteran leadership to the Saints young receivers, including first-round draft pick Robert Meachem.
"It's new territory for me, because I've always been with a veteran receiving corps," Patten said. "Now ... I'm the elder statesman. It's fun. It's not so much leading by what you say as leading by example. I'll give pointers here and there, but the bottom line is to go out there and work and good things happen."
Patten doesn't make a habit of showing off his Super Bowl rings, but he has brought them to the Saints headquarters when teammates have asked about them.
"I had a couple guys ask me to bring the rings in because you just want to see them. Once you get a chance to see them and actually hold them, it becomes a reality to you," Patten said. "If nothing else, it's motivation to remind guys of what we actually play this game for."
Colston said he hasn't seen the rings yet, but vividly remembers Patten's touchdown catch against St. Louis in the Super Bowl.
"It's funny. The first week he was here, I was watching the NFL Network and got a chance to see that," Colston recalled Monday. "I'm just glad he's here — a veteran guy who knows what it takes."
If Colston and Henderson continue to play well and Meachem matures quickly, Patten realizes he may not start. But Patten said he can live with that under Payton, a coach he senses is promoting the type of team-first, winning culture he experienced in New England.
"The way he's running things, he's bringing in guys where he trusts their character, their background," Patten said. "You get good people, then they're going to do what they're asked or what's required of them. When you get enough of those guys around, that's what allows you to go to that next level and win championships — like the Patriots."
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