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Saints coming to Philly for playoff game

The road hasn’t been too kind to New Orleans, which sported a perfect record at home.

NEW ORLEANS - Drew Brees couldn't quite suppress a smirk as he deadpanned the Saints' prescription for playing better on the road, which is where they'll be for the playoffs, facing the Eagles in Lincoln Financial Field on Saturday night (8, NBC10).

"There's three main things we need to do," Brees began. "We're going to change up the Gatorade flavor, we feel good about that. We're going to change our travel sweats. We're going to change, at the hotel, the beefy mac [and cheese] recipe the night before, just kind of give it a little extra kick. We feel like those three things are going to help pull us through."

For one last time this season, Brees and the Saints proved how tough they are to hang with in the Big Easy, clinching a wild-card spot with a 42-17 beatdown of the Tampa Bay Buccaneers yesterday. Brees was his usual prolific self, passing for four touchdowns and running for another score as New Orleans (11-5) finished the regular season 8-0 at home.

But the Saints went 3-5 on the road, and they had little time to celebrate their widely anticipated triumph over the Bucs before fielding questions about what they can do to change their fortunes outside of the Superdome.

"We're going to be told all week long that we can't win on the road," right tackle Zack Strief said. "We all acknowledge why people say that, and yet, the other games don't matter - not anymore."

If the Saints can indeed summon Superdome-like performances in the coming weeks, they'll be a dangerous No. 6 seed.

Three of Brees' scoring strikes against Tampa Bay went longer than 40 yards - 76 to Kenny Stills, 44 to Lance Moore and 41 to Robert Meachem. Brees passed for 381 yards, eclipsing 5,000 yards for an unprecedented fourth time. He finished with 5,162 yards to go with 39 TDs.

"We did a lot of things well today at a time when we needed to," Saints coach Sean Payton said. "I'm proud of how they finished . . . It's hard to get 11 wins in this league."

Brees' other TD was a 10-yard pass to tight end Jimmy Graham.

Mike Glennon passed for 219 yards and two TDs for Tampa Bay (4-12). With doubts swirling about the future of second-year Bucs coach Greg Schiano, Tampa Bay closed with losses in its last three games, and four of its last five.

"Any time you win only four games, there are definitely going to be some type of changes," right tackle Demar Dotson said. "Upstairs, downstairs - I don't know what it's going to be."

The Saints had lost three of their previous four games to set up a season finale they needed to win to assure themselves of a playoff spot. They got back to the postseason for the fourth time in five seasons, the lone exception being 2012, when Payton was suspended the entire season in connection with the NFL's bounty probe.

"Obviously, Sean's a huge part of" the Saints' return to the playoffs, Brees said. "Four out of five years, winning an average of 12 games in every one of those [playoff] years. That's a big deal."

Schiano, meanwhile, coached like he had nothing to lose, trying a fake field goal, which failed, and going for it three times on fourth down, converting one. In the end, his team was overmatched, outgained 468 yards to 290.

Asked about his future, Schiano said: "I don't think I have to say anything. That's not being smug. I come in and do my job the best that I can. That's other people's decision."

Schiano did call a successful flea-flicker on which Glennon found Tiquan Underwood for a 48-yard score to tie it at 7.

Pierre Thomas provided New Orleans' other second-half score on an 8-yard run.

Brees was 17-for-21 for 321 yards in the first half, when he threw all of his scoring passes and had a maximum 158.3 passer rating. His final line was 24-for-31 for 381 yards, no interceptions and a rating of 157.4.