Tommy DeVito’s agent Sean Stellato is back again, and he looks like “a Leprechaun” in the eyes of one NFL analyst.
Stellato was on the field in New Orleans before the Giants’ game against the Saints, rocking a bright green suit as he greeted DeVito and took photos with others on the sideline.
Stellato’s jacket had a crest featuring the logo for the National Italian American Sports Hall of Fame, which he was inducted into on Friday.
DeVito, Stellato and DeVito’s brother, Max, hugged and put their heads together as the undrafted rookie quarterback prepared for the game.
Jonathan Vilma, calling the game for Fox with Kenny Albert, said on the broadcast that Stellato looked “like a Leprechaun.”
Stellato gained nationwide fame on Monday when he was spotlighted wearing a black pinstripe suit and black fedora during ESPN’s “Monday Night Football” broadcast of the Giants’ win over the Packers, with DeVito leading Big Blue to their third straight win.
At one point during the game, Stellato and DeVito’s dad, Tom Sr., kissed each other on the cheek.
“I’m very proud of my heritage, and I’m very passionate about the players I represent and my worksmanship as a sports agent,” Stellato, a father of four daughters, told The Post’s Steve Serby on Tuesday. “I like to dress a little bit outside the box at times. That’s my late grandmother Littizza who worked at a men’s clothing store ’til she was 86 years old. They used to bring me home goodies during the holidays and get dressed up. We called her ‘Owa,’ she was my inspiration, and she loved with me ’til she passed.
“[Monday] I went to her grave (Greenlawn Cemetary in Salem, Mass.) and I had just a really deep moment at her grave, and I put the (National Italian-American) Hall of Fame hat on her grave, and I prayed for Tommy and all my clients for the remaining part of the season. And I just was so grateful that I had the chance to be partially raised by her. I’ll never forget her.
“The hat was for the heritage for all the Italianos that came before me that wore the fedora. The fedora’s a staple in Italy, and we’re trying to bring it back a little bit in America.”
DeVito has called Stellato the “Italian Stallion” of sports agents.
“It’s an honor,” Stellato told Serby. “Being able to carry that baton of an Italian-American or an Italian Stallion … that’s a pretty special title from a pretty special quarterback.”