PROGRESS: New Orleans Saints’ Spencer Rattler Shows IMPRESSIVE Growth in Three Key Areas

Let’s dive into the tape as New Orleans Saints quarterback Spencer Rattler’s progress impresses. We got all of that and a little bit of land for you on today’s episode of Locked on Saints. You are Locked On Saints, your daily New Orleans Saints podcast, part of the Locked on Podcast Network, your team every day. What is good Huda nation and Huda family? I am your host, your friend Ross Jackson, New Orleans native, your New Orleans Saints expert and credentialed member of the media covering those New Orleans Saints as a Saints beat writer over at louisianaapasports.net. And on today’s episode of Locked on Saints, New Orleans Saints pass rush desperately needs a boost. They’re getting a lot of sacks, but they’re not getting a lot of pressure. But don’t worry, help might be on the way. Rookie safety Jonas Sanker impressed in his debut. and Spencer Rattler continues to impress by showing progress in three major categories as a quarterback. Let’s dive into all that today as we get into our film watch Wednesday here on Lockdown Saints. We appreciate you very much as always. Whether it’s your first time or your next time being here with us this time, making us your first listen and being an everyday here on the show, which is a proud part of the Lockdown Podcast Network, your team every day. Today’s episode is brought to you by Mazda. Just like the players, we sweat every detail because when you make every move count, pulling off the unexpected is only the beginning. So stay tuned later for highlights in this week’s moving the game forward. Mazda move and be moved. New Orleans Saints quarterback Spencer Rattler absolutely impressed with the progress that he showed on Sunday. We dove into some of the numbers in yesterday’s episode. So, if you missed yesterday’s kind of analytics Tuesday episode, if you will, we dove into all that during that show, you can head back and check that out after this. But now, I want to go into a little bit of the tape. Obviously, I can’t show any tape on the Locked on Saints show. The NFL does not allow that, but I’ll have a film study later on this week over with their insider program. You can click the link in the description, and I’ll tell you some other ways to join that later. But, we also have a story up over at louisianaapports.net that you can go and check out that’s got some stills and everything. So, I took three plays from Spencer Rattler’s day after I watched the whole thing that kind of exemplified progress in three major categories. And the three categories that really stood out to me was his operation of the pre-nap operation, excuse me, his execution of the pre-nap operation. Listen to me use an operation twice, his processing speed on the field, and the decisiveness that he showed. So, some of those things cover multiple other categories as well. For instance, decisiveness isn’t just about deciding when to pull the trigger. it’s about when to run the football, things like that. So, we’ll kind of pinpoint a couple of different things throughout all this, but I want to start off with the pre-nap operation. And to me, one of the biggest plays from Sunday against the 49ers that exemplified that the best was the 39yd pass down the left sideline to Rasheed Shahed. In that play, the Saints come out in a three, excuse me, a 2x two formation, meaning there’s two receivers on one side, two receivers on the other side. They were in 11 personnel. They lived in 11 personnel again this week. over 70%. A far cry from last year’s New Orleans Saints team who ran 11 personnel of just 33.3% of the time. Now, you might think that injuries had something to do with that, but even early on in the season when they still had all their wide receivers, they were still running over 40% of their offense in 11 personnel, but that’s it. So, seeing the Saints over on this side of things, we talked about the modernity that this brings the Saints into, that’s a little bit of that. That is in tune with current trends around the NFL. Before the snap though, they end up motioning and moving Jawan Johnson back from being in line at tight end to kind of being in the back field. That was something that the Saints did more than a few times against the San Francisco 49ers front. Kind of causing the 49ers to to kind of uh designate or dictate themselves a little bit. So, that’s that’s a good move there. It allows you to be able to see how the linebackers react, how the safeties react. And in this play when they motioned Jawan down, the safeties ended up changing their rotation, showing their rotation a little bit because of the motion of Jawan. So what happened was that they started the San Francisco 49ers with kind of this two deep safety look and then once Jawan moved into the backfield, you saw one safety creep down and you saw the other safety get a little bit more depth. It’s a different of maybe difference of maybe one or two yards on either side, but you saw that creep. And so when that happens, that tells you that very likely there’s going to be an over-the-top safety rotations where one of those safeties is going to come down to the box and another one is going to take the deep middle of the field. Here’s the thing, though. When you’re taking the deep middle of the field as a safety, but you’re starting on one side of the hash marks, you’ve got a long way to go to get to that opposite side. And so that’s what happened here. They had the field safety, meaning you know the the hash mark where the ball is on the hash mark. The short side is called the boundary side. The wider side where there’s a lot more before you get to the boundary or the out of bounds line. That’s the field side. That fieldside safety was on one side of the field basically before the snap while Rashahed was on the entire opposite side. So he knew he had Rashahed one-on-one with a single high safety over the top. Takes the snap, makes the makes the read, make sure that he, you know, that rotation happens. The one safety comes down, the one safety gets over the top, but by the time that that safety crossed the other hash marks, the ball was already up. And that’s exactly the way that that play is supposed to go. Ends up hitting Rashid Shahid, who by the way made a fantastic catch. And shout out to Spencer Rather for the ball placement on that one, too. going over the top and to the outside, giving Rasheed Shahed the angle to only to be the only player to be able to make a play on that and doing so before that safety rotation was able to get over to the other side of the field in time. So, good job operating, seeing how things were developing, what the safeties were showing, and taking what the defense gave you. Taking what the defense gives you doesn’t always mean playing condensed line of scrimmage. Sometimes it means attacking one side of the field where you have a one-on-one instead of going over the top where you would have a bit of a bracket situation or at least a double team situation by the time the ball got to its catch point. The second one for me was the processing speed, right? And so for me, this one was a third and six. Spencer rather completed to Alvin Chimera in the I think it was in the third quarter. Um and they gained five yards on it. So they did not pick up the first down on this play, but they start with a two by one, two receivers to one side or two passcatching options to one side. Uh it was actually a three by one, sorry, three on one side and then one on the opposite side. Again, an 11 personnel uh as they lived all throughout this. They took the snap and then as they take the snap there, you end up seeing uh everything completely covered very well. There was a window in the middle of the field where they could have tried to fit a tight window throw in, but you might have gotten one of those receivers hurt doing that. And so instead um Spencer Rler starts from the right side of the field, reads all the way across and then ends up dumping the ball out to Alvin Chimera who had leaked out through the offensive line and then started to break out to the left sideline. So he goes from right to left full field read and then ends up dumping that one off to Alvin Chimera who goes and he picks up five yards on third and six. They convert the fourth and one on a Spencer Rattler run. So again, good processing speed there, getting the ball out and being able to manage a little bit of that pressure uh and being able to step up to deliver that pass. Finally, decisiveness. I’m going to go with the ground game and the legs here. And this was Rattler’s nine-yd run on also a third and six on the play as he drops back. He gets a lot of depth on that drop back and Kelvin Banks Jr. gets beat around the left side. Tales gets beat around the right side. It’s not a great situation for any quarterback, but he begins to throw the football, feels that pressure, tucks the ball back down, and then escapes right up the middle, looks like he’s going to go down, but then fights through that contact to go and get the extra yardage. So, a lot of that play is going to be made about him fighting through the contact to go and pick up the extra yardage and convert the first down. But really, the big thing that happened here was just the decisiveness. He could have dumped that off to Alvin Chimera, but had he reared back too much, there’s a chance that ball could have gotten knocked out of his hands. instead protects the football and then escapes up the middle where he had a whole lane to run through. So I think when it comes to the decisiveness, the processing speed, as well as the pre- snap operation, Spencer Rather showed a lot of growth and a lot of progress in that week 2 matchup. Now he gets to take that progress on the road up against the Seattle Seahawks. Coming up next, one defensive player made his debut in rookie rookie safety Jonas Sanker and he impressed. We got that coming up for you as we continue on with today’s episode of Locked on Saints for the Locked on Podcast Network. our team every day. This episode is brought to you by Mazda’s moving the game forward for those who believe that it’s not just about playing the game, it’s about redefining it. There are moments that do more than put points on the board. They move crowds, move culture and move the game forward. And this week’s moment that move the game forward for me is really a player. And that player is again Spencer Rather. I think when you talk about moving the game forward for the New Orleans Saints, finding out what they have at quarterback, for better or for worse, is a big time priority throughout this season. So, a strong start to the season moves the game forward. A weak start to the season would have moved the game forward, too, cuz either way, you’re getting closer to an answer. So, the Saints have some big tests, and so does Spencer Rattler on the way with the Seattle Seahawks and the Buffalo Bills right around the corner. So, we’ll see if they’re able to keep moving the game forward at the quarterback position. And when you follow what moves you, the unexpected is only just the beginning. Just like there’s more to every highlight, there’s more to every Mazda vehicle. Mazda, move and be moved. Today’s episode of Locked on Saints is brought to our friends over at Game Time. The best place to go for your last minute ticket purchases. Let’s be honest, there’s no better place to be on a Sunday than in the Caesar Superdome cheering on those New Orleans Saints surrounded by fellow fans just like yourself. between the cues, the long login screens, and prices jumping at checkout. Though, it can be a little bit frustrating getting to your favorite events. And that’s why I use Game Time. You see the price that you pay with all fees included. And of course, you get that Game Time guarantee, which means you always get 100% authentic tickets delivered on time and at the best price. 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He was in on plays and he found himself out there helping so that nobody around him ever had to make a solo tackle. Jonas Sanker himself is a very strong tackler, but him getting in the mix constantly when it came to underneath throws or even some some, you know, deeper patterns and stuff like that. There was a real showing of his aggression and that was something that Kell Moore highlighted about him that stood out to him about him was that he played with an aggressive and physical mindset but did so in a controlled fashion. And when we talk about a safety that plays in a controlled fashion, you talk about a guy that’s not like throwing his body around, potentially putting himself at risk, things like that. He was second on the team with eight tackles. Three of them were assisted, but five of them were solo. He was a guy that was all over the football field. And I thought that he played extremely well. Uh he had some really good moments, too, getting down in the run game, helping to set an edge. And even when he wasn’t making a tackle in those situations, he knew how to get to the right spot that he was expected to be in this Brandon Sely defense to be able to come down and give a little bit more of that run support. He’s a really, really intelligent player. Never really saw him, you know, bite a ton on play actions and never saw him overcommit to double moves. Never saw him overcommit to routes, things like that. always kind of played with a very measured perception of what was going down on the field, across the field, across from him, consistently hustling to get involved in plays that he wasn’t a part of initially. All of that was absolutely there for them. Uh M. Jones did not complete a single pass in this game that traveled more than 20 yards through the air. Now, there was, you know, the big catch and run to Jawan Jennings that was 40 plus yards, but that completion was a 19 was like an 18 17 yard completion and then Jawan Jennings did the rest as Pete Werner kind of I don’t know if he I still can’t tell if maybe he got his foot caught or if it was the slippery nature of the field, which has been a big time talking point here all throughout the week. I mean, we saw it during pregame warm-ups where wide receivers were running routes and one of the receivers, I think it was Crystal Ab was the first one, he ends up running kind of this comeback or this hitch route and then he slips and then Rasheed goes to run and then he slips all the way down to the point to where Keith Williams was like moving their routes down. He was literally walking up and saying, “Don’t come this far. Don’t come this far.” Because they were trying to avoid that slippery spot on the field. And then they ran some kind of vehicle, you know, you know, uh, uh, motorized thing to maybe try to flatten out the field. I don’t know exactly what it was they were doing, but, uh, I think, uh, Nick and Mike have a really good story about what exactly that was over at New Orleans. Football, you can check that out there. But for the Saints, like the slippery nature of the field was certainly a big thing. So maybe that’s what got Pete Warner. I don’t know. Uh, but in any case, like that was the biggest completion of the game. But also none of the completions that went for 20 plus yards throughout were 20 plus through the air. It was all kind of catch and run stuff. So Saints have a little bit of, you know, clearly some discipline things to fix in terms of not just penalties, but also missed tackles and everything, particularly in the passing game. Uh, but I think Yonas Sanker helps you out there. And he did enough when he was tasked with deep coverage to force M. Jones to move on to the next guy. And that’s that’s what you want from the safety. I really wish I’ve said this on the show before. I really wish that we had a stat for that of like and maybe maybe it’s like shut up, stop talking about it, Ross, and do it yourself. I get it. But like, man, I really wish that there was something that kind of showed like a forced progression or something like that by the uh by the safeties. I think forcing completions have have kind of become a thing. And I think that’s a great stat that kind of helps to tell the entire story. Not just interceptions, not just passes defended, but can you and pass but like pass breakups versus passes defended and putting them all in one thing all in one pot. And by the way, the big difference between that is like pass breakup, you get your hand on the football. Pass defended is you either get your hand on the football or it’s a little bit of a wider stat, a wider criteria, which could be, you know, hitting the receiver as they catch the football or just simply getting your hands up to where they can’t see. there’s other ways to defend passes. That doesn’t necessarily mean necessarily getting your hands on the pass on the way. And so, yeah, I I was really impressed with Yonas Anker, who was kind of thrown into the fire here. Um, now, you know, he didn’t have to go up against the full complement that the uh or the full artillery, if you will, of what it is that the San Francisco 49ers have to offer on offense. Don’t get me wrong, but in any case, I mean, Jawan Jennings made big plays. We saw Ricky Pierce all make some plays and so you didn’t give those guys more than what was necessary. You made them earn what they got. Uh and so I think that Yonas Anker did a very good job there. From the overall coverage side for New Orleans, I think one of the things that I came away highlighting is that actually there was pretty good coverage throughout the game. There weren’t a lot of there were a couple of broken assignments. You saw the big pass down the left sideline where like nobody was there. everybody kind of bit on an underneath route and everything and then so it was like wide open to the left sideline. There were a couple of those moments but for the most part like a lot of the reason why some receivers ended up shaking free on Saints corners and Saints safeties was because the Saints corners and Saint safeties were covering for a long time and so we’ll get to pass rush here in a little bit absolutely needs a big time kind of revamp uh as we as we go or not really revamp but they need a bump there. Um, the other player that I thought was massively impressive that came through on tape should be no surprise to anybody and it’s Dear Mario Davis. I don’t know how this dude does it. I I genuinely don’t. I mean, he is just as good as almost any 24, 25, 26 year old linebacker in the league, offball linebacker in the league that you can point to. Demario Davis, the age of 35, 36, whatever he is, I is just as good as any of those players. And it’s absolutely incredible to me. Like this New Orleans Saints team is so lucky to have a player like Deario Davis right now. We were highlighting this a little bit during the squad show and I really like what Dylan Sanders said when he said that like Demario Davis might not be a part of the next New Orleans Saint Super Bowl team, but man, he is never going to be forgotten for his contributions to this team and the fact that he walked away during this game leading the team in combined tackles and just flying all over the field. It’s the first game in a while that I don’t think I saw him actually make a tackle for a loss and get to go out there and do a celebration. But outside of that, still found a way to impact the game with a fumble recovery and of course, you know, making some big hits on some players as well. And so I wanted to quickly highlight Demario Davis too as somebody that just never fails to impress me with how good he still is in today’s NFL which has experienced so much change from how defenses attack uh excuse me how offenses attack defenses. He’s experienced so much change about the changing at the linebacker room as a whole and he’s survived it all and here he is still making all of these big plays. All right, coming up next, the New Orleans Saints defense absolutely needs a boost when it comes to its pass rush and one might be on the way. We got that coming up for you next as we continue on with today’s episode of Locked on Saints, part of Lockdown Podcast Network, your team every day. Today’s episode also brought to you by our friends over at FanDuel. 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That’s fanduel.com to make your first $5 bet and your chance to walk away with $300 in bonus bets. Let’s get it here nation. The New Orleans Saints edge rushers, pass rush, edge defenders. They desperately need a boost going into this game up against the Seattle Seahawks. and they just might get it going into this week. Fingers crossed if you’re a New Orleans Saints fan on this one, which of course you are, you’re watching this show, um that Chase Young is available because if Chase Young’s available after missing those first two games with the calf injury, then this New Orleans Saints pass rush gets even better going into week three. There are some deficiencies when it comes to this pass rush. I want to highlight that. So, we’ll dive into why the pass rush needs help, why the edge defender role is about to become a thing again going up against the Seattle Seahawks and of course the value that Chase Young brings to both of those conversations. So, the pass rushers in need of help for a couple of different reasons. The number one thing that you might be thinking to yourself is, “What do you mean Ross? They’re tied for the second most sacks in the NFL with eight. Only the New England Patriots with nine have more than New Orleans.” And that is very, very true. The Saints are indeed tied at number two or for number two across the entire league when it comes to sacks. There’s no doubt about that. But here’s the thing. The Saints pressure statistics have not been great. And they are right now sitting with a 22.2 pass rush pressure percentage according to our friends over at True Media, making them number 30 in the NFL. So, when they get those pressures, they are finding their way to the quarterback. We broke this down in yesterday’s episode as well, but now going into a game up against the Seattle Seahawks, this is going to be very important because Sam Darnold can be effective, not very often, but he can be effective when kept clean. And if he’s only experiencing pressure, let’s say, at 22.2% 2% of the time. That’s going to cause some issues for New Orleans because it’s going to give him an opportunity to start to get comfortable and see what it is that he’s going to be able to do going up against this New Orleans Saints defense that’s looked a little weak when it comes to covering uh over on the backside, right? Covering when it comes to pass coverage uh down the field. Now, the Saints only had a 19% pressure rate when it came to what they did in the week 2 game up against M. Jones. It was one of the reasons why he was able to even start running on them at one point. At one point he ran for more than like a 10 plus yard run at one point, but then they had a 25.6% pressure up against Kyler Murray and the Arizona Cardinals. So, you’d certainly like to see them closer to their week one level of production than their week 2 level of production. And there is an obvious part of that that is aided by having Chase Young on the field. Chase Young had his careerhigh in pressures last year. no matter whose pressure statistics you’re checking. Uh even though he didn’t finish enough plays at the quarterback with only five and a half sacks on the season, he still gives you somebody that can add some pressure. And from rushing from that wide nine, much like we saw with Carl Grannerson and Cam Jordan over the course of the first two games, clearly there’s some things that are working there and they have been able to finish more plays at the quarterback. It’s why their sack numbers are high even though their pressure numbers are low. Whereas last year, both their sack numbers and pressure numbers were kind of right in the middle of the NFL, number 18. So, I guess it’s not right in the middle, but just below average across the league. And so, Chase Young certainly helps you out there. But here’s the other thing that this edge rusher group is going to have to help you with, and it comes down to being edge defenders, and it’s setting the edge in the run game. The Saints are very familiar with what it is that offensive coordinator Clint Kubak wants to do. He was the offensive coordinator here in New Orleans last year. Now, he’s the offensive coordinator over in Seattle. And so when it comes to running the football, the Saints know where the point of attack is. They know where the target is and they know where the tracks are going when it comes to the handoffs. They want to get outside the tackle. They want to get to that 98, you know, kind of gap of getting over all the way to the outside. And so those edge rushers are going to play a big role in forcing potentially some of those rushers back towards the inside. That’s what you want to do in this situation. Remember, they’re the wide zone rushing offense is going to create multiple gaps and start a running back on a wide trajectory or a wide track outside of the tackle. And that’s going to be the first point of attack is to be able to get around that edge. But if that edge is taken, they’re trying to open up a hole in the middle for them to be able to cut back. And they’re trying to also give them an opportunity to be able to completely reverse field. And so the discipline of both of those edge rushers, whether you’re on the play side or on the back side of the play, is going to be vital in terms of trying to force some of those rushes back towards the inside. Nick Underh Hill, my good friend over at New Orleans football when we were doing our nof pod uh for the week, one of the things that he talked about was how effective the Saints actually were in that category against the San Francisco 49ers. It’s one of the part one of the reasons why San Francisco only ran for three yards per carry last week. And the thing that we know very much about a Clint Kubak offense, having all experienced that together here in New Orleans, is that if you make Clint Kubak doing to if you force Clint Kubak to do, excuse me, things that make him uncomfortable, you have a chance up against him as a defense regardless of how uh how talented your secondary is, how talented your pass rush is, all those other things. And if the secondary, by the way, isn’t having to cover for five, six seconds, then maybe you’ll see some improved play there in terms of the coverage players. And so that pass rush is going to be really, really important. That setting of the edge is going to be very, very important as well. And Chase Young is a good run defender. Like, it’s not something he gets a lot of credit for. It’s not something that a lot of people get to know about him uh or get to talking about when it comes to talking about him, but he is a good run defender. and so is Carl Randerson who currently sits with three and a half sacks through the first two games, just two off of the season total from last year at 5 and a half. And so watching that game up against San Francisco, you really saw that pass rush kind of get neutralized more times than not. But man, when they got the pressure, they were getting the sacks like they were getting into that backfield and they were making some of those plays. Now the week one sack numbers are a little bit inflated. couple of times where you helped, you know, rush Kyler Murray out of uh bounds at the for no gain and things like that. Like that kind of boosted a little bit of those sack numbers, but nonetheless, the Saints were there and the Saints were getting it done. And now they’re going to go up against a far less mobile Sam Darnold. And so you got to make Sam Darnold see ghost, which he he’s not that quarterback anymore. He’s not great, but he’s not that quarterback anymore. And of course, you got to limit that outside run game. All right, we appreciate you very much for being here with us. Don’t forget to check us out every day over on the GF Coast Sports and Entertainment Network at 10:00 a.m. And in tomorrow’s episode, Crossover Thursday, Corbin Smith and I break it all down. We appreciate you very much as always making us a part of your day, part of your routine for saying yes to me and the show. If you see me, please say hi. And if you need anything else around your New Orleans Saints in between these episodes, make sure you follow me on your favorite social media, Ross Jackson na. Hit me up. Let me know how the family’s doing with them and how you living. Let me know how you moming them. And trust that Nation, I’ll holler at you. [Music]

Spencer Rattler’s progress takes center stage for the New Orleans Saints. The quarterback showcased improved pre-snap operation, processing speed, and decisiveness, highlighted by a 39-yard strike to Rashid Shaheed. Rookie safety Jonas Sanker made waves in his debut, displaying aggressive yet controlled play with eight combined tackles.

Despite being tied for second in the NFL with eight sacks, the Saints’ pass rush needs improvement. The upcoming matchup against the Seattle Seahawks looms large, with edge defenders key to containing Klint Kubiak’s wide zone rushing offense. Demario Davis continues to excel, adapting to evolving NFL offenses and solidifying his status as a top off-ball linebacker.

0:00 Spencer Rattler’s Progress Impresses
10:44 Jonas Sanker’s Impressive Debut
19:38 Saints Pass Rush Needs Boost

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24 comments
  1. I’m reading the comments and I wish Spencer would as well. I understand the pressure he’s under; late pick, not the coach’s guy, and he feels like this is his one shot and he CAN’T blow it. But Ratt, do you really wanna win or just look good losing?! He’s not playing to win; he’s playing to not be the problem. Go out and play like you have nothing to lose!! Reading the comments, you all are behind him, the city’s rooting for him! The season’s a rebuild year but bro is better than Sam Darnold, better than Geno Smith, so go be great!!

  2. Idc about the season tbh cause we can’t compete with these teams. I just want rattler to keep developing and key younger and better all around the board. Rattler is our franchise quarterback

  3. Am i wrong to think that Moore always intended on starting Rattler but needed a decent/cheap option at backup and Haener want going to cut it. To not be scrutinized you don't go for a high profile rookie QB but one that's backup worthy…Shough. Get him up to speed for a just in case scenario during the off-season… Food for thought

  4. The media narrative is not only shifting around the Saints but also around Spencer Rattler.

    They’re not a contending team (yet) but they’re still a fun team to watch!

    Both of those games were winnable, so I’m excited for Ge 3!

    Man, I just hope he can continue to progress and also stack some wins along with it.

    They’re so close to breaking through that wall for him.

    I think they do it against the Seahawks!

    Let’s go Saints! #WHODAT.

  5. Yeah Ross bc the Entire secondary is Trash! All our DBs do is Hover over the Wide Open Receivers! Our DBs are afraid to man up and play up on the receivers! Everyone is wide open

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