EARNED: New Orleans Saints OUTPLAYED New York Giants Thanks To Young DBs, Kellen Moore’s Evolution

The New Orleans Saints won their first game way more than the New York Giants lost it. We got all that and a little bit of land for you on today’s episode of Locked on Saints. [Music] You are Locked On Saints, your daily New Orleans Saints podcast, part of the Locked On Network, your team every day. What is good Huda nation and HUD 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 beatr writer over at louisianaapasports.net. And on today’s episode of Locked on Saints, it’s time for Kendra Miller to see more opportunities in the run game. The New Orleans Saints are watching Kell Moore’s offense take shape and we’ll kick everything off with a look at how the New Orleans Saints won their first game more than the New York Giants lost it. We got all that coming up for you on today’s episode. We appreciate you very much whether it’s your first time or your next time being here with us this time making it your first listen and being an everyday hero on the show which is a proud part of the Locked on Podcast Network. Your team every day. The New Orleans Saints won their first game and they earned the win. Despite some popular narratives right now, the New Orleans Saints absolutely won their first game. And I got three reasons why. The defense is a big part of it. The coaching evolution is another big part of it, and the secondary is the last big part of it. So, we’re going to separate kind of defense and secondary. Maybe we’ll break that down to front versus secondary. But there was just there were just some spectacular things going on in the New Orleans Saints secondary during this game. But I I wanted to to discuss this because this is always kind of the thing that happens with young or rebuilding or even struggling teams, which I think the Saints now check all three boxes starting 0 and4. No way to say that they weren’t struggling, right? Even though it was completely expected and understood that that would probably be the way that their season would start, it’s still a struggle to go through an 0 and4 start and then to come out here and win a football game. Like there’s some mental fortitude that’s necessary for a club in those types of situations. But then, you know, it becomes, oh well, the Saints might not win a football game. The Saints might not win a football game. They’re the worst roster in the NFL. They’re the worst team in the NFL. All these other narratives. and all of a sudden they win a football game in a convincing fashion. Not one that convinces you that they’re anything other than what they are, which is a young, rebuilding and presently struggling team, but that still gives you some sign of light at the end of the tunnel. And then it becomes, oh no, the Saints didn’t win that game. Whoever it was that they beat lost that football game. And we see this kind of narrative all the time. So, I wanted to push back against narrative a little bit. Uh the first thing that I want to mention is that the New York Giants had just beaten one of the best teams in the NFL uh in the Los Angeles Chargers before traveling here to New Orleans to play against the New Orleans Saints. And you’ll bear in mind too that Sunday night the New England Patriots who now come to town uh this coming weekend beat the Buffalo Bills on Sunday Night Football. And there was no conversation about how the Bills lost that game. just everything about how it was that the Patriots won that game when there are some things that you can point to when it comes to the Bills in terms of self-destruct mode and the things that they could have done better on that side. So, it’s always very interesting to just sort of see the dichotomy of the, you know, the narrative around the teams and things like that. But rather than diving into all those things that are kind of larger overarching narrative stuff, let’s be more specific. The New Orleans Saints on the defensive side of the football took the football away. And I’m not talking about luck in anything. I’m not talking about maybe they lucked into Jackson Dart fumbling a football for no reason but still being able to jump on that football and get a recovery. Often times when you have a non-cont fumble like that, typically the person that fumbled the football will be able to fall right back on top of the football. Veteran Cam Jordan did not let that happen. He ends up sealing a uh a takeaway that way. Veteran Deario Davis forces a fumble that’s recovered by rookie safety Yonas Sanker. You get another fumble on a fantastic punch out. I don’t know if you’ve gone back and watched that play, but the punch out by Brian Brezie was a thing of beauty. He had an arm bar. He had a hand in, you know, the face of one offensive lineman and he had one arm free and he literally just reached around and punched the football out of Cam Scataboo’s hands. Cam Scaboo on the sideline. I need new gloves. That was really funny. Uh, but it was recovered by Jordan Hen and taken to the house. Not on any easy task. Thank goodness Kool-Aid McKinry didn’t give up on the play because Darius Sllayton might have been able to catch up with Jordan Hen from behind him. But it was Dar but it was Kool-Aid McKinry throwing a block down the field or at least you know trying to get in his way without drawing like a block in the back penalty or anything like that that sealed Jordan Howden be able to being able to take that one back to the house. You get the two interceptions by Kool Mentry as well. And then the game ends on a turnover uh on downs that maybe could have ended a little bit earlier if there wasn’t like the worst roughing the passer call I’ve ever seen in my life in person in person. Uh but in any case, uh the Saints defense did its thing and it did the thing that they needed to do, which was take the football away. And you might say, “Oh, well, did they take the football away or did the New York Giants give the football away?” The New York Giants had only had three turnovers committed coming into this game all season. Saints and the Giants were in the same place. They had both given the ball away three times and taken the ball away three times. They were at a perfect zero or not perfect, but they were at an even zero uh differential. And the Saints offense did a very good job taking care of the football. We’ll get to that here in a second. But the Saints defense did a very good job taking away the football nearly twice as much in one game as the New York Giants had given the ball away the entire four games before going up against the New Orleans Saints. That included a turnover less game up against the Los Angeles Chargers who at the time were unbeaten facing a rookie quarterback in Jackson Dart. And so that’s one of the reasons why I say, yeah, it was more about the New Orleans Saints taking the football away over the defensive side than it was about the New York Giants giving up the football on the defensive side. That much is also evidenced by five consecutive drives. That does not happen very often in the NFL to where a defense forces a turnover on five consecutive drives. Last time that it happened in the league, actually was in 2016. It was the uh Kansas City Chiefs going up against the New York Jets. There were eight turtle to a turtle. Uh the uh Chiefs had eight total takeaways in that game, including five in a row. And the last time the New Orleans Saints did that was in 2020, excuse me, 1991. I almost said 2021. No, no, 10 years more than that. 1991. Obviously, a phenomenal defense that year. They actually did that twice in that season. So, I wanted to give the New Orleans Saints defense its flowers for doing something that again doesn’t necessarily mean that this team’s all of a sudden the greatest team in the world or the best team we’ve ever watched play football or that they’re even a playoff or postseason appearance team at this point. I think there’s no reason to expect that and there’s no reason to expect all of a sudden they’re going to rip off some big winning streak, although it’d be fun to cover. Uh, but the Saints simply did what it was that they needed to do, showed that they had a light at the end of the tunnel and a lot of it came from some of their young defensive players as we broke down in yesterday’s episode. if you want more on that line of thinking. Uh the offense’s role continues to expand and I love the fact that this offense is now under center and at out of shotgun and out of pistol. Hata Hill is back and able to get mixed in at quarterback every now and then that Kendra Miller is now playing the complimentary role to Alvin Chimera. We’ll get to that in a little bit as well. But then just an offense that doesn’t put the football in harm’s way, an offense that doesn’t put the football on the ground very often. all those other things like the Saints didn’t shoot themselves in the foot which would have allowed the Giants back into this game. They’ve done a good job keeping their distance. Even that fourth and five completion between Spencer Rattler to Rashid Shahi, which isn’t going to be talked about very much. Obviously, very impactful and very necessary in that moment to be able to put put that game on ice, get another three plays out of that to continue to bleed that clock. And then finally, the secondary. Um the Saints secondary, which mind you has one, two, three, actually really had f after after Justin Reed was out with a concussion, had five guys on rookie contracts on that field. The corners in Kool-Aid McKenry and then rookie Quincy Riley as well as a guy on a rookie contract still in Alante Taylor. He had another rookie in Yonas Sanker. And then after Justin Reed was hurt, Jordan Hen stepped in. He’s still on a rookie contract in his third year as well. and the way that those guys mixed and molded and uh you know covered each other and communicated so well on the back end. There are these plays to where coverage gets carried out to go and take away a certain route and when that area is vacated you can see the whole defense rotate to fill that gap and then another player rotates in to fill that gap. That’s the kind of communication and just the nature of what a Brandon Saley defense needs to be able to do. And I thought the New Orleans Saints defense, in particular, its young secondary, did a very good job of that. So, those are three reasons why I think that the Saints won. Oh, and I didn’t even mention the offensive line giving up no sacks. He gave up a lot of pressure, surrendered a lot of pressure, but that’s to be expected going up against three premier pass rushers, as well as a phenomenal interior defensive lineman and Dexter Lawrence. But zero sacks up against that front is a humongous win for this New Orleans Saints offensive line, which by the way was down a starter uh in the midst of all of it. And so that’s why I say that the New Orleans Saints with all of that stuff taken into account won their game up against New York Giants more than the Giants would go on to lose it. Coming up next, New Orleans Saints offense is continuing to take shape in Kell Moore’s vision is becoming clear. We got that coming up for you next as we continue on with today’s episode of Lockdown Saints for Lockdown Podcast Network. Your team every day. This episode is brought to you by our friends over at Prize Pix. The easiest and in my opinion most fun way to play daily fantasy sports. 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So download the prize pix app today and use promo code locked on NFL. You get $50 in lineups when you play your first $5 lineup. That’s code locked on NFL for $50 in lineup. So if you play your first $5 lineup prize picks, it’s good to be right. All right, family. We’re watching Kell Moore’s offensive vision start to really fall into place. At least the version that we’re going to see here in 2025. I can’t stress enough how different this offense looks weeks one into week two, week two into week three, week three into week four, and so on. There’s so much that kind of changes about this offense on a weekly basis. We saw the Saints start very heavy in shotgun with a little bit of motion and not so much play action, not being able to get the run game really starting to go early on uh in week one up against the Arizona Cardinals. Then we saw the run game start to become a little bit more of a focus up against the San Francisco 49ers. But really still kind of the coordinated effort was behind that passing game, although the run game really started to get going. remember Alvin Camra 99 rushing yards in that game. Almost had his first 100yard rushing uh game of the season in that one. Then you get into Seattle where that game just kind of, you know, fell out of the bottom very very quickly. There was not a lot going on there. But then as you got into Buffalo, you saw this team learn from the mistakes that it had during the Seattle game, the pre- snap penalties, remember that? Uh all those other things. They go into Buffalo and they take their offense and they go from being in shotgun to moving under center and in pistol, which is where they did a very good job getting some of their run game going, but going under center, which allowed them to be able to do a little bit more of the run game, be able to take advantage of play action opportunities with turning the back and kind of hiding the the mesh point and those things from the defense, which has a bit of uh an impact, right? Um, then you go beyond that to their usage of motion, their usage of play action, their usage of being able to be at the line of scrimmage in a hostile environment and being able to communicate at the line because they were under center and being able to use a vocal cadence rather than a silent count or a snap, you know, a silent snap count and things like that. There’s a lot of those kinds of benefits that have come from, you know, practical nature of what it is that Kell Moore has been doing, but you’re watching the offense build off of that as well. to last week. They’re very successful running out of under center formations and out of pistol formation. They go into this week and the biggest play at 87 yard touchdown coming out of the break was out of under center. It was a 13 personnel look, meaning that there were three tight ends and there was just two routes being run on that play and it was under center play action with some motion before the snap. The Saints ran motion more than 40% of their snaps in this uh game. nearly 50% in this game up against the Giants. Another big kind of continuing evolution, the usage of motion uh for this team, the variety of motion that they use, all those other pieces. And then they end up connecting on that play because of tendencies that they set up against Buffalo that told the New York Giants defense, which is not a worldbeating defense by any stretch of the imagination. We’ll dig into kind of what their numbers looked like going into the games, but we are kind of trying to keep all these things in perspective, right? You got to have knowledge of the team that you beat. But the Saints taking advantage of that and being able to do the things that got their players in the best position. And so Spencer Ratler operates really well out of play action. The Saints called six different play action passes for him. He was five for six for over a 100 yards and a touchdown with a perfect 158.3 passer rating. That’s not necessarily a pro-Sper Rather tweet. That’s just a a a a very good I mean it is it is kind of a positive for Spencer Rley, don’t get me wrong, but more than anything else, it is a positive for what Kell Moore system is doing in terms of putting players in position to do the things that they do well. And that has always been one of the things that we knew that Spencer Rattler could do well, playing out of play action and being able to come out of those uh play action looks and find the right receiver, make good choices, all of those pieces. And so to see the big 87 yard connection come from that. And oh, by the way, talk about putting a player in position to do what it is that they do best. How about uh Rashid Shahi crossing the entire field and then getting hit perfectly in that sort of you know hash to numbers gap there and being able to take that one up field for a touchdown that or downfield for a touchdown. All of that is about putting players in position to do the things that they do well. How about Kendrick Miller rushing for 4.1 yards per carry uh on offense? I know he didn’t have a huge rushing day and the Saints probably should have continued in there particularly in the red zone and particularly in the fourth quarter rushing with Kre Miller a little bit more. Uh but he had the most carries for the team with 11 41 40 something rushing yards coming out of that one. 40 plus rushing yards coming out of that one and that 4.1 average. And he did some of that by getting outside. He did some of that rushing inside. Some of it was on zone runs. Some of it was on man runs. like this diversity in the run game is was really really good. And again, that’s part of what it is that the Saints want to see from their rushing attack because balance is much better than being predictable. Remember, this is a New Orleans Saints team last year that ran outside the tackles 69.8% of the time. I know I bring that stat up all the time and it’s like, Ross, get over it. That was in 2025, 2024. I get it. I understand. I understand. However, that made that offense very, very predictable. And then there were other things, other cornerstones that were really predictable over the course of the past couple of years. Remember the Keith Kirkwood and Lynn Bowden days where anytime those guys were on the field, the Saints were running. Well, last year it was 46. It was Adam Prince. Anytime that he was on the field, told you exactly what it was the Saints were going to do. Doesn’t feel like the personnel is being utilized in such a way here in New Orleans now that it’s telegraphing anything to the opponent, but instead maybe it’s telegraphing the wrong thing to the opponent on purpose, like the usage of that 13 personnel when they had three tight ends in the formation there. and then bombed it deep out of a clear rushing uh format or a clear uh rushing picture, right? Look on the offensive side on a first and 10. And so those are the kinds of things that I think you look back at and you can kind of see over the course of the year the way that it’s all grown. So I do feel very much like Kell Moore’s offense is coming to fruition. It’s taking shape. It’s getting where it needs to go. Now again, they did it against a not so fantastic defense in the New York Giants. You’re talking about a a team that was 29th in uh opposing yards per game, total yards allowed per game. Um you’re talking about a team who’s, you know, uh scoring defense didn’t leave didn’t get have a lot uh to to really be touted about it. Uh 31st in the NFL with a 6.1 rushing yard per attempt uh average. They were awful, awful, awful. 29th in the NFL in terms of rushing yards. I I get it. They were not the strongest defense, but to see the play calling and to see the way that the scheme and system and philosophy and identity is taking shape. None of that has to do with what your opponent is doing. That has everything to do with the decisions that you’re making as a coach and the execution that you’re pulling off as a team. So again, I’m not here to try to sell the New Orleans Saints as this great team or anything like that, but I am here to say that the New Orleans Saints are putting the pieces in place for them to be able to build that foundation where they can continue to build their future and their identity off of. So it feels like the Saints team under Kell Moore is finally starting to find its identity and the execution is beginning to match what that identity can be, right? In terms of being able to execute uh what it is that the identity is. You can have the philosophy, the play calls, you can have all of it you want. If you can’t execute it, you can’t execute it. The Saints don’t look like they’re having that problem. Or at least it looks like they’re having less and less of that kind of problem as a new team learning a new offense and learning the new mechanics under a new and first time uh head coach in the process, but the Saints clearly have some things going their way. Next up, the New Orleans Saints need to feed Kre Miller. Let’s get to that as we continue on with today’s episode of Locked on Saints, part of Locked on Podcast Network, your team every day. Today’s episode of Locked on Saints is brought to you by our friends at Mazda. Mazda crafts cars for those who do more than simply move. They try to deliver confidence with every ride as well with more IHS Top Safety Pick Plus awards than anyone else as of August 2025. I love a Mazda vehicle. I love some of the SUVs and also those crossover SUVs that they have, which by the way come with all-wheel drive standard to make sure that you’re able to drive with confidence through almost any season. Uh they also make sure that you can take those everyday drives and make them feel like anything but with the smooth handling and intuitive controls that they provide. And they bring a lot of that same attention to detail of your favorite athletes with every single model, including the metallic accents and the available Napa leather upholstery as well. Just like the players that you know and love, Mazda sweats every detail. Because when you make every move count, impossible becomes irrelevant. Mazda, move and be moved. Let’s get it. Had that nation. New Orleans Saints running back Kendre Miller deserves more carries as they continue on throughout the 2025 NFL season. And we’ve certainly seen that trend for Kendre Miller so far. But let me tell you first before we look at that why it is that I feel that he deserves more carries because this is going to be often blown up as an anti- Alvin Chimera situation. It’s absolutely not that. Alvin Camra is obviously incredibly valuable to this team. Is the most dynamic rusher this New Orleans Saints team has. It is a rusher that even if you go back to the game up against the Buffalo Bills where, you know, the Saints found creative ways to turn empty formation plays into running plays by motioning him in to the back field from out wide and being able to line him up out wide in the first place means that there’s some level of belief and certainly uh evidence that opposing defenses will look at him as a threat when he’s lined up out there and would take that seriously. And so they ended up doing that and then he went back to the sideline and said, “Hey, I’ve got, you know, a little bit of a an adjustment to make with that and based upon what the defense was doing, then they implemented that again.” They went 17 yards first time, 12 yards the second time. Like those are things that a veteran running back can give you that a Kendre Miller can’t. So this is not my all right, it’s time to start phasing out Alvin Chimera and phasing in uh Kendre Miller type of uh content here. But what my suggestion is more simply than that and more logically than that is having both players continue to get snaps, having both players continue to have an impact makes each of them better. Kendrick Miller is better the more that he gets the opportunity to run and build a rhythm. Alvin Chimera is better when he is being utilized efficiently in both the rushing and passing game as opposed to being overutilized or over relied upon in between the tackles for instance. We’ve seen that in recent years. Well, probably not last year, but going back to like 2023, 2022 where he was rushing in between the tackles, having to be a bit more of a bellcow back than he typically is. But so far throughout the season, we’ve watched Kre Miller tick up from five carries in each of the first two games to seven carries in the third game to 11 carries a game ago to 10 carries just on Sunday up against the New York Giants. And we’re watching his averages turn out pretty well. 4.8 8 in his first game, 3.9 in his third game, 5.9 in his third in his fourth game, and then 4.1 last week up against the New York Giants. Uh he had the one 1.6 yard game per carry up against the San Francisco 49ers, but that was a game where the Saints kind of struggled to run anybody but Alvin Ker in that game. Hence why having both is very, very important. Uh Kendry Miller had his second highest career total in rushing yards just two weeks ago in Buffalo. uh up against the Buffalo Bills with 65 rushing yards during that game. So, the highlight here is that of course you want to keep both of them in in involved, but having the opportunity here to build off of what Kendrick Miller has done so far, averaging 4.3 yards per carry so far this season gives you a bit of an idea of how it is the Saints could finally have that tandem again. Allah Mark Ingram, uh Alvin Chimera, Allah, Latavius Murray, probably more appropriately, and Alvin Chimera. is having those guys, those two guys in the back field that kind of support one another and whose rushing styles complement one another. Getting the other guy, that second guy, more opportunities bolsters your top guy in Alvin Chimera as well. So, all of that to be said and then eventually Devin Neil will get his opportunity to get more involved as well, whether that be because of availability purposes or just simple development purposes, whatever that might be. Saints will figure that out in time. But I do think that getting Kre Miller available or while having him available, uh, getting him more involved rather, I think is going to be something that the Saints will continue to look to do. And knowing that if they need to overload on one of those running backs, then probably Alvin Chimera is the guy to do that with. He is the veteran. He is the dynamic piece after all. But let me give you this one tidbit about Kre Miller. Kre Miller has got 38 carries on the season so far. If you look back at all players that have at least 20 carries, all running backs that have at least 20 carries for the New Orleans Saints by a season’s end, Kendre Miller leads and has the most yards after contact with 4.4 yards after contact so far this season. That’s the most since 2018 for a New Orleans Saints running back with at least 20 carries in a season, Dwayne Washington, who averaged 4.5 yards per carry on 27 carries in that season. This is one of the reasons why I do think that getting Kre Miller the ball a little bit more as the Saints have shown that they’re doing makes a lot of sense because Kre Miller is the type of guy that beats up a defense. Just simply put, he’s the type of guy that makes a defense worry about having to tackle him. He’s the type of guy that makes a defense tired of tackling him. And that makes a defense weaker. That makes a defense more busted. That makes a defense more tired. And that allows you to be able to take advantage and maybe greater efficiency in the process when Alvin Chimera gets the ball in his hands in those situations. So, I just wanted to highlight the progress that we’re seeing from Kre Miller and the metrics that back it up that he should continue to be more involved in this New Orleans Saints rushing game. He absolutely deserves it and as long as he stays healthy, he can be a big-time asset to Alvin Chimera in the meanwhile as a partner in that backfield. not trying to replace him in the back field, but serving as a complimentary piece to one another. Uh, lastly, I wanted to highlight something that Kell Moore mentioned on Monday. I asked him a little bit about what it was that led him to rule out Chase Young, New Orleans Saints defensive end, so early last week. Remember the Saints who had been taking that all the way down to Friday that, you know, previous weeks, they ended up ruling him out on Monday or excuse me, on Wednesday, a much earlier point in the week. And I asked him about that and he kind of put that on just giving him a little bit of a lighter mental load, right? Not having to worry about what people are saying or questions that are being asked. He’s out. That’s it. He’s done. Don’t worry about it anymore. And kind of giving him a little bit of a relaxing week. So, we’ll see what that means going into this week as the Saints would certainly love to have him in there considering that they are the lowest one of the lowest teams in the NFL right now with just 28% pressure percentage. Coming up in tomorrow’s episode, Film Watch Wednesday, we’ll dive even further into this big- time win for the New Orleans Saints. We appreciate you very much. As always, make us a part of your day, part of your routine for saying yes to me on the show. If you see me, please say hi. If you need anything else around your neighbor between these episodes, make sure you follow me on your favorite social media, RossJack NA. Hit me up. Let me know what the family’s doing with them. How you living? Let me know how your moming them. And trust your nation, I’ll holl at you. [Music]

The New Orleans Saints’ defense shines in a decisive win over the New York Giants, forcing multiple turnovers and showcasing young talent. Kellen Moore’s offensive vision takes shape with increased play-action and formation variety, while Spencer Rattler excels in the evolving system.

Kendre Miller emerges as a potential game-changer in the Saints’ backfield, complementing Alvin Kamara with his physical running style and yards after contact. The offensive line’s performance in pass protection against a strong Giants rush adds another layer to the Saints’ offensive progress.

0:00 Saints Won More Than Giants List
9:37 Kellen Moore’s Offense Taking Shape
18:47 Kendre Miller Deserves More Carries

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22 comments
  1. One of the reasons NFL fans think a lot of the games are rigged, is the roughing the passer call on Granderson. That could have potentially been a turning point in the game. ⚜️

  2. Are we bringing in kickers yet?

    We are seeing Granderson in coverage quite a bit. Easily our best pass rusher… Because Pete can’t QB Spy or cover anything.

    Can’t we get Stutsman in there!?

  3. I know I had my opinions about Moore, but it's best to be patient with what he's doing because it seems like it's starting to come together.

  4. lanny, I thought last night's game, was rigged against the Chiefs.. Weird huh😵‍💫🤣 There were 3-4 Head Shots, that weren't called, I saw it not necessarily Sober🤨, but was Very Clear 😅⚜️⚜️

  5. Ruiz shouldn’t be the starter number 68 Simtson idk how to spell his name but he can really play .. but with both tackles that’s are young also looks like we found our LG . So with 68 playing RG . If we let them 5 play together they will get better..Ruiz is just hurting the O-Line

  6. Saints lead the league in turnover worthy plays. There has been an amazing amount of luck that has lead to lack of turnovers.

    The defense 100% won that game. Other than week 3, the defense has put the team in position to win every game. The offense didn’t capitalize on those opportunities.

  7. I don’t understand why people are down on Rattler .. man what people expect from a young QB .. check out Drew Bree’s Peyton Manning, Troy Aikman .. he’s really getting better every game . I really think we got us a good one if we give him time to develop.. if anyone think otherwise you don’t know football. We have a young team with nothing but cap problems and a 1st time head coach.. i honestly can’t believe how good he’s doing considering everything that’s going on around him .. We really got us one saints fan be patient.

  8. Saints D got 5 turnovers and 1 offensive TD and 6 FG attempts by Groupe which we know he missed 2. To be honest nothing really changed offensively and a lot of work to do for The Saints on both sides of the ball

  9. That’s right Ross! Put it perspective for the haters… All this “They beat themselves “ narrative that’s floating out here is disrespectful! We TOOK the ball 4 times.. Dart gave us one gift 🎁 lol 😂 and that’s because he was flushed out the pocket and was on his skates he got nervous and dropped it when he saw them boys closing in⚜️⚜️⚜️⚜️

  10. I'm glad for the win, but if Blake Grupe is scoring more points than the rest of the offense AND making game saving tackles, we're in for a rough time over the next 4 games. 1 offensive TD and 0/3 in the redzone may have worked against another really bad team, but our Saints have to play real football teams in the coming weeks. Can't expect refs to keep answering our prayers with called-back Rattler interceptions forever.

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