EVOLUTION: New Orleans Saints’ Kellen Moore Offense Unfolds As Spencer Rattler Settles In
The New Orleans Saints offense is a work in progress, but from week one to week two, it definitely opened up. We got all 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 Network, your team every day. What is good HUD 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 the Saints beat writer over at Louisiana.net. And on today’s episode of Locked on Saints, the Saints rushing defense is now overshadowing its passing defense. Spencer Rattler has shown a lot of improvement from week one to week two, but we’ll tell you specifically what that improvement looks like. And we’re going to kick everything off with the New Orleans Saints offense, which is starting to open up. We got all that coming up for you on today’s show. We appreciate you very much, whether it’s your first time or your next time being here with us this time, making us your first listen and being every day. You’re here on the show, which is a proud part of the Lockdown Podcast Network. Your team every day. Today’s episode brought to you by our friends over at FanDuel. Right now, new customers can bet just $5. And if your first bet wins, you’ll get $300 in bonus bets to use across the app. The New Orleans Saints offense is very much still a work in progress. It’s far from being finished, but we’re already starting to see how this offense can open up. Even just the leaps that were made from week one to week two. So, I want to highlight some of the things that the Saints have done that opened up the offense in week two that stood out to me and watching and going through our All22 film review, which we’ll have some pieces of over on our insider program. You can join that with the link in the description, but we’ll also have a look at some of the things that the Saints can still do to continue to open up. Remember, this season is all about progress, not remaining stagnant, and not settling for anything. So, even where there is improvement, though incremental, none of those should be considered as anything more than incremental, as this Saints team continues to look for ways to continue to improve throughout this 2025 season. So, the first thing we’re going to start off with with is that the Saints made a leap from just a few playaction passes to several playaction passes here in week two. And for me, that was a big leap for them and something that allowed them to be able to utilize a little bit more of what we call the easy buttons uh in the NFL. And when we talk about easy buttons, what we’re really talking about are things like motion, play action, sometimes RPOS’s get funneled into that classification as well. Just things that help make your defense or excuse me, your offense a little bit easier for your quarterback. Motion is an easy button because it could potentially diagnose man or zone coverage before the snap. Play action is considered an easy button because it can help a quarterback have a little bit more time as they look to see what’s going on and also of course to impact that second level and defensive line of any defense that might be looking for some opportunities to maybe rush the passer. creates a little bit of a hold for those players. And so for the Saints going into the second week of action, them getting some opportunities in the playaction game, I think came down to something that Kell Moore himself said was a bit of a reflection that he ended up putting on himself, which was making sure that he stayed true to that run game a little bit late or a little, you know, go getting late into the game. I mean, right? Staying late and staying um connected to the run game late in the game, if that makes sense, and not getting away from it too early, which was certainly something that was observed in that first week. So, the Saints went from uh four playaction dropbacks to 18 play action dropbacks in the second game, completing nine of 15 passes in that case for two touchdowns, both of which in the red zone. So, that gives you a little bit of a glimpse of one of the places where the Saints absolutely opened up their offense. Let’s continue through our positives of how things opened up. Uh, more attempts downfield in this one. We saw a little bit more of a concerted effort to push the ball downfield. Big 39 yard completion down the left sideline to um to uh Rasheed Shahed. We saw them try a couple of other deep passes to Brandon Cooks that were kind of on these outbreaking routes that weren’t necessarily like 20 yards deep, but were explosive passing plays. And so these 15 plus yarders, we saw the Saints funnel more of those in. And even that almost touchdown strike between Spencer Rattler and Chris Ave in that opening uh in that opening drive is one of those things. I love the the usage of tempo as they kind of slowed it down a little bit but still continued to use tempo plays and I think that the tempo the mesh of tempo and penalties has started to kind of even out a little bit for New Orleans. So of course still much progress to be made in terms of penalties. Timing routes are in the offense more tight end usage is there and moving pockets. These are all things that make things very comfortable for a young quarterback. So like seeing all of those things. Here are some things I think that the Saints continue to in that could that the Saints could continue to incorporate in order to push that that passing game a little bit further. Alvin Chimera utilized a little bit more in the screen game as well as on those famous option routes that he runs. Him doing that will also continue to help to open up that run game as well. That’s another thing, by the way, that I would highlight as a positive is the Saints King committed to the run late in the game. I know I kind of stumbled my way through a reference of that earlier, but I want to make sure I’m very clear about that when it comes to the run game as well. I think attacking the middle of the field is something else that this Saints team could do a little bit better just going into uh just looking at this week uh two of eight over the middle of the field beyond 10 yards down the field. And so finding more opportunities in the intermediate and deep areas to attack the middle of the football field would be a good thing for New Orleans. It’s part of what San Francisco did very effectively against the Saints passing defense. I think more RPOS’s could go a long way for this team as well as they get more comfortable and settled in with their scheme. It’s a big thing that you kind of have to get figured out because the issue with the RPOS’s is that you’ve got to either make that decision to hand the football off or the ball has to come out quickly because those offensive linemen are blocking like it’s a run play. And so if you hold on to the ball a little bit too long, those offensive linemen all of a sudden get too many yards downfield and then bang, you’re getting a whistle for illegal man downfield. And so you want to stay away from those types of penalties there. So I don’t blame the Saints for kind of slow playing the RPO game. But when you have two young quarterbacks that recently ran RPO heavy offenses in the NFL, there’s an opportunity to build that. The Saints ran that a lot with both Spencer Rler and Tyler Shuck during training camp. I think that there’s opportunities to do that with Spencer Rattler on the field. Um, we’re not really seeing a lot of the crossing routes or crossing route combinations from Keller War. I’m very surprised by this. I don’t know if it has something to do with maybe the build of wide receivers or something that they just don’t necessarily feel comfortable with there. Maybe that has a lot to do with sort of the the lack of attention of attacking the middle of the field. So, I’ll be very curious to see if that grows over the course of the season or if that’s been a bit of a concerted effort to maybe move to more of a perimeter attack. I’m not sure. just yet, but definitely something we can keep an eye out on. And then the last thing that I’ll mention here is something else that I would like to see the Saints continue to grow is the under center diversity. So for New Orleans, they have taken 17 snaps under center so far. According to our friends over at True Media, 12 of those have been rushing attempts. So if they’re under center, you can almost bank on the fact that it’s going to be a run. So it’s becoming a little bit of a tell. Now, the Saints are still throwing out of it and out of under center looks. They did it again in week two against San Francisco. So, as long as they’re doing it a little bit, it creates some level of having to play honestly. But the more that you continue this trend to where the vast majority of your under center snaps are rushes. Um, that’s going to end up causing you some trouble later. It’s going to help make you predictable. So, definitely uh something I’d like to see the Saints, a habit I’d like to see them break. on first downs alone, 11 of 14 of their under center reps have been rushes. So definitely something to watch there. So the Saints offense is opening and still has more space to open and one of the players that’s going to help them be able to achieve that is Spencer Rattler, especially if he continues on a trajectory because he has shown a lot of improvement getting back in to the starting role in 2025. Let’s get to that 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 of Locked on Saints is brought to you by our friends over at Mazda. Mazda crafts cars from people who do more than simply move. Uh Mazda delivers confidence with every ride with more IHS top safety pick plus awards than anyone else as of August 2025. From footwork to breath work, athletes sweat all of the details. And Mazda brings that same intention to how they craft every make or every model of their vehicles. 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That the Saints cannot mistake progress for a final product. I am so so so stringent on that, but also the fact that Spencer Rattler has shown improvement and looks much better than he did in 2024, which was to be expected. He didn’t have a great supporting cast in 2024. He was starting as a rookie in 2024. now he’s got an entire off seasonason where he actually got to, you know, make that leap and and and train and get ready for a season as opposed to the draft. Blah blah blah blah blah. Um, a whole lot of context to that. And so I think the most important thing that’s happening for the Saints right now is that Spencer Rattler is cashing in on the opportunity. Now we’re we’re through two weeks right now. He’s got some tough opponents on the road to go and take on Seattle Seahawks, Buffalo Bills. We’ll see what he looks like over the course next couple of weeks, but what he has looked like to begin the season is indicative of growth. Is that growth enough to become the future franchise face of this team? It’s way too early to call that. Is the growth enough to propel him to looking just as good in Seattle and in Buffalo? We don’t know. We’ll find out. But for Spencer Ratler, there has been concrete improvement. And I wanted to instead of just telling you that there’s been improvement, I wanted to break down where we’ve seen that improvement. One of the first things that stuck out to me on tape, and this went back to the Arizona game, but specifically during the San Francisco game, is his processing speed. This was something that we talked about a lot during training camp, but then kind of went, you know what, got to wait and see what happens until he’s in regular season action going up against live bullets and those the players flying around and full speed, full-on, full-blown NFL players. And we’re certainly seeing it. Gets the ball out quick. He’s moving along and he’s kind of working through his progressions. He’s being given pure progression opportunities, things like that as well. He’s not a half field read guy. He’s being given an entire field to read and he’s working through that, making decisions, making passes, making good choices, and also choosing to use his leg. So, along with that processing speed also comes uh a composure, a lack of panic. I have not seen Spencer Rattler do a lot other than keep surveying the field even when he feels some pressure. He had uh a big throw down the field to Chris Olive. It was the one after it was on the same drive that they missed. It was on that opening drive where they missed that connection in the end zone. And then there was another one as he was coming across between two defenders where he kind of put the ball a little bit behind him. Well, on that one, he had Nick Bosa lined up over Caesar Ruiz. Nick Bosa beat Caesar Ruiz and then was right in Spencer Rattler’s face. Spencer Rattler took a big hit and got that ball out, but he stood in the pocket. He kept his eyes up and he delivered. And we see that a lot. It’s not like watching some of the other quarterbacks that we’ve seen under center for New Orleans in recent years where the moment there is a feeling of any pressure, they’re looking for a place to scramble and run. Rattler has done a very good job of getting the ball out. In fact, he is tied right now amongst all quarterbacks in the NFL with at least 40 passing attempts. That’s 26 different quarterbacks. uh he is right now tied for number three when it comes to time to throw 2.47 seconds. So he’s getting the ball out quickly. The downside to that is that the offense stays a little bit contained, a little bit condensed, but he’s getting the ball out quickly and he’s making quick decisions. A lot of the sacks that he took last year, some of those came down to him holding on to the ball too quickly or too long. Him holding on to the ball too long no longer an issue, at least in the early going of this season. So the other thing about this in particular in week two is the quickness with which he makes the decision to run. His decisiveness to pull the ball down and run when the opportunities are there, which is different from panicking into running the moment that you feel any little bit of pressure. I think that he took a step forward from that from week one into week two. In week one, I thought maybe there were a couple times where he was too hesitant to pull the ball down and run. Week two, he was very decisive and when he had an opportunity to run, he took it at one point going through some contact to go pick up some extra yards and pick up a big for first down. Those types of moments there are going to be ones that are going to continue to galvanize his decision-m in going out there and making the decision to run. Um, a lot of folks have made a lot about his uh yards per attempt. We’ll get to that here in a little bit because certainly you’d like to see it higher. But I will say that his 36.3% target rate of air yards of 10 or more yards, so these are passes that are 10 or more yards from the line of scrimmage through the air, not caught in a run or anything like that. This is him throwing the ball more than 10 yards downfield. 36.3% of his passes have looked like that. That’s eighth in the NFL. And so there is something there in terms of the Saints and Spencer Rattler being willing to take those shots, just maybe not connecting on those shots enough to push the average up from that week one game. So we’ll see how things continue to move in that direction. But it doesn’t seem like anybody’s afraid to push the ball 10 yards, 15 yards down the field with Spencer Rattler. And then a couple of intangible things. I like watching his uh uh pre-nap work. He does a very good job managing the team at the line of scrimmage. He had one play to where he had uh lined up in the shotgun. It was in the red zone. Alvin Camra was on his right hip. He made some calls and then Alvin Camra moved over to his left side and then they ended up handing the ball going to the right and they ended up picking up some good yards and I think it was like a nine yard run. It’s little things like that of just orchestrating whether it be checks, whether it’s part of the play, whether he’s changing things. I’m not sure. But in those situations, finding those moments to, you know, where he is commanding and orchestrating the offense, I think that’s part of what’s what got Spencer Rattler the job in the first place as well, in addition to his onfield performance was his ability to be able to orchestrate that Kell Moore offense and run the operation. That’s what Kell Moore talked about over and over again this offseason. Operation, operation, operation. Also, his accountability at the podium. He’s not blaming guys for running the wrong routes or anything like that. He’s saying, “I put the ball in the wrong place. I can I can hit that pass. I got to be better on that. Blah blah blah. I like hearing the accountability from the quarterback position here in New Orleans, which unfortunately was not always a given. Um, next up, couple things that I think you can continue to improve on. Three sacks that he took last in this last game. One of them was like a quick pressure sack. So, it is what it is, but obviously that week one game where he was sacked only once, you’d probably like to see him hovering around that as opposed to three sacks. Uh, 5.3 yards per attempt. This has been a big talking point. This is number 25 out of those 26 quarterbacks with at least 40 passing attempts. We’ll see how that continues to progress though because like I said earlier, that 36.7 downfield target range of more than 10 yards is eighth highest in the NFL amongst that very same group. So eventually that average is going to start to push up. And then I think the other thing is just miscues, a little bit of inconsistency in terms of ball placement. You get a great throw to Jawan Johnson on the left sideline. You get a great throw to Rasheed Shahed deep down the left sideline as well. Put it over that outside shoulder where only he could get to it, but then missing a little bit on the connection with Chris Olive getting the ball a little bit too far to the left where you’re trying to place that pass before he even makes his break. You’re throwing to a spot. He just needs to get to a spot where Chris Olive is going to be. And so, you know, you’re trying to recalibrate some of those things. So, there’s opportunities still for growth here. and not all these things like even that inconsistent ball placement thing is just as much a part of the connection and chemistry with the receivers that he’s throwing to as it is an arm talent issue because again you can see some of those other spots where he’s making these spectacular throws down the field. And so once those other things start to settle in, uh this New Orleans Saints offense, going back to our opening segment here, will continue to open and open and open. And you can do that when you have a young quarterback that’s growing and growing and growing. but he’s got two big challenges coming up next in the next couple of weeks, Seattle and Buffalo. Let’s see if he can keep it going from there. Up next, let’s flip the script over to the defensive side. We’ll do our deep dive into the Saints run defense, which is surprisingly overshadowed their passing defense so far. 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 of Locked on Saints is brought to you by our friends over at FanDuel. The best place to go to get in on the action when it comes to the NFL season, which is here and rolling. And FanDuel is making sure that you’re ready for every kickoff every weekend with a can’tmiss offer. Right now, new customers can get $5 put down for your first bet. And if that bet wins, you can earn $300 in bonus bets to use across the app. You can use that for same game parlays for an even bigger payout. You can get it on things like money line spread uh props as well, even live betting, which I absolutely love. And of course, if you’re a new customer, what you want to go and do is find a big point spread and bet the money line on the favorite. That way, if you win that first $5 bet, you get that $300 in bonus bets. The Saints, big underdog, third largest underdog this week up against the Seattle Seahawks on the road plus seven. So, are you ready to get started? Well, download the FanDuel app now by visiting fanduel.com to get started. That’s fanduel.com to place your first $5 bet. Let’s get it, Huda Nation. The New Orleans Saints run defense was a big concern last year in 2024, but here in 2025, though early, they’re showing some incremental improvement. And those improvements are definitely overshadowing what’s been going on for the Saints passing defense so far this season. So, let’s dive into it. We’ll take a look at a couple different things where things have gone well in run defense, where things can still improve in run defense, where things have improved relative to the Saints positioning from last year in the run defense, and where are some things in the passing defense still need to kind of take some steps forward. So, a couple different targets that we’re going to hit here as we go through our final segment of the show. We appreciate you very much as always for being here. Don’t forget you can catch us every Monday through Friday over at 10:00 a.m. on the GF Coast Sports Entertainment Network, which has got a big deal with DirecTV. So, really, really exciting stuff there. Make sure you come and check us out. All right, so the Saints, two things that I want to highlight that they’ve done very well so far or that tell you the story of how they’ve done so far when it comes to their uh run defense. The first thing is defensive rush success rate. So, this is the percentage of defensive run plays, right? or or or run defense snaps, the percentage of them that are successful or considered successful for the Saints defense. That could be a tackle for a loss. That could be a no gain. That could be a short game, a short gain, right? That could be a a a twoyard gain on first and 10. It could be a four yard gain on third and five. Like, there’s a lot of different ways that this can kind of, you know, stretch out in terms of what is success. but the percentage of defensive run snaps the Saints have taken or run defense snaps the Saints have taken that are successful. And then we’ll also take a look at rush EPA. That’s expected points added. That basically is just an efficiency metric that takes into consideration things like down distance, uh field position, game situation, score, all that good stuff. So, uh, the the the short side of that is that a run on, um, you know, a five-yard run on third and five is going to be seen as more successful than a 5-yard run on second and 15, right? Like those types of things. So, for New Orleans, in defensive rush success rate, they sit at 63.8%. That’s top 10 in the NFL. Remember that top 10. I’ll tell you why that’s important in a second. As for rush EPA, which again is that efficiency metric that takes into consideration a bunch of game situation stuff, number 11 in the NFL and so nearly top 10 there as well. The reason why I said remember top 10 and you can kind of just remember top 10 for both of these, right? Because the things are top 10 in one, they’re number 11 in another. So they’re close to top 10 in the other. So for defensive run success rate last year, right? We’re talking about improvements relative to where the Saints finished last year and are beginning this year. They were number 30 in the NFL. Get ready to hear number 30 a lot when talking about last year, by the way. Uh but they were number 30 in rush success rate on the defensive side. They were also number 30 in rush EPA last year on the defensive side. So that’s two places where I think you can immediately see that kind of tell the overall idea that hey, the Saints run defense is in the process of improving. I’m not going to say has improved because it’s only two games, but is in the process of improving. One of the other reasons why I think that the defensive rush success rate thing is so important is because sometimes, especially early on in the season, a run defense can be seen as middling or not doing well based on some big breakaway runs in each game. For instance, a 52-yard run by Trey Benson in that first game up against the Arizona Cardinals made that game look a lot worse for the Saints defense than it actually was. And so this just kind of gives you a glimpse of something that is relative to the entire uh smorgansborg if you will of what’s going on for the Saints run defense. So overall positives there for the Saints run defense. Now there are a couple things that I wanted to look at in terms of the passing defense as well. That includes coverage as well as pass rush. And so for coverage, Saints right now tied for 15th when it comes to passing success rate. 50 56.3% success rate there. So, a lesser success rate for the Saints passing defense than their run defense. So, definitely something to keep an eye out on there. And then I want to highlight the Saints pressure percentage, not their sacks. Right now, sacks wise, tied for number two in the NFL with eight sacks. Would have never guessed that they would have been in that place here. Three and a half of them coming from Carl Gran alone, but eight sacks in the NFL. Good job there. But a 22.2% pressure rate according to our friends over at True Media. that is, say it with me, number 30 in the NFL. And so last year where they were 18th in sacks and 18th in pressure rate, this year they’re eight, they’re second in sacks with eight, but then they’re 30th in pressure with 22.2% of a pressure percentage on the defensive side. So they aren’t generating pressure at a successful enough rate or at a high enough rate. That’s something that Kell Moore has has brought up a couple times already. But when they are getting pressure, they’re finding ways to get to the quarterback or at least run the quarterback out of bounds before they can pick up a yard. And so I think that that’s something that we’re looking at there. Couple of things to consider as well. Yards before contact, Saints right now number 22 in the NFL. That’s up from number 30 in the NFL last year. I told you we were going to hear that number a lot. And at number 18 and yards after contact, that’s up from number 20 last year. And the last thing that I’ll highlight is yards per carry. So this is just an efficiency metric, uh, basic efficiency metric for, um, stopping the run. Saints were guess yes guess number 30 last year and with 4.9 yards per carry allowed that only Carolina was worse this year tied for number 17 with 4.2 yards per carry holding the San Francisco 49ers to under four yards per carry by the way last week that ties them with the Baltimore Ravens and the Los Angeles Rams much better company to be in. So, the Saints rushing defense, taking some steps forward. Still a lot of work to do, but taking some steps forward, kind of overshadowing the progress of the passing defense so far. All right, coming up in tomorrow’s episode, it’s our film watch Wednesday, so we’re going to dive in even deeper in terms of what we saw on the All 22 tape and of course keep you up to date with everything going on around your New Orleans Saints. We appreciate you very much as always for making 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. All right, if you need anything else around your New Orleans Saints in between these episodes, make sure you follow me on your favorite social media, RossJackn OA. Hit me up. Let me know the family’s doing them or how you living. Let me know how you moming them. And trust Nation, I’ll holl at you. [Music]
The New Orleans Saints offense is showing signs of life, with notable improvements from week one to week two. Increased play action passes and downfield attempts highlight the team’s evolving strategy under Kellen Moore.
Spencer Rattler’s growth at quarterback is turning heads. His faster processing, improved composure under pressure, and quicker decision-making are showing promising signs of improvement.
On defense, the Saints are making some notable strides in run defense, jumping from 30th to top-10 in defensive rush success rate. However, the pass defense still needs work, ranking 15th in passing success rate.
0:00 New Orleans Saints Offense Opening Up
10:46 Spencer Rattler’s Improvement
20:14 Saints Run Defense Overshadowing Pass Defense
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32 comments
Spencer Rattler has shown us that he is a capable Quarterback in this league. Capable
Is Chase ever gonna play…dam ….
He moves in the pocket well under pressure and keeps his eyes downfield. Already better than Derek Carr
That crossing route ti AJ brown was his bread and butter with the eagles
Kellen called an amazing gameplan man I even seen him use dart in the run game with fuaga moving looking forward to seeing penning come back that should boost the run game even more. Rattler is finally starting to settle in would love to see him get better with the accuracy’s but the projection of the team is pretty cool to see . Great things to see good video Ross 🫡⚜️⚜️
#rideordiewithrattler 🐍 🐍
We need chase young to come back
🫡⚜️💛
Spencer looks real good right now….
Rattler true breakdown:
2 good balls on the day, shaheed down the sideline and Johnson TD.
19 of his 25 completions were behind the line of scrimmage and under 9 yards.
Two of his touch downs were from 3 yards.
He continue to drop his eyes and run early.
The run game is top 5 in the league. Passing bottom 5.
Love the little dig at Carr there Ross. 😂
Fuck all the bullshit. We got Spencer Rattler in the 5th round….lets stop being so fuckin weird and ungrateful. We look like the Cleveland browns as a fan base and it’s getting weird and unbearable.
Great analysis ROSS J ⚜️⚜️⚜️🔥 WDN
With all these numbers you throw out I feel I am back in math class
I’m sticking with Rattler becoming our Baker. Our team isn’t good enough for our dumb fan base & potentially our coaches to put our chips in on Rattler. So he will go to a real team, GM & have a tremendous career.
Olave is obviously unwilling to make a catch over the middle. Rightfully so. I’d attribute our lack of crossing routes to Chris Olave not being comfortable. And Shaheed not being as capable. Need to get Vele onto the field!
Offense doesn’t convert on 3rd down while defense can’t stop 3rd down. Not a good recipe for W’s
I respect Kellen Moore for actually running a fair QB competition after drafting Shough. He is giving Rattler a fair shot and so far, Rattler is making good on it.
I came to this site B4 I went to SNL… Keep them straight Ross
We got to get 14 on the field to bring a toughness to the wide receivers he needs to start to tell you the truth everybody else is just speed catchers we need a position catcher on the field at all times
Locked on titans guy get off my channel nerd😂
Rattler is progressing at a higherrate than severalnof 1st round QBs taken in past 3 or 4 years
Coaching is proving to be good so far. Minor things will get fixed. But the team is getting more and more competitive, which means were getting better and better, that is easy to see. Love to see it
I GOT SEAHAWKS 160 TO 0 SEAHAWKS WIN VS SAINTS
3 td passes. Rattler is definitely proving he’s qb1 for a reason. ⚜️💯👏🏼
Rattler already looking better than Carr imo 💯⚜️👏🏼
So is it fair to give Mickey Loomis credit for this?
tom brady and pat mahomes great but they don’t win without a
squad. get rattler a squad see if he can be great yall write him off as if yall seen him with a squad
It's nice that you all are so optimistic, but I'm I the only one who saw the missing of open receivers, especially the wide open one in the end zone. I hope he gets better, but that small margin for error in the NFL separates the winners from losers.
Our Defense is legit but both games you can tell when the offense don’t come away with points it affects the defense. It’s like the defense get to telling themselves it’s no point in trying if offense can’t score points.
Here's what I want people to understand. You don't have to be an elite QB to win in this league you have to have a really good supporting cast around you. The Saints found a gem in the 5th round with Spencer & I believe he can be Baker Mayfield. Sidebar: Baker just started to put it together since arriving in Tampa.
Who Dat Let’s Get It. Keep Believing In Who Dat!!!!! We Can Get There.