You can tell that Kellen Moore has coached Dak Prescott and Jalen Hurts.

The New Orleans Saints coach likes his quarterbacks to use their legs, and that’s been a consistent part of his offense dating back to his days of being the play-caller in Dallas and Philadelphia. And through four days of training camp, Moore has sprinkled in specific calls that give the quarterback the chance to take off in space.

The Saints might need it, too.

Sunday’s practice — the last session before pads come on — turned out to be a rough showing when the quarterbacks were required to use their arms, not their legs. Spencer Rattler and Jake Haener each threw interceptions in 7-on-7 drills, and all three quarterbacks were uneven when work shifted to full 11-on-11.

It wasn’t for a lack of opportunities, either. On the hottest day of camp so far, which required New Orleans to go inside for the last period of practice, the Saints got extended team reps — opting to double dip with the 2’s to work on the opposite end of the field when Rattler and the starters were working in the red zone near the end of the session.

“We did a two-spot drill, and we’ll do those on occasion throughout camp,” Moore said. “It’s to maximize as many reps as we can, while not being out here for three hours.”

Let’s take a look at the numbers through Sunday’s practice — with apologies to Hall of Famer J.J. Watt, who recently derided the use of keeping track of training camp stats:

Rattler: 5 of 11 (20 of 28 overall)

Shough: 5 of 10 (11 of 21)

Haener: 3 of 3 (11 of 15)

If Friday’s practice was the Rattler who balled out in the first half of games last season, then Sunday’s version represented the Rattler who fell apart in the second half. Rattler’s splits were so drastic last year that he had a 103.3 passer rating in the first and a 46.5 passer rating after halftime. That inconsistency again was on full display on Sunday.

Rattler appeared to let an earlier interception by linebacker Danny Stutsman snowball his play. On the turnover, Stutsman read the pass perfectly and jumped in front of Cedrick Wilson’s route at the goal line. It was Rattler’s second red-zone interception of camp.

From there, Rattler mostly unfolded. While he did have a nice touchdown to Juwan Johnson that avoided oncoming pressure from Cam Jordan, Rattler threw a ball incomplete behind an intended for Dante Pettis and closed his day with three straight incompletions. Perhaps the incompletions were the right reads – two of them avoided pressure — but Rattler also looked frustrated. Before his second-to-last throw, he clapped his hands prior to the huddle.

As for Shough, the rookie’s most impressive moments of the afternoon occurred with his legs. He opened his first set of team drills with two straight runs, with the first play seeing the quarterback outrun defensive end Carl Granderson and Stutsman for a good chunk of yards. Shough’s mobility is an interesting wild card for the Saints: The 25-year-old can run, but his coaches at Louisville avoided using him that way given Shough’s injury history (two broken collarbones, one broken leg). The approach worked as Shough stayed healthy for the entire campaign.

If there was a quarterback who did best of the three, it was arguably Haener. He had a really nice throw to Chris Olave on a comeback route that got the defense to bite on a play action. Later, he hit a wide-open Bub Means in the back of the end zone for a touchdown.

But there were down moments for the third-year signal-caller — lowlights that prevented him from outright winning the practice. In 11-on-11s, he would have likely been sacked on a play that was blown dead soon after Haener tried to climb the pocket to take off. Then, in the indoor 7-on-7 session, Haener tried to needle a throw to Chris Tyree and instead was picked off by safety Julian Blackmon in the end zone.

“Both guys just made really, really good plays from a defense perspective,” Moore said of the interceptions. “And quarterbacks, again, just ball placement and you know, giving us an opportunity. We’ll evaluate on film and see if there are any other coaching points.”

The Saints still have weeks before they have to decide a starter, and putting on the pads this coming week will help provide clarity to their eventual decision.

But Sunday’s session appeared to be a step back after the offense found a rhythm two days earlier.