3 Saints rookies receive PFWA recognition after 2019 debut

The Pro Football Writers of America recognized New Orleans Saints Erik McCoy, C.J. Gardner-Johnson, and Deonte Harris on its All-Rookie Team

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Three members of the New Orleans Saints rookie class were recognized by the Pro Football Writers of America on their 2019 All-Rookie Team, highlighting their impressive efforts during their first season in the NFL.

Saints center Erik McCoy, cornerback C.J. Gardner-Johnson (who went by Chauncey in college before abbreviating it in the pros), and punt returner Deonte Harris were each singled out as top performers. Of that group, Harris was also named a first-team All-Pro and Pro Bowler.

McCoy snapped the ball on 99.4% of the plays run by the Saints offense, and played a combined 1,141 snaps between his time on offense and defense, per Pro Football Reference. That total trailed only right tackle Ryan Ramczyk, who tied McCoy’s snap count on offense but logged three more appearances on special teams. The consistency and mistake-free football McCoy played with (he didn’t draw a single penalty flag in the final six weeks) is remarkable to see out of a rookie.

Encouragingly, the Saints got great returns on both prospects they traded up to acquire. The trade package that helped New Orleans move to pick McCoy in the second round of last year’s draft also netted them a fourth-round pick that was swapped again in a leap up for Gardner-Johnson.

It took the safety some time to earn playing-time with the defense, but he ultimately finished tenth-best in snaps played there (546) while also logging the seventh-most snaps on special teams (205). He was credited with just four missed tackles on 46 attempts, a rate of 8.0%. Only first-team All-Pro linebacker Demario Davis had a better missed tackle rate (4.3%) among Saints players who attempted 40-plus tackles.

As for Harris: he had the best season for a punt returner in the Sean Payton era, having returned 36 punts to gain 338 yards (leading the NFL in both categories), a rate of 9.4 yards per try. He also finished the year tied with Buffalo Bills kick returner Andre Roberts for the fourth-most yards in that phase (644), but did so with fewer kick returns than all of the players ranked above him (24).

It took a little longer for Harris to become comfortable fielding kickoffs in the NFL than punts — which should be expected given he played at small-school Assumption College before this — but he was ferocious down the stretch, picking up 100-plus kick return yards in four of his last seven games, including three matchups when opposing teams were too scared to kick to him.

So, all told, that’s not too bad for a draft class in which the Saints didn’t own a first-round pick. It’ll be intriguing to see where they go next.

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