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Alvin Kamara is the only Saints’ RB to test positive this week; all the others have been deemed high-risk, close-contacts and are expected back this week, per source. Now the Saints face a RB issue like the one the Broncos had at QB when they played New Orleans. https://t.co/lOI3UGnwMy
— Adam Schefter (@AdamSchefter) January 2, 2021
The hits keep coming for the New Orleans Saints, who won’t have most of their running backs available for Sunday’s regular season finale with the Carolina Panthers. After Alvin Kamara tested positive for COVID-19, several players were ruled out as high-risk close contacts to him: Latavius Murray, Dwayne Washington, and fullback Michael Burton, as well as running backs coach Joel Thomas. None of them will travel with the team for a road game with Carolina.
Fox Sports’ Jay Glazer first reported the absences, which was confirmed by ESPN’s Adam Schefter. Kamara is the only confirmed positive case out of the group, so he’s in quarantine away from the team for 10 days (eligible to return Sunday, Jan. 10). If the others continue to test negative, they can return after spending 5 days away from the team (on Tuesday, Jan. 5).
The only running backs the Saints will have available against the Panthers are backup Ty Montgomery and rookie Tony Jones Jr., who will be called up from the practice squad. Montgomery is a former wide receiver and splits time with that position group, so he likely wasn’t around Kamara often enough to be deemed a high-risk close contact.
So at least the Saints will have someone with NFL experience in the backfield, even if Montgomery only has a single rushing attempt this season (which he lost 4 yards on; he’s also caught a pair of passes for 25 yards). He’s averaged 4.6 yards per carry in his 63-game pro career, running 225 times with the Green Bay Packers, Baltimore Ravens, and New York Jets before joining the Saints this year.
As for Jones: the rookie appeared in 37 games at Notre Dame, logging 271 rushing attempts for 1,481 yards (5.5 yards a pop), with a dozen touchdown runs. But this will be his first game of the year, so it’s unclear how heavy a workload he’ll see or what he might be able to do with those opportunities.
Expect some carries for Taysom Hill, too. The Saints will have to get creative to keep their normally-strong ground game intact, even against a vulnerable defense like the Panthers’. They’ve been very diligent in the face of COVID-19’s challenges all year, but things are very close to falling apart at the worst possible time.
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