NFL Week 2: Saints wearing gold pants again vs. Panthers

NFL Week 2: Saints wearing gold-ish pants again vs. Panthers

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The New Orleans Saints announced their uniform combination for Week 2’s away game with the Carolina Panthers: black jerseys and gold pants. It’s the second week in a row the Saints have gone with the nominally gold trousers, which can look closer to beige or khaki depending on the light, meaning the Saints have used gold pants just as often in 2021 as they did in 2020 and 2019 combined.

Because they’re the visiting team this week, the Saints had to let the Panthers choose whether to wear darker home-colored jerseys. Carolina did not, meaning New Orleans will be wearing black-and-gold in Charlotte’s mild late-summer heat.

Here is the winning percentage the Saints have achieved in each of their different uniform combinations dating back to 2006, when Sean Payton was hired to coach the team:

  1. White jerseys, white pants: 6-2 (.750)
  2. “Color Rush” alternates: 8-3 (.727)
  3. “Black and Gold” throwbacks: 2-1 (.667)
  4. Black jerseys, gold pants: 23-13 (.639)
  5. White jerseys, black pants: 41-25 (.621)
  6. Black jerseys, black pants: 46-30 (.605)
  7. White jerseys, gold pants: 33-24 (.578)
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Referee Ron Torbert’s crew assigned to work Saints-Panthers game

NFL Week 2: Referee Ron Torbert crew assigned to Saints-Panthers game

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Eight-year NFL referee Ron Torbert and his crew have been scheduled to officiate the New Orleans Saints’ Week 2 game with the Carolina Panthers, per Football Zebras. Torbert did not work a single Saints game in 2020 after doing so twice in 2019, and New Orleans has a 5-2 record in games he has refereed. Before being promoted in 2014, he spent four years working as a side judge.

Last week, Torbert’s crew were assigned to the Giants-Broncos game. They called 9 fouls (tied for the second-fewest in the league for Week 1) for 99 penalty yards (sixth-fewest), though a pair of the flags were declined. It included two unnecessary roughness fouls against each team as well as two pass interference penalties on the Broncos defense. The Saints secondary must continue to be careful in coverage.

And in 2020, Torbert’s three most-frequent foul calls were false starts, offensive holding, and defensive pass interference. For added context, here is how the Saints, Panthers, and Torbert’s crew compared to the NFL average last season, per NFLPenalies.com:

Defensive pass interference Offensive holding False starts Total penalties
Torbert 1.19 1.75 1.81 11.1
New Orleans 1.06 0.83 0.67 5.98
Carolina 0.44 0.75 0.69 5.09
NFL average 0.58 0.89 0.96 5.39

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Kenny Stills among latest Saints free agent tryouts

Kenny Stills, Marqise Lee among latest Saints free agent tryouts:

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Well that’s interesting. The New Orleans Saints reported a group of free agents in for tryouts on Monday’s update to the daily NFL transactions wire, and one of them is pretty familiar: wide receiver Kenny Stills. He was one of four wide receivers to work out for the team after it sent Tre’Quan Smith to injured reserve for at least three weeks.

That leaves a group of receivers on the 53-man roster that includes Marquez Callaway, Deonte Harris, Ty Montgomery, Lil’Jordan Humphrey, and Chris Hogan, with three more on the practice squad — Kevin White, Easop Winston Jr., and rookie draft pick Kawaan Baker.

Originally drafted by New Orleans out of Oklahoma, Stills found immediate success with the Saints until he was surprisingly traded to the Miami Dolphins in 2015, where he remained until he signed with the Houston Texans in 2019. After two years in Houston, he’s a free agent again, and could return where his career started. Stills has averaged 2.6 receptions and 41.4 receiving yards per game in the NFL.

But no one has been signed yet. Here’s the other players who worked out on Monday:

Report: Texans reworked Bradley Roby’s contract for multiple Saints draft picks

Texans reworked Bradley Roby’s contract in exchange for multiple Saints draft picks

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We knew there would be some hurdles in fitting Bradley Roby’s $8.9 million salary onto the New Orleans Saints’ books, and now we’ve seen how they managed it. NFL Network’s Field Yates reported Thursday morning that the Houston Texans agreed to restructure $7.6 million of Roby’s salary into a signing bonus — meaning his 2021 salary cap hit in New Orleans clocks in at just $1,862,645 (accounting for the Week 1 game check he’s lost to suspension).

This was confirmed by Texans beat reporter Aaron Wilson, who clarified that Houston didn’t do this out of goodwill; the Saints are expected to pay back multiple draft picks. The exact rounds and years those picks will be in (or even how many are going to the Texans) remains to be seen, but the Saints can handle it. They were projected to own nine picks in the 2022 draft with three compensatory selections on the way.

Additionally, Roby is under contract for 2022 on a $9.5 million salary with a $500,000 roster bonus, but none of it is guaranteed. That effectively makes it a team option. If he’s a bust, they can cut him without financial penalty. If he plays as well as expected across from Marshon Lattimore, the Saints could extend his deal or employ “ghost years,” their signature move of future years that automatically void.

To illustrate that point, the Saints could restructure all but $1.12 million (the 2022 veteran minimum) of Roby’s base salary into an $8.38 million signing bonus, which would be spread out over four new ghost years (the NFL limit). That lowers his 2022 cap hit to $2.796 million, saving the Saints $7.204 million against the cap next year. If he ends up leaving in free agency in 2023, the Saints would have a dead money charge equal to those savings, but that falls in line with the salary cap going to the moon in 2023 once new broadcasting rights money flushes into the league. They can take the hit.

So it’s like the extra picks the Saints are sending to acquire Roby while getting some back. In the same way they could shuffle some money around knowing a big payday is around the corner. It’s like kicking the can down the road while the road is actively paying for the can.

But, hey. This is all two years away. For now let’s celebrate the Saints finding a way to address the most glaring problem on their roster for a high-stakes season. Stay tuned for details on which picks are being sent out and what the Saints still have to work with once they’re gone.

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