How the Saints safeties are evolving throughout the preseason

The Saints are trying out new looks at safety each week. How their secondary is evolving through the preseason, via @MaddyHudak_94:

The New Orleans Saints may have lost their second preseason game to the Green Bay Packers, but they gained valuable information to shape the final depth chart – particularly in the secondary. While Marcus Maye and Tyrann Mathieu, presumed starting safeties, did not play Friday night, Maye only played 11 snaps the week prior. And yet, the remaining personnel of P.J. Williams, Daniel Sorenson, J.T. Gray, and Justin Evans painted an entirely different picture from what we saw against the Houston Texans. Here’s what I learned:

Top 5, Bottom 5 Saints PFF grades through preseason so far

The best and worst players from the two Saints preseason games so far, via Pro Football Focus grades:

The New Orleans Saints weren’t able to overcome the Green Bay Packers at Lambeau Field a week after failing to seal the deal at NRG Stadium with the Houston Texans, but preseason games aren’t about wins and losses. The objective is to evaluate players and coaches in different roles, like trying new guys out on special teams and giving the play sheet to quarterbacks coach Ronald Curry. You’re more focused on the process than the results.

With that in mind, let’s check out the player grades from Pro Football Focus. Their team charts and grades every play from every player in every game to give us an idea of who is performing their best and who isn’t getting the most out of their reps. It’s not a perfect system, but it is a useful tool at a glance. Here are the highest and lowest grades from the Saints preseason so far, deferring to players who have suited up for both exhibition games:

Saints have found a scrappy playmaker in safety Justin Evans

The Saints have found a scrappy playmaker in safety Justin Evans. He’s making a strong return to the NFL after injuries threatened his career, via @MaddyHudak_94:

The New Orleans Saints secondary illustrated the value of versatility in their preseason loss to the Houston Texans – both in scheme and personnel. The team may have their starting safety tandem in Tyrann Mathieu and Marcus Maye, but a quiet free agency signing back in March demanded attention with Saturday night’s performance: safety Justin Evans.

When head coach Dennis Allen commented early in the offseason about coveting interchangeable safeties with complementary skill sets, it was fair to think that vision was primarily for the two starters. If we’re going off last year’s depth chart, former Saints safeties Marcus Williams and Malcolm Jenkins were backed up by P.J. Williams and C.J. Gardner-Johnson, respectively. P.J. Williams wouldn’t have been the first name in mind as a run stopper, and Gardner-Johnson’s short-area quickness and motor as a blitzer are traits that serve greater value in the slot. It’s hard to imagine a disguised look with Williams in the box while Gardner-Johnson backpedaled into single-high coverage. Neither the starters nor their backups seemed remotely interchangeable.

Those defined roles were reflected in New Orleans’ employment of coverage in the 2021 season. They ran single-high coverage on over half of defensive snaps, primarily in Cover-1 (29%) and 25% in Cover-3. Comparatively, in two-high safety coverage, they ran 20% of snaps in Cover-4 and just 12% in Cover-2.

It was slightly astonishing to see that out of 61 defensive snaps against Houston, the leading coverage was Cover-4 at 34%. Cover-2 was second highest on 23% of snaps, and only 11 plays (18%) were in Cover-1. It’s all but a complete antithesis of the emphasis on single-high safety coverage that played to Marcus Williams’ strengths. The preseason opener saw Maye, P.J. Williams, J.T. Gray, and Justin Evans drop back at free safety. Those same players often rotated throughout each coverage. It lines up with the ever-rotating secondary that has shined throughout training camp; each safety has dropped back into strong and free, vice versa, and split-safety coverage.

While training camp illuminates team trends with a larger data set, preseason matchups often see scrappy playmakers make a case. Justin Evans’ performance was a statement. Watching it back on film only bolstered his impressive performance, and it was reminiscent of traits I saw when I watched his 2017 and 2018 film over the offseason. In comparison to Marcus Maye – who, in fairness, was nearly impossible to evaluate in coverage on the New York Jets – Evans displayed better range on film. His diagnosis of run plays in high coverage stuck out. He was communicative with his teammates pre-snap and adjusted to cover the slot based on reading receiver alignments.

With just 24 career games played due to multiple season-ending injuries, including the entire 2019 and 2020 seasons, I had analyzed his production per snap. It’s more indicative of playmaking abilities regarding perennially injured players. Evan’s per snap rate of interceptions (0.30%) and pass deflections (0.61%) showed high upside. Moreover, he had the highest percentage of combined and solo tackles per snap of all five safeties analyzed. That showed up quickly on film in his eager downhill pursuit against the run, and he took good angles to tackle in open space. His technique was a bit reckless, and that bolstered concerns of an injury history that kept him off the playing field for the last three seasons.

It’s incredible to consider that Evans hasn’t played a down of football since Week 10 of 2018 in light of his performance in New Orleans’ preseason opener. Evans recorded two solo tackles, defended a pass, and recorded an interception late in the third quarter – on third down. Dennis Allen talks about situational football fairly often in his training camp press conferences, and multiple defensive backs have spoken on the value of mental toughness. We talk about the two-minute offense on that side of the ball, but third-down turnovers are extremely valuable in a team’s defensive counterpart.

Evans stood out further beyond the production numbers. In his first snap in the slot, he was patient in soft coverage and absorbed the physicality of the incoming receiver to take away a target on third down. His solo tackles made his statement. He made an incredibly quick read the moment Jeff Driskel set his feet and traveled about 8 yards in seconds to hit poor, unassuming Chris Moore like a freight train on 3rd and 23. After backpedaling to Houston’s 30 two plays later, he flew downhill in pursuit of a screen pass to make a tackle in open space. Play only made it four yards.

Out of 23 snaps played, Evans spent 26% of those at corner, 4% at slot, 48% at split-safety, and dropped back into single-high coverage for the remaining 22%. Two of his standout plays came on third down. His head was on a swivel, dropping back at the snap with eagerness to fly into the backfield from 30 yards out. Stats don’t always tell the story, but Justin Evans showed Saturday night that the Saints were right to take a chance on a player with solid traits and upside as a playmaker. There’s more work to do, but he’s positioning himself to make the final roster.

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WATCH: Justin Evans snags Saints second interception vs. Texans

Justin Evans makes good on his return to the NFL, snagging a tip drill interception in Saints preseason opener with the Texans:

Former Tampa Bay Buccaneers safety Justin Evans has been away from football for the last two seasons. He missed 2020 after starting the season on the physically unable to perform list and then did not play in 2021 as he focused on his recovery. Returning to the league this season with the New Orleans Saints, Evans has a chance to revitalize his career after being derailed by injuries. He started that journey off with a bang in his preseason debut with the Saints.

Houston Texans quarterback Jeff Driskel uncorked a deep shot to Chad Beebe who looked to have a step on Saints cornerback DaMarcus Fields. Fields though didn’t give up on the play and made an impact at the catch point causing the pass to be tipped in the air. That’s when Evans saw and made good on the opportunity, diving to finish the play with an interception. He then quickly got back up to his feet for a big return. Evans starts off his return to the NFL with great momentum that he’ll look to build on throughout the rest of the preseason.

Saints training camp takeaways, Day 5: Paulson Adebo continues to shine

Defense dominates throughout the Saints’ first padded practice with Paulson Adebo continuing to stand out. Training camp notes via @RossJacksonNOLA:

The pads went on for the first time on Day 5 of New Orleans Saints training camp. The clattering and cracking of contact filled the practice field with fans in attendance on Monday. The ability to evaluate the offensive and defensive lines took a step forward today, but it was the secondary finding ways to shine yet again. Here are our observations from the fifth day of Saints camp.

7 toughest cuts from our latest Saints roster projection

7 toughest cuts from our latest New Orleans Saints roster projection

It’s a good time to take stock of the New Orleans Saints’ roster, with minicamp behind us and a monthlong wait until training camp kicks off in late July. We’ve seen all of the big moves in free agency and the 2022 NFL draft. Anything else is going to be minor tweaks and touchups. We have a good idea of what the starting lineup will look like. We explored it all in our 53-man roster projection, which you can find here broken down by position groups.

There were other tough decisions that ultimately didn’t materialize into anything — is Zack Baun finally ready to get on the field with the rest of the defense? — but for the most part we got down to the final ten or twelve roster cuts without much debate. In the end, though, we put together a squad that looks formidable. Here are the seven toughest cuts from that process:

Saints sign former Buccaneers safety Justin Evans, another 2017 draft pick

Justin Evans was picked by the Buccaneers in 2017 just behind Marcus Maye and Marcus Williams. Now he’s replacing Williams to join Maye with the Saints, via @DillySanders:

ESPN’s Adam Schefter reports that the New Orleans Saints have agreed to a one-year deal with free agent safety Justin Evans. Like Marcus Williams and Marcus Maye, Evans was a second round pick in the 2017 NFL draft — picked by Tampa Bay Buccaneers out of Texas A&M at No. 50 overall, just behind Maye (No. 39 to the New York Jets) and Williams (No. 42 to the Saints).

So how does he fit in New Orleans? Pro Football Focus play-by-play charting found that Evans lined up at free safety on 853 of his 1,320 defensive snaps through his first two years in the NFL, making him an option to replace Williams at that spot while Maye works in as an underneath defender replacing Malcolm Jenkins at strong safety. But both Maye and Evans have experience in different roles, so he won’t be pigeonholed into one alignment. Look for Evans to compete with veteran backup P.J. Williams for the starting job.

Evans had four interceptions and eight passes defended during his first two seasons, but he suffered an Achilles injury in Sept. 2019 and was never able to get back on to the field. After missing the entire 2019, 2020, and 2021 seasons, he is back to being healthy and finally got another chance in the NFL. Here’s hoping it works out well for the 26-year-old.

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Who have been the last 10 players drafted 50th overall?

Looking at the previous players that have been taken 50th overall, there are some encouraging picks but more that didn’t exactly pan out.

The Chicago Bears are without a first-round pick for the second straight season, but they do own a pair of second round picks at No. 43 and No. 50.

When considering the previous players that have been taken at 50th overall, there are some encouraging picks but more that didn’t exactly pan out.

Let’s take a look at the last 10 picks at No. 50.

2019: TE Irv Smith Jr., Vikings

Jake Roth-USA TODAY Sports

Following a solid preseason, rookie Irv Smith Jr. was gradually worked into Minnesota’s offense. In 2019, Smith had 36 receptions for 311 yards and two touchdowns, which was more than any Bears tight end last season. The Vikings already have a really good tight end in Kyle Rudolph, so there hasn’t really been a rush with Smith. But with the loss of Stefan Diggs, Smith is expected to get more opportunities in Minnesota’s offense in 2020.

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