5 reasons the 2020 offseason will be one of the craziest in recent memory

The NFL offseason has basically already begun for 30 teams. Only the Chiefs and Niners have something to focus on. That means every other organization is looking forward to the offseason. The planning has been begun. Teams are trying to sign their …

The NFL offseason has basically already begun for 30 teams. Only the Chiefs and Niners have something to focus on. That means every other organization is looking forward to the offseason. The planning has been begun. Teams are trying to sign their current players to extension and trying to figure out who they will target in free agency. The offseason is always crazy and has surprise signings, but this year will be different. It could be the craziest offseason in ages due to a confluence of factors.

Saints’ Super Bowl 44 win ranked 17th-best of all time

The New Orleans Saints’ win in Super Bowl XLIV over the Indianapolis Colts was ranked the 17th best title game in NFL history by USA Today.

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The New Orleans Saints were recognized for their victory over the Indianapolis Colts in Super Bowl XLIV by that game being ranked the 17th-best title game in NFL history by USA Today. It remains the most memorable game in Saints history, thanks to huge plays ranging form Pierre Thomas’s crafty running on a screen pass touchdown, to Thomas Morstead’s “Ambush” onside kick, to Lance Moore’s just-in two-point conversion and Tracy Porter’s famous interception returned for a touchdown. The writeup from USA Today’s Nate Davis summed it up well:

The Saints ended decades of futility courtesy of MVP Drew Brees’ pinpoint passing, coach Sean Payton’s surprise onside kick to start the second half and CB Tracy Porter’s game-sealing pick six of Peyton Manning.

This win in Super Bowl XLIV brought the first NFL championship to New Orleans in franchise history, providing the high point in the greatest era of Saints football. It ended a decades-long championship drought for the city and ushered fans into a new time where competing for another title has been the expectation, not the long-shot hope.

It’s not something the NFC South-rival Atlanta Falcons can boast. That team still hasn’t won a Super Bowl, and their loss in Super Bowl LI ended up earning the top spot in the USA Today rankings. We’d be remiss to forget how that game saw the Falcons surrender a 28-3 lead late in the third quarter in the most epic collapse in the championship game’s history. You love to see it.

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2020 NFL Free Agency: 12 wide receivers for the Saints to consider

The New Orleans Saints won’t lack for options at wide receiver in free agency, ranging from A.J. Green and Amari Cooper to Phillip Dorsett.

The number-one priority for the New Orleans Saints in the 2020 offseason has to be finding a wide receiver to run opposite Michael Thomas (after their quarterbacks riddle is answered, of course). Thomas put the team on his back for much of the 2019 season, breaking and resetting the NFL record for receptions in a single season, but he can’t be expected to do that every year.

Ted Ginn Jr. was the next-best wide receiver in catches, and he only had 30. After him, no other wideouts had more than 18. The Saints were able to win a lot of games and get into the playoffs by asking Thomas to make magic despite the extra coverage going his way, but their first-round exit spelled out how serious a problem this could be. Drew Brees needs more weapons at wide receiver, and Sean Payton has to recognize that.

While this is a draft class loaded with talent at that position, we shouldn’t expect the Saints to sit on their hands and wait for a rookie hopeful to drop to them in April. Their strategy for nearly two decades has consisted of filling roster holes through free agency so that they can go into the draft targeting the best players available. To that end, we’ve ranked a dozen possible free agents who fit the Saints’ needs, though maybe not their budget. Each tier is broken down by expected contract values.

Bank-Breakers ($10 million-plus per year)

Aaron Doster-USA TODAY Sports
  • Amari Cooper, Dallas Cowboys
  • Robby Anderson, New York Jets
  • A.J. Green, Cincinnati Bengals
  • Emmanuel Sanders, San Francisco 49ers

Each of these players should command double-digit salaries. They’ve proven themselves to be number-one receiving threats who can make plays in the NFL, even though they each bring their own challenges. Sanders and Cooper have to be seen as favorites to re-sign with their current squads, given how integral they’ve been to their recent success; it would take a serious recruiting effort by the Saints to land Cooper on even a one-year contract beneath his market value. And the 49ers didn’t trade multiple draft picks to acquire Sanders just to let him walk away uncontested in free agency.

As for Green: he missed the entire 2019 season with injuries and it’s possible the Bengals want to retain him as their go-to target for Joe Burrow, the rookie quarterback they’re inevitably set to draft first-overall. Conversely, Anderson played more snaps than any other free agent wide receiver (944) and curiously isn’t part of the Jets’ long-term plans, despite his quick chemistry with young passer Sam Darnold. There could be some off-field shenanigans at play here, which the Saints should be wary of.

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List of Big 12 players that have declared for the 2020 NFL draft

As the CFB season comes to an end, players will be declaring for the draft. We will be updating this list as players start to declare.

As the college football season comes to an end, a lot of players will be declaring for the 2020 NFL Draft. We will be updating this list all the way until the deadline for underclassmen to declare which is January 20.

The Big 12 historically full of talent and this year is no different. Talented players will come throughout the entire league. Texas is expected to have a few names on this list, but nothing is official as of yet.

Here are the Big 12 players that have declared for the 2020 NFL Draft:

(updated as of Dec. 29)

Ross Blacklock: Defensive Tackle, TCU

Jalen Reagor: Wide Receiver, TCU

CeeDee Lamb: Wide Receiver, Oklahoma

NFL 100 All-Time Team discredits itself by snubbing Drew Brees

Saints QB Drew Brees joined LaDainian Tomlinson, Darrelle Revis, and Julio Jones on the list of players snubbed by the NFL 100 All-Time Team

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Well, they did it. The NFL 100 All-Time Team “blue ribbon panel” threw an interception late in the fourth quarter, condemning the product it put out to be remembered as something only worth laughing at.

It’s because they left off Drew Brees. The best player in New Orleans Saints history is also one of the greatest players in the NFL’s history. He’s breaking everyone else’s records each week after a career spent beating his peers head-to-head.

Among his generation of quarterbacks, he trails only Tom Brady in prestige, and that’s because Brady was fortunate enough to play with a defense that carried him to several championships early in his career. Now that they’re both on the back nine, there’s no comparing who plays at a higher level.

In addition to Brady, here are the quarterbacks who did make the cut on the NFL 100 All-Time Team (listed in alphabetical order):

  • Sammy Baugh
  • John Elway
  • Brett Favre
  • Otto Graham
  • Peyton Manning
  • Dan Marino
  • Joe Montana
  • Roger Staubach
  • Johnny Unitas

Most of those names are no-brainers; Brady, Favre, Manning, Marino, and Montana among them. The others are shamelessly catering to nostalgia, hyping up an era of football that wasn’t as impressive as some want to remember it. In the case of Baugh, the voters used his stats on defense and special teams to justify his inclusion, which is hilariously awkward.

Let’s be clear: nobody in the history of the NFL has done more with less than Brees, including everyone on this list. Until Alvin Kamara and Michael Thomas rose to prominence in 2017, Brees had set the league on fire in New Orleans despite having shared the field with just one pass-catcher who earned a spot in the Pro Bowl (tight end Jimmy Graham). The Saints’ defensive personnel during Brees’ career is laughable, especially compared to the Hall of Fame-stocked units players like Brady, Manning, and Montana were able to lean on.

No, football was not better in the 1940’s — it was a sloppy, poorly-executed sport that hadn’t figured out important things like efficiency of movement or player safety just yet. Yes, it’s easier to pass in today’s game; that’s because decades of trail-and-error taught athletes the best ways to win. But those realities shouldn’t disqualify the best to ever do it from getting recognized for his accomplishments.

Overlooking the league’s all-time leader in passing yards and touchdowns thrown in favor of quarterbacks who played in an era where most players (offensive linemen and defenders included) weighed 230 pounds or less is ridiculous. Are we really going to look back fondly on an era that predated desegregation?

This exercise has been lambasted before, for making head-scratching decisions like leaving off the NFL’s all-time leader in receiving yards per game (Julio Jones), or the best running back of the 2000’s (LaDainian Tomlinson), or the best cover corner in NFL history (Darrelle Revis). But Brees’ exclusion stands out even more glaring than the rest, because there are too many facts, stats, and other quantifiable values to argue against it.

If the voters wanted to highlight an often-forgotten era of the game and remember some of its most talented players, then fine, do that. But be honest about it. In this case, the selection panel let their feelings get in the way of the facts, and it led to Brees getting disrespected yet again in his storied NFL career. Here’s hoping they come to their senses when their votes really mean something, like induction to the Pro Football Hall of Fame.

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Saints inactive report: Marshon Lattimore officially out vs. Panthers

The New Orleans Saints and Carolina Panthers released their official inactive lists before their Week 12 kickoff, with Marshon Lattimore out

The New Orleans Saints and Carolina Panthers are both dealing with injuries across the board, and it forced them to rule out some key players for Sunday’s game from the Mercedes-Benz Superdome. New Orleans will be without multiple starters including left guard Andrus Peat (broken arm), returns specialist Deonte Harris (hamstring), fullback Zach Line (knee), and now, cornerback Marshon Lattimore (hamstring).

Friday’s official Saints injury report listed Lattimore as questionable to play, but the team decided to rest him another week after testing his hamstring in pregame warmups. With another game in just four days against wide receiver Julio Jones and the Atlanta Falcons, it makes sense to let Lattimore’s body fully recover before giving him the green light.

NFL rules stipulate that just 46 of the 53 players on the roster may be active on game days. Here’s which players will be joining their injured teammates on the sidelines for Week 12:

From the Saints

  • OL Andrus Peat
  • CB Marshon Lattimore
  • WR Deonte Harris
  • FB Zach Line
  • OL Ethan Greenidge
  • TE Dan Arnold
  • DE Carl Granderson

From the Panthers

  • CB Ross Cockrell
  • CB Corn Elder
  • DE Wes Horton
  • RB Mike Davis
  • DE Marquis Haynes
  • LB Jordan Kunaszyk
  • WR Brandon Zylstra

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