Sean Payton on Broncos’ roster building: ‘The hay is never in the barn’

Waiver wire claims can be an important part of building an NFL roster — it’s how Sean Payton landed Taysom Hill with the Saints in 2017.

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Denver Broncos head coach Sean Payton has emphasized this offseason that the transactions never stop. Players are always competing not only against their teammates for a roster spot, but also against players on other teams who might become available.

“You guys know this better than anyone — the transactions continue here from now until training camp,” Payton said on May 25. “There may be a player of two that we are still looking to sign.”

Since those comments, the Broncos have signed kicker Elliott Fry, tight end Tommy Hudson and pass rusher Frank Clark (wide receiver Nick Williams was also signed and later cut).

The transactions could continue through training camp. Even after setting their initial 53-man roster in August, Denver will look to the waiver wire and consider picking up players cut by other teams.

“That final cut down from 90 [players] to 53 [players] — it happens on one night,” Payton said on June 15. “There’s a lot of work that’s done leading up to that. You’re watching film, and you have roughly over a day to look at who’s available. We tell our players all the time, ‘You’re not just competing with the depth chart in your room, you’re competing with your room on 31 other teams, as well.’

“We weren’t looking for Taysom Hill when we found him. We were looking at another receiver for a practice squad position. We kept watching the film. This was 11:30 at night. I finally call [Jeff] Ireland in and said, ‘Who is this No. 7?’ He tells me, ‘It’s Taysom Hill.’ I asked him to bring me all of his tape. A day later, we put a claim in, and we were awarded Taysom Hill. That doesn’t stop. The hay is never in the barn, relative to things like that.”

Hill went on to become a key, versatile player for Payton in New Orleans. Payton also claimed linebacker Michael Mauti off waivers in 2015 and he made 35 appearances in three seasons. After wide receiver Willie Snead was cut from the Carolina Panthers’ practice squad in 2014, the Saints signed him to their practice squad.

Snead later earned a promotion to the active roster and he totaled 149 receptions for 1,971 yards and seven touchdowns in three seasons in New Orleans.

Hill, Snead and Mauti were all cut by other teams before finding success with Payton. We’ll be tracking all of Denver’s roster moves on Broncos Wire this year as Payton seeks his next waiver-wire success story.

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42 days until Penn State football 2021 season opener

42 is a pretty historic number in Penn State football history. There were three well-known players that gave it their all while wearing 42.

We are officially 42 days away from Penn State football!

42 is a pretty historic number in Penn State football history. There were three well-known players that gave it their all while wearing 42.

The first guy that we will be discussing today is former Penn State running back Lenny Moore. Moore played three seasons as a Nittany Lion (1953-1955) and posted a 1,000-yard rushing season and 11 touchdowns in his second year. Moore played 12 years in the NFL, where he was both a 5x All-Pro and 6x Pro Bowler. There wasn’t a ton of action from him in the passing game in college, but that changed in the NFL, where he played both running back and wide receiver.

Lenny Moore, star halfback of Pennsylvania State University football team, is presented the Patriot News Award from Charles “Rip” Engle, Penn State coach, after Moore was named Pennsylvania’s athlete of 1954 at a sports night program in Harrisbur, Pa., Feb. 4, 1955. (AP Photo)

Former Saints J.T. Barrett, Michael Mauti make Big Ten Network All-Decade Team

Former Saints players J.T. Barrett (Ohio State) and Michael Mauti (Penn State) were recognized on the Big Ten Network All-Decade Team.

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Former New Orleans Saints quarterback J.T. Barrett was recognized on the Big Ten Network All-Decade Team as the first-team quarterback for his efforts with the Ohio State Buckeyes, where he started 44 of the 50 games he played while breaking a long list of records; including Drew Brees’ conference title for career yards on offense, which he set at Purdue back in the day.

Barrett joined the Saints as an undrafted free agent in 2018 and went on to be signed, released, and re-signed to their practice squad 28 times, though he’s currently a member of the Pittsburgh Steelers. For the curious, that’s one transaction away from tying the record former Saints wide receiver Andy Tanner set with the team from 2011 to 2015, having been involved with 29 different transactions.

But Barrett wasn’t alone in representing the Saints on the Big Ten Network’s All Decade Team. He was joined by former Saints linebacker Michael Mauti, who made a name for himself on special teams. But before he stood out for his home team, Mauti was starring for Penn State at the college level. He stepped up as a leader for the Nittany Lions in the wake of NCAA sanctions in the early 2010’s, earning recognition as the Big Ten Linebacker of the Year in 2012. Now, he’s been shouted out again by being named to the Big Ten Network’s All-Decade Second Team.

Mauti, a New Orleans native, had a three-year run with the Saints and did the bulk of his work on punts and kickoffs. He earned a spot in Saints history in 2015 by blocking and recovering a punt against the Atlanta Falcons, then carrying it into the end zone for a touchdown, recalling an iconic play by Saints legend Steve Gleason back in 2006 — a game Mauti had attended as a young fan.

While neither of these players may have left the sort of lasting impressions they’d hoped for on the Saints, it’s great to see them earning this respect for their impact on the college game. Those are the sort of memories that endure.

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