Marshon Lattimore and Deonte Harris limited on estimated Saints injury report

Marshon Lattimore and Deonte Harris were limited on the initial New Orleans Saints injury report, which estimated practice participation.

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The New Orleans Saints and Atlanta Falcons did not practice on Monday due to the short turnaround between their games on Sunday and the upcoming matchup on Thursday Night Football, but both teams released estimated injury reports. While these are just educated guesses from each team’s medical staff about who may have practiced, they’re full of good news for Saints fans. Here’s what we learned.

 

From the Saints

  • G Andrus Peat (forearm), Did not participate
  • FB Zach Line (knee), Did not participate
  • T Terron Armstead (ankle), Did not participate
  • G Will Clapp (back), Did not participate
  • CB Marshon Lattimore (hamstring), Limited
  • WR Deonte Harris (hamstring), Limited

From the Falcons

  • TE Austin Hooper (knee), Did not participate
  • WR Julio Jones (shoulder), Did not participate
  • CB Jordan Miller (illness), Did not participate
  • TE Luke Stocker (back), Did not participate
  • DT Tyeler Davison (neck), Limited
  • RB Devonta Freeman (foot), Limited
  • DE Takkarist McKinley (shoulder), Limited
  • S Sharrod Neasman (shoulder), Limited
  • CB Desmond Trufant (toe), Limited
  • S Kemal Ishmael (concussion), Full
  • QB Matt Ryan (ankle), Full

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Michael Thomas, multiple Saints players top-5 in Pro Bowl voting

The NFL opened up fan voting for the Pro Bowl, and New Orleans Saints players like Michael Thomas rank in the top five at their positions.

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The NFL has opened up voting for this year’s Pro Bowl, and multiple New Orleans Saints players rank inside the top five at their positions. The Saints announced Monday that Michael Thomas has surpassed Dallas Cowboys star Amari Cooper to lead all wide receivers in votes earned, and that he ranks eighth in the entire NFL for fan voting.

Additionally, left tackle Terron Armstead, punt returner Deonte Harris, and punter Thomas Morstead each rank second-best at their position groups. Defensive end Cameron Jordan and kicker Wil Lutz are sitting in third for theirs, while Vonn Bell and Marcus Williams place fourth among strong and free safeties, respectively. Fullback Zach Line and right tackle Ryan Ramczyk have earned the fifth-most votes for their positions. Not a bad showing at all.

Fans can click this link to vote for their favorite Saints players on the 2020 Pro Bowl ballot. Obviously these Saints players would prefer to be practicing for Super Bowl LIV rather than participating in the Pro Bowl, but getting named to that exclusive list is great recognition. Be sure to help them out and cast your ballot.

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NFL won’t flex Week 14’s Saints-49ers game

The NFL won’t flex its Week 14 game between the New Orleans Saints and San Francisco 49ers despite implications for the NFC playoff picture.

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The NFL will not flex Week 14’s game between the New Orleans Saints and San Francisco 49ers despite the matchup’s big playoff implications, the Saints announced Monday. Right now, the 49ers are the projected top seed in the NFC playoff picture, while the Saints trail them by a game. A head-to-head win would give the Saints a tiebreaker should both teams finish the season with the same record, guaranteeing the road to Super Bowl LIV runs through New Orleans.

It’s a shame that the NFL is keeping the game in its early afternoon time slot, which means a noon kickoff in the central time zone. The game won’t reach as many viewers as it would in more prominent time slots. CBS is likely to feature the Kansas City Chiefs’ visit with the New England Patriots in the late afternoon slot, while Sunday Night Football is scheduled to show the Seattle Seahawks’ road game against the Los Angeles Rams.

Keeping the Rams in prime-time is a puzzling decision to say the least. They’re a distant third-place in their own division at 6-4, and could very well see their season end against the Baltimore Ravens on Monday Night Football. In three night games this season, Rams quarterback Jared Goff has completed a combined 61% of his throws while scoring three touchdown passes against four interceptions. If he continues to play poorly, L.A. is at real risk of missing the playoffs after losing last year’s Super Bowl.

All of that said, it benefits the Saints to host the 49ers earlier in the day. West Coast teams have to adjust to an abbreviated schedule on game days when moving out east, forcing them to wake up earlier or risk having fewer hours with which to prepare. Considering how dominantly San Francisco is playing right now, Saints fans should hope for any advantage they can get.

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Panthers cut DB Rashaan Gaulden after Saints loss

The Carolina Panthers released DB Rashaan Gaulden, their third-round pick in the 2018 NFL Draft, after his role in a New Orleans Saints loss

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The Carolina Panthers released defensive back Rashaan Gaulden, their third-round pick in the 2018 draft. The Panthers announced his release on Monday; it followed a rough day against the New Orleans Saints in which Gaulden ran into teammate D.J. Moore on a punt return, disrupting the catch and giving the ball back to New Orleans. He later started a brief fight after a kickoff return by shoving Saints safety Justin Hardee to the ground after the whistle.

These mistakes were the latest in a series of problems Gaulden has had this year, per a report from The Athletic’s Jourdan Rodrigue. Gaulden at one point walked out of practice and did not travel with the team to a road game against the Arizona Cardinals. At the end of the day, his growing list of unforced errors and lacking discipline became too much for Panthers coach Ron Rivera to put up with.

It’s not the first time a bad outing against the Saints made an opposing team show a defensive back the door. The Houston Texans released cornerback Aaron Colvin after Saints quarterback Drew Brees victimized him in an end-of-game sequence to set up a last-second Wil Lutz field goal (sound familiar?). It’s just further proof that opponents need to be on top of their game when facing New Orleans, because the Saints won’t hesitate to take advantage of players who can’t keep a cool head.

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UT News: November 25, 2019

UT News: November 25, 2019

The Volunteers football team emerged victorious Saturday night over the Missouri Tigers, earning a postseason bid for the first time in three seasons. Meanwhile, the swimming and diving team had a record-breaking effort at the Tennessee Invitational while the women’s volleyball team split a pair of matches over the weekend. Additionally, the men’s basketball team looks to extend their perfect start tonight while the Lady Vols get set to face Arkansas-Pine Bluff on Tuesday evening.

Men’s basketball takes on Chattanooga

The 20th-ranked Tennessee Volunteers men’s basketball team takes on the Chattanooga Mocs tonight at Thompson-Boling Arena. The 4-0 Vols look to extend their season-opening winning streak to five against their Southern Conference foes.

The Volunteers and the Mocs have tangled 39 times on the hardwood over the years, with the Vols dropping their last match, 82-69. However, the Big Orange leads the all-time series, 33-6, and sports a 94-17 all-time record against teams from the Southern Conference.

A win would extend UT’s Division I-leading home winning streak to 30 games and also give Tennessee a 52-14 record as a ranked team during the Barnes era, per the Associated Press Top 25 Poll. Head coach Rick Barnes lost his only previous match against the Mocs, that same game that the Vols last lost to them opening the season three years ago.

Tipoff is slated for 7 p.m. ET on SEC Network, and can be heard on local Vol Network affiliates.

NEXT: Lady Vols volleyball split a pair of matches

Poll: Who should the Saints call on to replace Terron Armstead at left tackle?

The New Orleans Saints don’t lack for options to fill in for injured left tackle Terron Armstead, who is sidelined by a high-ankle sprain.

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How will the New Orleans Saints adjust to life without starting left tackle Terron Armstead? NFL Network’s Ian Rapoport reported Monday that Armstead is out for Thursday night’s game with the Atlanta Falcons after suffering a high-ankle sprain on Sunday against the Carolina Panthers, and his recovery is expected to progress on a week-to-week basis. So the Saints could be without him a while longer, which is bad news considering the San Francisco 49ers will visit the Mercedes-Benz Superdome in two weeks.

Fortunately, the Saints don’t lack for options to step in for Armstead. They just aren’t the preferred options. In the past, their go-to move was shifting left guard Andrus Peat over to left tackle (his college position) in Armstead’s absence. But Peat is in the middle of a six-week recovery from surgery on his broken arm, with his own backup (veteran guard Nick Easton) running in his place.

When Armstead exited Sunday’s game with the Panthers, journeyman Patrick Omameh was the initial choice. Omameh has played six years in the NFL for teams including Tampa Bay Buccaneers, Chicago Bears, Jacksonville Jaguars, and New York Giants, starting full seasons at both left and right guard. That experience made him an easy choice for the Saints to name as their top backup, which is the role he’s filled this season. But he’s never played left tackle for more than a handful of snaps (as he did on Sunday in a pinch), so the Saints could look elsewhere.

It’s the same strategy they took in replacing Peat. Second-year pro Will Clapp was the preferred reserve ahead of Easton in all nine games before he was activated, but the Saints didn’t hesitate to name Easton the starter in Peat’s place ahead of Clapp thanks to his extensive experience at the position.

And there may not be a more-seasoned true left tackle on the team than Ethan Greenidge, a rookie out of Villanova. Greenidge’s collegiate career began with nine starts at left tackle as a true freshman, and he held onto the spot for 43 games (barring three appearances at right tackle as a senior). While Omameh has spent more time playing against pros in the NFL, he hasn’t done it at left tackle, which is where Greenidge might have an edge. Greenidge has been a healthy scratch in all 11 games this year, but much like Easton, could be ready for his call-up.

There’s always the possibility that the Saints flip star right tackle Ryan Ramczyk to the left side. They did just that early during his rookie year, putting Ramczyk at left tackle (where he lined up in college) with longtime right tackle Zach Strief in his accustomed spot, while Armstead was working his way back from an injury. Strief went down with his own injury and forced New Orleans to put Ramczyk at right tackle ahead of schedule, but it worked out well for them.

However, asking Ramczyk to swap sides this late in the season (and for maybe as few as two or three weeks) could do more harm than good. It would require someone else stepping into the lineup on the right side, forcing veteran right guard Larry Warford to work quickly to establish communication with a new face.

One injury to Armstead shouldn’t impact multiple starting spots like that, so the Saints may need to keep a narrow focus on Omameh, Greenidge, and maybe their practice squad candidates — rookies such as Tulane’s John Leglue (who has started college games at all five positions) and Florida State’s Derrick Kelly (who the Saints tried out at right tackle during their preseason games).

For a refresher, here’s what the Saints depth chart looks like at tackle, based off the official team roster and where players have lined up this year:

  1. LT Terron Armstead (injured)
  2. RT Ryan Ramczyk
  3. LG/LT Andrus Peat (injured)
  4. LG/LT Patrick Omameh
  5. LT Ethan Greenidge (inactive in 11 games)
  6. OL John Leglue (practice squad)
  7. RT Derrick Kelly (practice squad)

Who do you think should start in Armstead’s place? Vote in the poll below and make your voice heard.

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Terron Armstead week-to-week after high-ankle sprain vs. Panthers

The New Orleans Saints lost starting left tackle Terron Armstead with a high-ankle sprain against the Carolina Panthers, sidelining him.

The New Orleans Saints lost starting left tackle Terron Armstead during Sunday’s game with the Carolina Panthers to a high-ankle sprain, NFL Network’s Ian Rapoport reported Monday morning. Armstead is managing his injury on a week-to-week basis and is already ruled out for Thursday night’s game against the Atlanta Falcons. High-ankle sprains can sideline players for as long as a month, though it’s not uncommon for them to return sooner.

It’s obviously a huge loss for the Saints offensive line. The step down from Armstead to his backup, Patrick Omameh, is as wide a gulf as there can be found in the NFL — when healthy, Armstead is an All-Pro talent and one of the best left tackles in the game. Omameh is a journeyman with more NFL experience at both left and right guard than left tackle. The Saints also have an option in rookie left tackle Ethan Greenidge, an undrafted free agent out of Villanova who has been a healthy inactive all year.

This injury compounds a bigger issue for the Saints offensive line, which is the absence of starting left guard Andrus Peat. Peat is expected to miss about four more weeks after having his broken arm surgically repaired. He’s normally the top option to fill in for Armstead at left tackle, but he’s off the table and replaced by backup left guard Nick Easton.

Hopefully things stabilize for the Saints soon, but for now, it appears they’re going into the late-season stretch with both their starting left tackle and left guard sidelined by injuries. Their next opponent is the Atlanta Falcons, who sacked quarterback Drew Brees six times just a few weeks ago, when both Armstead and Peat were in the lineup. New Orleans has to make some quick adjustments on the fly.

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Terron Armstead injured, questionable to return vs. Panthers

New Orleans Saints left tackle Terron Armstead injured his ankle and is questionable to return to play versus the Carolina Panthers.

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The New Orleans Saints offensive line took another hit early against the Carolina Panthers, with left tackle Terron Armstead injured his ankle during the first quarter. Armstead walked off the field slowly under his own power before riding a medical staff cart into the locker room. An announcement from the team updated his status as questionable to return to the game.

In his place, the Saints called up veteran  backup Patrick Omameh, who has spent most of his time in the NFL at left or right guard. The Saints were already starting a backup next to Armstead in Nick Easton, who was filling in for injured starter Andrus Peat. Ironically, Peat is normally the go-to option to replace Armstead, but he’s going to be out about four more weeks after breaking his arm against the Atlanta Falcons.

This injury to Armstead has been one of the few problem areas on offense for the Saints against Carolina. They have otherwise avoided mistakes and converted on tough downs, ending two of their first three drives with touchdown scores (including a 26-yard run by Latavius Murray and a 13-yard pass to Tre’Quan Smith). That third drive ended with a punt, which the Saints were fortunate to recover.

Armstead’s status is officially questionable to return, so he hasn’t been ruled out entirely. Stay tuned for an update to his situation.

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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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Reports: Marshon Lattimore not expected to play vs. Panthers

The New Orleans Saints will be without starting cornerback Marshon Lattimore in their Week 12 game with the Carolina Panthers, per reports.

The New Orleans Saints injury report listed star cornerback Marshon Lattimore as questionable to play in Sunday’s game with the Carolina Panthers, but NFL Network reports now suggest Lattimore will be sidelined another week while managing a hamstring injury.

NFL Network’s Ian Rapoport reported early Sunday morning that Lattimore was not expected to play against the Panthers, but he could return on the following Thursday for the Thanksgiving headliner with the Atlanta Falcons. Tiffany Blackmon, also reporting from NFL Network, was assigned to cover the Saints-Panthers game from the sidelines and later added that Lattimore will not suit up.

While the Saints probably wanted to get a look how Lattimore’s hamstring responds during pregame warmups, it makes sense to let him rest until Thursday’s kickoff. Starting nickel corner P.J. Williams held his own while filling in for Lattimore a week ago against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, and he should have another opportunity to put up good game film against Carolina’s lackluster receiving corps.

With Williams on one side, Eli Apple on the other, and rookie C.J. Gardner-Johnson in the slot, the Saints are enjoying rare depth in the secondary. They’ll have tough decisions to make in the spring when Williams, Apple, and starting strong safety Vonn Bell each test unrestricted free agency.

We’ll know for sure whether Lattimore is playing today when the Saints release their inactive report later Sunday morning. So keep an eye out for official confirmation from the team.

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