12 players who must impress during Saints’ preseason game vs. Jaguars

12 players needing to impress during Saints’ preseason game vs. Jaguars

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We’re on to the second preseason game for the New Orleans Saints, who will be hosting the Jacksonville Jaguars at Caesars Superdome on Monday night. While this is a meaningless exhibition game, the stakes are higher for some players than others. Some need this opportunity to prove they can handle greater responsibility during the regular season.

Others know their careers could be on the line when they take the field. Dozens of jobs have already been locked in for the 2021 season, but that just isn’t true for everyone. A game (even a preseason game in exhibition play) against another team is just what some of them need to help seal the deal. Here is who needs a big night against the Jaguars:

 

New Orleans Saints roster locks and long shots on special teams

The New Orleans Saints have two-thirds of their specialists locked in, but a competition is raging at punter between Blake Gillikin and Nolan Cooney:

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Get excited: our position previews for New Orleans Saints training camp continues with the special teams unit, where the Saints are enjoying some veteran continuity at two key spots with serious competition ongoing to complete the group. The team moved on from Thomas Morstead this year, but they have a pair of promising young punters working hard to replace him. Let’s evaluate the roster locks, long shots, and players on the bubble for New Orleans’ special teams unit:

Saints are set for a training camp punter battle to replace Thomas Morstead

The Saints added Syracuse punter Nolan Cooney to go up against Penn State’s Blake Gillikin in the search for a Thomas Morstead replacement.

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Blake Gillikin spent his rookie year learning everything he could behind longtime Saints punter Thomas Morstead, and now he’ll have to put his skills and knowledge to the test in a training camp competition for the right to replace the fan-favorite specialist. The Saints moved quickly after the 2021 NFL draft to bring in Syracuse punter Nolan Cooney, one of the nation’s best, who went through a pro day workout with the Saints’ special teams coach earlier this spring.

Of course Gillikin was an accomplished punter in his own right. So how do the two of them compare? Let’s look at some stats putting Gillikin’s 2019 season at Penn State against Cooney’s numbers with the Orange in 2020:

  • Cooney punted 74 times for 3,314 yards in 11 games, averaging 44.8 yards per punt with 3 touchbacks and 24 landing inside the opposing 20-yard line. 25 of his punts traveled 50-plus yards and 14 traveled out of bounds, while 22 were fair catches. 26 of his punts were returned for 170 yards, resulting in a net yards per punt of 41.7, while 9 were downed by his teammates. He posted a long of 64 yards and had no punts blocked.
  • Gillikin punted 62 times for 2,615 yards in 13 games, averaging 42.2 yards per punt with 4 touchbacks and 32 landing inside the opposing 20-yard line. 12 of his punts traveled 50-plus yards and 7 traveled out of bounds, while 16 were fair catches. 20 of his punts were returned for 34 yards, resulting in a net yards per punt of 39.7, while 15 were downed by his teammates. He posted a long of 72 yards and had one punt blocked.

That’s a lot of volume numbers, so let’s condense it into percentages to better summarize the data.

Stat 2020 Nolan Cooney 2019 Blake Gillikin
Punts per game 6.7 4.8
Gross yards per punt 44.8 42.2
Net yards per punt 41.7 (-3.8) 39.7 (-2.5)
50+ yard % 33.7% 19.3%
Inside the 20 % 32.4% 51.6%
Touchbacks % 4.1% 6.5%
Out of bounds % 18.9% 11.3%
Fair catches % 29.7% 25.8%
Punts returned % 35.1% 32.3%
Downed by team % 12.2% 24.2%

It’s worth noting that Gillikin punted for four years at Penn State whereas Cooney held the job for just his final season at Syracuse; if we look at Gillikin’s career numbers, we’ll see that his numbers generally improved: he punted 4.6 times per game with his gross yards per punt rising to 43.0 and his net falling to 38.8 (a 4.2 yard difference); 22.6% traveled 50-plus yards and 41.8% landed inside the 20 but 9.2% were touchbacks and 6.3% went out of bounds. 26.4% fair catches but 32.6% returned and 21.3% downed by teammates. And, yes, that’s a big jump in sample size (239 career punts).

Still, it’s enough to suggest that while Cooney may have a bigger leg, Gillikin has been more accurate with his ball placement. Gillikin may have had a better supporting cast, too — he saw fewer punts returned and his teammates downed his punts twice as often as Cooney’s.

We also can’t ignore that Gillikin’s offense asked him to punt significantly less often than Cooney did. There are other standards we don’t have access to like hang time that will be used to judge both punters in training camp, and ultimately that’s what it will come down to.

At the end of the day, the Saints have two promising candidates that shouldn’t be out of work for long in this league. It’s about as an ideal a succession plan as could be hoped for.

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Saints assistant Darren Rizzi puts Syracuse punter Nolan Cooney through his paces

New Orleans Saints special teams coordinator Darren Rizzi got a close look at Syracuse punter Nolan Cooney, a 2021 NFL draft prospect.

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Blake Gillikin is expected to be the New Orleans Saints punter of the future, but the Saints won’t just give him the job. The second-year pro spent his rookie season studying under Thomas Morstead, which could give him a leg up on any competition. That’s not going to stop the Saints from scouting out their options.

Saints special teams coordinator Darren Rizzi was spotted by NewOrleans.Football’s Nick Underhill at Syracuse’s NFL pro day working out punter Nolan Cooney, an All-ACC selection in 2020. A fifth-year senior with just one season of punting experience, Cooney led the nation with 74 punts for an NCAA-most 3,314 yards (a clip of 44.8 yards per punt), with a net yards per punt of 41.7. 25 of his punts traveled 50 or more yards, and 24 landed inside the opposing 20-yard line.

And he has an inspiring backstory. Syracuse named Cooney their Jim DaRin Courage Award winner in 2019 after he survived a battle with testicular cancer. After redshirting the 2017 season, he worked as the team’s holder on field goal tries and extra-point attempts in 2018 and 2019 before earning the punting job in 2020.

He’d be an interesting option to bring into training camp to push Gillikin for the right to succeed Morstead. Even if the Saints ultimately don’t bring in Cooney, it’s still great to see his hard work paying off with attention from the NFL.

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