Saints’ 2023 schedule is 2nd-easiest based on opponent record in 2022

The Saints’ 2023 schedule is 2nd-easiest around the league based on opponent record in 2022. Only the Falcons have an easier road ahead of them:

Here’s some good news. The New Orleans Saints finished in third-place within the NFC South last year, but a silver lining to the 7-10 record that landed them there in 2022 is an easier schedule in 2023. We’re all about positive thinking.

New Orleans’ opponents for the 2023 season went a combined 122-164-3 last year, which is a winning percentage of just .427 for the second-easiest schedule in the league. Only the Atlanta Falcons (.417) have an easier road ahead of them. Of the 14 teams to qualify for the playoffs, only four of them are on the 2023 schedule:

  • 13-4 Minnesota Vikings (away)
  • 9-8 Jacksonville Jaguars (home)
  • 9-7-1 New York Giants (home)
  • 8-9 Tampa Bay Buccaneers (twice)

Not bad, right? Of course there’s going to be a ton of turnover and changes around the league between now and September. We have a busy free agency period, the landmark 2023 NFL draft, and plenty of trades to navigate between now and then — to say nothing of the injuries, holdouts, suspensions, and other factors that will determine what each of these teams looks like in the fall.

Who will be playing quarterback in New York and Tampa Bay next year? Will the Vikings be able to keep Justin Jefferson happy despite a mediocre quarterback situation of their own? For that matter, who are the Saints going to trot out under center themselves?

New Orleans has a lot of work to do this offseason beyond finding a quarterback they have faith in. The Saints have 20-plus outgoing free agents to consider re-signing, some bloated contracts to whittle down, and plenty of funny money to move around in their usual restructures. They may be looking at the 2023 schedule and feeling good about their chances, but so are many other teams looking at their games with New Orleans.

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Saints 2020 strength of schedule projects as one of the NFL’s easiest

The New Orleans Saints will face just five playoff teams in 2020, and host all but one at home. Their strength of schedule is trending up.

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We’re just a few days removed from the New Orleans Saints’ unceremonious exit from the race for Super Bowl LIV, which abruptly shut the book on the 2019 season. It’s understandable if fans aren’t ready to look forwards just yet.

That said, we come with good news: the Saints’ strength of schedule projects to be one of the NFL’s easiest in 2020. Next season’s opponents finished the regular season with a combined record of 125-130-1, for a winning percentage of .490. That ranks 24 out of 32 around the league, or ninth-easiest.

Interestingly, only four rival NFC teams place ahead of the Saints, and it’s because they all play each other in the NFC East. The Dallas Cowboys (.459), Washington Redskins (.465), and New York Giants (.482) will each be debuting new coaching staffs, while the Philadelphia Eagles (.486) face a slightly tougher degree of difficulty after their first-place finish. That bodes well for the Saints, who are positioned to get right back into championship contention — should they have a successful offseason, anyway.

Just five of the Saints’ future opponents made the playoffs after the 2019 season, and they’ll play most of those games at home with matchups against the Kansas City Chiefs, Green Bay Packers, Minnesota Vikings, and San Francisco 49ers. They’ll have to hit the road to Philadelphia for their lone game away from home against a playoff team. All told, it’s not a bad slate for a team that’s won the NFC South in each of the last three years. Are the Falcons, Panthers, and Buccaneers even trying?

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6 teams sitting at 7-5 or worse that could make a push to the playoffs

Let me start this off by saying that any of these teams making the playoffs is unlikely. They have to be perfect – or near-perfect – from here on out. Then again, that’s why we watch football. We watch because something crazy tends to happen every …

Let me start this off by saying that any of these teams making the playoffs is unlikely. They have to be perfect — or near-perfect — from here on out. Then again, that’s why we watch football. We watch because something crazy tends to happen every season. If the rest of the season played out how we currently think it will, that’s pretty boring. So let’s talk about the teams that could make things exciting.