The New Orleans Saints have the NFL’s slowest pass rush in 2023

Your eyes aren’t fooling you. The New Orleans Saints have the NFL’s slowest pass rush, taking more time to get to the quarterback than any other team:

If you’ve been watching the New Orleans Saints defense this year and found yourself muttering or shouting some variant of “That’s too much time!” when the opposing quarterback drops back to pass, you aren’t crazy. Research from Doug Analytics found that the Saints have posted the NFL’s slowed pass rush unit through the first 10 weeks of the season.

And that checks out when you look at other stats. The Saints are tied for the fifth-fewest sacks (18) going into their Week 11 bye. Their Pro Football Reference pressure rate is 19.4%, ninth-worst around the league. That’s a slight improvement over last year’s 17.5% pressure rate, which was fourth-lowest, but the big difference is that the Saints aren’t finishing pressures with sacks. They had 48 sacks a year ago. They would need to average 4.3 sacks per game through these last seven weeks to match that total.

The problem is a lack of speed along the defensive front. Cameron Jordan is still being asked to be their leading rusher off the edge when his body just doesn’t have that extra gear anymore. He’s never been known for his speed off the snap, so Jordan’s game should age well as a run defender and power rusher, but the Saints must compensate for that by getting faster at other spots. Carl Granderson has some speed element to his game and Bryan Bresee can move quickly along the interior, but those are just two of the eight players in the rotation most weeks.

Whiffing on so many early-round draft picks hurts. The Saints swung and missed on first-round defensive ends like Marcus Davenport and Payton Turner and their rookie second-round pick Isaiah Foskey has had few snaps to show what he can do. They badly need one of those guys to step up and add some athleticism to the mix. Jason Pierre-Paul could improve the group but he isn’t helping them get younger.

Interestingly, the next-slowest pass rush in this graph comes from the Washington Commanders. It’s a comprehensive look at teams from Weeks 1 through 10, so that includes edge rushers Montez Sweat and Chase Young, both of whom were dealt at the NFL trade deadline. There was an uproar from Saints fans about not acquiring one of them, but it sure looks like they wouldn’t have cured the specific problem ailing the Saints defense.

A lacking athleticism up front is the issue. The Saints are slow to get after the quarterback, slow to put hands on him, and slow to keep up with him when he rolls out of the pocket looking to throw downfield. We saw them get gashed consistently by Joshua Dobbs and Tyson Bagent in recent weeks after C.J. Stroud did it a few weeks earlier. Any quarterback who can use their legs can challenge them.

Dennis Allen is a believer in the idea that the secondary and pass rush must work in tandem. He’s built this defense so that the quarterback is forced to hold onto the ball long enough for the rush to get home. But even a secondary full of All-Pro corners will get beaten if they’re all asked to cover for four, five, or six seconds. The Saints can’t afford to stop investing resources in the pass rush unit. Hopefully one of those draft picks hits soon.

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LOOK: In terms of pressure rate this season, it’s the Raiders and then everyone else

LOOK: In terms of pressure rate this season, it’s the Raiders and then everyone else

It’s hard to comprehend just how quickly the Raiders went from several years of being one of the worst pass-rushing teams in the NFL to being far and away the best pass-rushing team in the league.

It’s easy to see the night-and-day improvement by the Raiders’ defensive line. But even as good as it is, some folks who have followed the Raiders exclusively for years may find themselves wondering if the improvement is drastic merely compared to how bad it was or compared to the rest of the league.

It’s both, actually. And this graph from Next Gen Stats offers the best illustration of this I’ve seen yet.

Most NFL teams are that oval cluster in the middle. Then look in the upper lefthand corner, separated from everyone else. It’s the Raiders.

That’s exactly where you want to be because it means the Raiders blitz less than any other team in the league and yet still have the third-highest pressure rate (38.7). It makes them an extreme outlier as the rest of the NFL shows.

The NFL’s Next-Gen Stats added that the Raiders have gotten pressure on 30% of their snaps in every game this season. Which explains why they have six different players with multiple sacks, led by Maxx Crosby (5.0) who also leads the entire NFL QB hits (19) and is second in pressures (36) only to teammate Yannick Ngakoue (38).

Ngakoue is the reigning AFC Defensive Player of the Week.

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ESPN: Jameis Winston was pressured on almost two-thirds of Week 2 dropbacks

ESPN: Jameis Winston was pressured on almost two-thirds of Week 2 dropbacks

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The New Orleans Saints had a rough day. Jameis Winston in particular had a rough day, lobbing two interceptions to the Carolina Panthers defense. That hardly means he’s reverted to his turnover-prone Tampa Bay Buccaneers days, though — on Sunday, he faced a greater challenge than he ever saw wearing red and pewter.

ESPN’s tracking found that Winston was pressured on 18 of 28 dropbacks, a rate of 64%. That’s the highest pressure rate Winston has experienced in the NFL, and the third-highest rate any quarterback has faced since tracking began in 2009. For context, Patrick Mahomes was pressured on 52% of his dropbacks in the Chiefs’ infamous Super Bowl loss (ironically, to Tampa Bay), which was talked about all offseason as the worst game an offensive line had played in years. The Saints were significantly worse on Sunday.

It means Winston was already rushed through his progressions and hurried into making poor decisions on two-thirds of his dropbacks in Week 2. It’s no wonder he turned the ball over a few times; what’s almost impressive is that he didn’t give the ball away even more frequently in the face of that pressure. He’s as aware as anyone of his risk-prone reputation, and he took pride in protecting the ball a week ago. But some of his bad habits returned when playing under duress.

The good news is Sean Payton has time to work on that. Payton and Winston each acknowledged the protection issues postgame, pointing to breakdowns in communication that should have corrected blocking assignments and kept bought more time for Winston’s receivers to work their way downfield. Having everyone in sync and committed to repairing an obvious problem could help expedite that process. We saw just last week what happens when the Saints keep Winston clean. With 15 more games to play, there’s plenty of time for the Saints to cure what’s ailing them and get back on schedule.

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Washington’s offensive line is allowing 3rd most pressure in NFL

Washington’s weakest unit on the roster is the offensive line, and they took another hit on Sunday with the loss of Brandon Scherff.

One of the few benefits of having a dominant defensive line is that the offense can try and get adjusted to the skill level in training camp, and be ready for whatever they’re going to face once the regular season comes.

That doesn’t seem to be the case in Washington. Through two games this year, QB Dwayne Haskins has been sacked a total of seven times, which is tied for the second-most in the NFL. According to Pro Football Focus, Washington’s offensive line is allowing pressure on over 35 percent of dropbacks, which is the third-worst rate in the entire league.

The offensive line took a major blow on Sunday too, with right guard Brandon Scherff going down with a knee injury that will hold him out of action for the next few weeks. Wes Schweitzer stepped into that position and played well, but the weakest unit on the team took another hit, and it’s going to be a big focus for this team going forward.

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