Saints’ cultural problems are a direct reflection on Dennis Allen

The Saints feel they have cultural problems in the locker room, but they must acknowledge Dennis Allen’s role in this decay. He isn’t a leader players believe in:

There’s no secret that the New Orleans Saints had some problems in 2023; the product on the field spoke for itself, as did head coach Dennis Allen’s sometimes-awkward press conferences. For a team that pledged continuity to the success of Sean Payton’s regime and the furtherance of a winning culture, the Saints sure don’t look like themselves.

And here’s a good look into why that is. The Times-Picayune | Advocate’s Jeff Duncan explored the various cultural problems the Saints experienced this season for Nola.com, but there’s an alarming through-line for all of this: Allen’s role in this decay.

It isn’t that Allen has had an influence in players showing up late for meetings or parking in handicapped spots, which Duncan reported. It’s that his lack of influence has let all of this slide. He is not a leader who inspires his players to be better. As his former coworker and Raiders CEO Amy Trask observed earlier this week, Allen is a coach that players do the minimum for, not someone they’d run through a wall for.

That extends to dedicating time at home watching tape on their Microsoft tablets instead of spending time with friends and family, which Duncan reports was something dozens of players slacked off on midway through the season. Now, to be clear, professional football players should be making time to study game film and improve on their own. They deserve some blame for not doing that. But this still goes back to Allen. A better coach would compel his players into being responsible and putting in the extra effort to prevent this from happening in the first place. That Saints players were comfortable checking out when away from the facility speaks volumes about how little respect Allen commands from them.

To his credit, Allen acknowledged that he and the rest of the coaching staff needs to be better, just like the players and everyone else in the organization during his end-of-year press conference: “Everyone in the building is part of the culpability. All of us, coaches, players, everybody. And so we have to look at, ‘What do we need to change?'”

That calls for changes in their behavior and teaching practices. It also means changes are needed for the coaching staff and the depth chart. There is going to be personnel turnover in New Orleans, but it isn’t starting at the top. All of this decay and erosion of the winning culture and self-accountability that Payton and Drew Brees cultivated starts with Allen. It accelerates when, Duncan reported, other players voiced complaints about Allen coddling Derek Carr and ignoring his on-field mistakes.

He might be able to call a good defense, but Allen doesn’t have the magnetic presence to get players to buy in and put forth extra effort. He doesn’t have the emotional intelligence to see why scoring one more touchdown on a hated rival for a popular teammate matters. He doesn’t have the connection with the community and with Saints fans to earn their loyalty. It’s possible that Allen could cultivate those skills and grow into this leadership role, but if he hasn’t done it by his fifth year as a head coach how likely is it he’ll figure it out in his sixth season?

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3 critical questions for the Saints to answer in their 2020 training camp

The Saints look towards their 2020 training camp with question marks along the offensive line, at linebacker, and in the receiving corps.

It sure feels like New Orleans Saints training camp is a lifetime away, but it’ll be here before we know it. And when the black and gold gather for a month-long workout under the grueling Metairie sun, it’s safe to say that the coaching staff will have some questions weighing heavily on their minds.

We have three of those problems already written down in pen, circled, and highlighted. These are the most important issues facing the Saints this season, and they won’t even sniff Super Bowl LV if they don’t solve each problem before September. New Orleans must act quickly to gets its 2020 rookie class on the same page as its veteran pickups and the nucleus of players returning from the 2019 team.

Who starts at center and guard?

Credit: Mike Carter-USA TODAY Sports

New Orleans sent both guards to the Pro Bowl last year, but the Saints offensive line got even deeper in the 2020 draft by picking Michigan center Cesar Ruiz. While Andrus Peat is entrenched at left guard (having signed a five-year contract extension earlier in the offseason), the center and right guard spots are all but settled. If anything, they might be the most competitive roster battles we’ll see in training camp.

Ruiz and Erik McCoy, the incumbent, will both compete for the right to start at center. They’ll also work into the lineup at right guard, three-time Pro Bowl alternate Larry Warford is entering the final year of his contract (which carries the second-highest salary cap charge for the Saints this year, behind Drew Brees). With just those two spots available, the Saints will be benching either a draft pick selected in the first two rounds of the last two drafts or one of their best free agent acquisitions.

It’s possible Warford gets traded to help make that decision easier. Moving him would allow the Saints to work around the salary cap a little easier, while also getting both Ruiz and McCoy on the field together. While McCoy was graded very well by Pro Football Focus in 2019, Ruiz is one of the best center prospects in years — his college coach allowed him to make all the line calls for the Wolverines, and credited Ruiz with getting it right “99% of the time.”

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There’s no easy or immediate fix for the Bears

To say the Bears’ performance this season has been disappointing would be a bit of an understatement. If we travel back in time to the preseason, there were a lot of very smart people saying the Bears have one of the most talented rosters in …

To say the Bears’ performance this season has been disappointing would be a bit of an understatement. If we travel back in time to the preseason, there were a lot of very smart people saying the Bears have one of the most talented rosters in football. It wasn’t crazy to think Chicago would take their momentum from last year and try and make a Super Bowl run.

That obviously hasn’t happened. Mitch Trubisky has regressed to the point where it wouldn’t be shocking if he lost his job for the rest of the season to career backup Chase Daniel. Matt Nagy is getting ripped by everyone who has a Twitter account and lives in the greater Chicago area. Remember, Nagy won Coach of the Year last season and now people are calling for his firing for how’s he handled Trubisky and the team this season. Even the defense has been kind of disappointing — although a regression was to be expected. Khalil Mack may be playing alright, but he’s not putting up numbers. Here’s the bad part — and Bears fans may not want to continue — there may be no end in sight. Chicago could be bad for a while.

The first reason is obvious: teams simply can’t miss when they draft a quarterback high in the draft. Ryan Pace didn’t just miss by a little though.

Silva has hated the Bears trade up from the moment it happened, but that’s because he believes in having as much draft capital as possible. Let’s talk about that draft capital.

Last year, everyone was keen to make fun of Jon Gruden when he complained about the Raiders not having a pass rush. After all, he did just trade Khalil Mack to the Bears and Mack was running roughshod over every offensive line on his way to the quarterback. It would be an extremely hot take to say the Bears shouldn’t have traded for Mack, but Silva — and a lot of folks who back analytics — would criticize Ryan Pace for not caring much about draft picks.

That’s the real problem. The Bears traded picks to move up for Trubisky which actually hurts them twice since Trubisky currently isn’t any good and they traded picks that could have contributed to the team to get him. The future is even more bleak. The Bears simply don’t have any picks to restock the offensive line or find a quarterback to make up for the Trubisky mistake. They don’t have a first or third-round pick in the 2020 draft due to Mack trade. They don’t have a fourth-round pick because it’s either going to New England or Baltimore. They have a ton of fifth-round picks which is nice if you want to hope and pray that end of the roster guys can contribute. At least they have most of their picks in 2021.

It isn’t like teams are going to give picks away. The Bears don’t have anyone where teams would be willing to give up anything in the top half of the draft. Chicago could trade for Cam Newton, but that would contribute to their lack of draft capital. Plus, imagine if Newton never regains his form. The Bears would be in a worse spot than they are now.

There’s no quick answer for the Bears. They could theoretically try and pry Andy Dalton away from the Bengals. When Andy Dalton is the answer, that’s not good. They could trade for Cam Newton, but they don’t have the picks to do so. They could hope Newton gets cut, but would he want to go to the Bears after seeing the current issues on their team? There’s no simple answer. There’s no quick fix. That’s a real sudden change for a team hoping to make the Super Bowl this year.