Sean Payton chops it up with Jimmy Buffett, talks 2020 draft

New Orleans Saints coach Sean Payton previewed his team’s approach to the 2020 NFL Draft with musician and Saints superfan Jimmy Buffett.

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The New Orleans Saints have put together an elaborate plan to conduct their part in the 2020 NFL Draft, prompting Saints coach Sean Payton to share his take on the process with one of his friends, who also happens to be a Saints superfan: musician Jimmy Buffett. Payton’s conversation with Buffett was shared from the official Saints Twitter account.

“I’m actually kind of looking forward to it,” Payton said. “Because every one of us will be in a setup like this, in front of our cameras making draft picks, and we’ll be on a separate call with our G.M. and with our scouts. And it’ll challenge us a little bit in a unique way.”

Speculation has been rife on what this “virtual draft” might result in. It’s possible that teams will be less eager to agree to trades, moving up and down the draft board, with the added technological hurdles in place. On the other hand, they’ve had so much excess time to chat with each other that executives around the league could have deals ready-made to agree to under the right circumstances. We won’t really know until draft day.

Payton continued: “I was skeptical about the draft process in the meetings that we had two weeks ago. And two weeks later I thought, ‘I kind of liked it.’ Because I didn’t have to deal with Bill, I can just put him on freakin’ mute. I got a lot less annoyed with some of my scouts when I can just put them on mute and they’re in Tennessee or California, or Pennsylvania.

“I think that just comes with getting older,” Payton joked. Having the ability to simply mute an annoyance certainly has some appeal.

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Saints war room taking Zoom-within-a-Zoom approach to virtual 2020 draft

NBC Sports’ Peter King reports that the New Orleans Saints will use multiple teleconferences to organize their 2020 NFL Draft war room.

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The NFL’s decision to force teams to conduct the 2020 draft from home has raised anxiety and issues all around the league, but some of the more tech-savvy franchises have embraced the opportunity to innovate and help their personnel work more closely together.

Peter King of NBC Sports explained how the New Orleans Saints are one such outfit relying hard on teleconference technology to organize their war room ahead of this year’s draft:

Each team will have choices, but I talked to five over the weekend about the mechanics of it. The Saints, for instance, will have two videconferences working simultaneously. One will have GM Mickey Loomis, coach Sean Payton, assistant GM/college scouting director Jeff Ireland and VP/football administration Khai Hartley; the other will have those four people plus every scout.

The four-man group will be open for free discussion while the larger group will likely mostly be muted, with Loomis or Payton having the ability to unmute, say, the scouts with the most knowledge about a particular player. Say they want to pick LSU linebacker Patrick Queen in the first round; Loomis could ask the scouts who were at LSU the most in 2019 for their thoughts

This feels like the closest thing to the plan the Saints had originally crafted for this year’s virtual event. The Saints initially planned on placing that central braintrust of Payton, Loomis, Ireland, Hartley, and a few support staffers in the Dixie Brewery warehouse (property of Saints owner Gayle Benson) with their scouts and assistant coaches on deck, ready to jump in if their opinions were needed. Payton had previously said that the team intended to use a teleconference program like Zoom, Skype, or a similar service.

However, running two streams side-by-side like this seems a little superfluous. It’s possible the core Saints decision-makers want a separate channel to allow for more-confidential discussions (like debating possible trade offers), but the broader teleconference is structured like the war room would normally be conducted. Hopefully they won’t have any technical issues, or risk crossing the streams. It would be bad.

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NFL orders teams to conduct 2020 draft from home, scuttles Saints plans

The New Orleans Saints planned to hold their 2020 NFL Draft “war room” at the Dixie Brewery, but new orders from the NFL outlawed that plan.

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The New Orleans Saints thought that they had a good plan for the 2020 NFL Draft. They moved their “war room” to the Dixie Brewery in New Orleans East, a gated property secluded in an industrial park and owned by Gayle Benson (who also owns the Saints). Saints coach Sean Payton explained last week how he and several other decision-makers — including general manager Mickey Loomis and assistant G.M./college scouting director Jeff Ireland — had set up shop in a large banquet room, teleconferencing with scouts and position coaches for daily draft meetings. The plan was to remain there once the 2020 NFL Draft begins on April 23.

But they’ll have to adjust to new guidelines from NFL commissioner Roger Goodell, who NFL Network’s Tom Pelissero reported Monday told teams that they must send personnel home for the day of the draft. Staff will huddle digitally and make decisions remotely, calling in their picks much like many fantasy football drafts are held each year. That’s a notion Loomis may have scoffed at, but it’s their new reality.

Nick Underhill of NewOrleans.Football first confirmed that these new orders from the NFL mean the Saints will be unable to hold their draft from the Dixie Brewery as planned. So Loomis, Payton, Ireland, and their crew will have to work remotely just like every other NFL club, somewhat leveling the playing field. It’s shaping up to be one of the more-unique drafts in recent memory, and we’re still weeks away. Hopefully another video won’t get leaked of a top draft prospect smoking from a gas mask in the hours before kickoff, which was easily the strangest draft situation in recent memory.

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Sean Payton details Saints’ plans for 2020 draft amid coronavirus crisis

New Orleans Saints coach Sean Payton relocated his team to the somewhat-isolated Dixie Brewing Company to prepare for the 2020 NFL Draft.

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How are the New Orleans Saints responding to the coronavirus pandemic? Saints coach Sean Payton has experienced the infection more personally than most, having tested positive and self-isolating at home for two weeks before he received an update that he was in the clear on March 26. But the Saints organization is taking more thorough steps to protect its employees and their families, especially with the 2020 NFL Draft on the horizon.

Payton discussed the changes during a conference call with local media on Wednesday, including a move away from the team facility.

“Our meetings will take place and we’re kind of in a remote location,” Payton said. “We’re over at the Dixie Brewing Company actually, which is a brand new facility in New Orleans East and it’s really a way from any high traffic area and it’s also closed. We’re the only ones here.”

Dixie Brewing Company is another property belonging to Saints owner Gayle Benson, whose late husband Tom Benson — who Payton affectionately called “Mr. B” — purchased and renovated in recent years. Based in an industrial park far from residential and commercial districts, it’s a secluded, sanitized building in which the Saints brass can congregate. Team security staff will help turn away any uninvited visitors, but odds are slim anyone will travel so far out of their way as it is.

That’s as opposed to the more-cramped quarters in the team’s Metairie offices and training facility, or the Benson Tower in the Central Business District. Payton and the Saints considered both venues but agreed that it would be easier to follow guidelines from the Center for Disease Control at the brewery. The goal is to keep staff isolated and prevent the potential spread of infections, so its large conference room makes for an ideal location.

Payton shared an example of what draft meetings now look like. Typically these are crowded conferences in the Saints “war room” in their offices, stuffing scouts, coaches, and front office executives shoulder-to-shoulder to preview this year’s prospects. But they’re taking a different approach with everyone’s safety in mind.

“Those are kind of set up a little differently this year, with all our scouts Skyping in, teleconferencing in,” Payton continued. “Mickey (Loomis), myself, Jeff (Ireland), with the position coach, maybe a few others, are in a large meeting room spread out with a lot of monitors. Depending on who we’re reading, what player group we’re reading, different people Skyping in.”

Payton added that the Saints plan to keep everyone physically in the room at least six feet apart, checking their temperatures before entering as per CDC recommendations. While some position coaches and regional scouts may rotate in depending on each day’s topic, Payton expects the process to largely feature face-to-face conversations only between himself, the Saints general manager (Loomis), and the assistant general manager (Ireland).

These meetings will continue for almost two weeks as the Saints work to finalize their “big board” of ranked prospects and decide on a draft strategy. While the team is normally one of the NFL’s most aggressive in the draft, frequently trading up to acquire talented players like Alvin Kamara, Marcus Davenport, Erik McCoy, and C.J. Gardner-Johnson, Payton also suggested that a scarcity of the usual data points could lead them to a more passive approach.

“The grade and the system and the way it’s set up on the board remains the same,” Payton mused. “But you may not be able to clarify or clean up some of the question marks you normally would in each year. How do we philosophically then approach the draft this year? I think it’s a great question. You might be more conservative relative to, aversion to taking a risk if you don’t have the information that you’re looking for.”

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