Buccaneers evacuate to New Orleans ahead of Hurricane Milton

The Tampa Bay Buccaneers will travel to New Orleans early and practice at Yulman Stadium this week to avoid Hurricane Milton:

The Tampa Bay Buccaneers will be moving their practices to New Orleans this week, as they move to avoid Hurricane Milton throughout the week, per ESPN’s Adam Schefter. This comes as the Buccaneers are set to take on the New Orleans Saints in Week 6, which makes the logistics of this move somewhat easier on their end as they were able to get a hotel in the area.

Additionally, they will be practicing at Tulane’s Yulman Stadium throughout the week, per Nola.com’s Jeff Duncan. The Buccaneers have multiple connections to Yulman Stadium and Tulane as well which Duncan mentioned later, including the club lounge at Yulman being named the Glazer Family Club.

Hurricane Milton has rapidly intensified into a Category 5 hurricane according to the National Hurricane Center, and is expected to make landfall later in the week between Wednesday and Thursday according to current projections. Ultimately for the Buccaneers, the decision was made as Tampa Bay is well within the projected range of where the storm will hit, and for the safety of the team and employees it made the most sense to move further west to New Orleans.

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Foster Moreau signs a fan’s oyster shell at open practice

Only in New Orleans. Foster Moreau signed a Saints fan’s oyster shell after Tuesday night’s open practice:

You aren’t getting these kind of interactions California. New Orleans Saints tight end Foster Moreau fulfilled an unusual request after Tuesday night’s open practice at Yulman Stadium. A Saints fan approached the local product when he was signing autographs and asked Moreau to sign his oyster shell.

“That’s sick,” Moreau laughed, happy to oblige, palming the bivalve. What message he penned is between him and the person who may or may not have shucked it.

It’s a fun moment. And it’s something that’s been badly missing since the Saints relocated their training camp from the team practice facility in Metairie to Irvine for the last month-plus. The Saints will host local fans for a second open practice at the Caesars Superdome on Friday, and free tickets are still available for the taking. Act fast and maybe Moreau will sign your oyster shell, too.

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WATCH: Rookie kicker Charlie Smyth boots 65-yard field goal at Saints practice

Rookie kicker Charlie Smyth connected on a 65-yard field goal at New Orleans Saints practice. It might’ve been good from 70:

Have a night, Charlie Smyth. The rookie kicker from Northern Ireland has picked up the American game quickly after playing Gaelic football, and he’s made life tough for New Orleans Saints incumbent Blake Grupe.

And when the Saints kicked off their open practice at Tulane’s Yulman Stadium on Tuesday night, Smyth stole the show. He capped his eight field goal tries — nailing seven of them with a miss from 55 yards — by booting a 65-yarder through the uprights. Nola.com’s Jeff Duncan noted it was near the same spot Tom Dempsey once set an NFL record from 63 yards.

That’s very impressive. Smyth has a big leg but he’s put in the work to hone his craft in a very short time. ESPN’s Katherine Terrell shared that he first kicked an American football almost exactly one year ago on Aug. 22. If he can keep developing and earning confidence from his coaches, Smyth just might unseat Grupe. This Sunday’s final preseason game with the Tennessee Titans looms large.

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Former Tulane center Sincere Haynesworth waived by Saints with injury

Former Tulane center Sincere Haynesworth was waived by the New Orleans Saints with an injury designation:

This is a tough break for Sincere Haynesworth. The rookie offensive lineman from Tulane signed with the New Orleans Saints as an undrafted free agent earlier this year, but he was waived on Tuesday with an injury designation, the team announced. The Saints are practicing at Tulane’s Yulman Stadium on Tuesday night.

Haynesworth needed assistance exiting Sunday’s preseason game with the San Francisco 49ers after getting rolled up on by other players, which was really unfortunate.

The third-string offense missed him; journeyman guard Shane Lemieux had a couple of low snaps after filling in for Haynesworth, putting at least one on the ground. Haynesworth was a long-shot to make the 53-man roster but he is someone who could have stuck around on the practice squad.

Instead he’ll go on injured reserve upon clearing waivers. We’ll wish him a speedy and full recovery.

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Saints activate Juwan Johnson from PUP list ahead of Tulane practice

The Saints activated tight end Juwan Johnson from their PUP list ahead of Tuesday’s open practice session. He’s bringing a big boost to the offense:

The New Orleans Saints activated tight end Juwan Johnson from their PUP list ahead of Tuesday’s open practice session at Tulane’s Yulman Stadium, as first reported by Matthew Paras for the Times-Picayune | Advocate. NewOrleans.Football’s Nick Underhill adds that Johnson “is expected to practice in some fashion today.” Johnson is also scheduled to speak with local media afterwards.

He’s bringing a big boost to the offense as their best pass-catching tight end. Johnson’s first year with Derek Carr at quarterback finished strong when he scored three touchdown catches in their last four games, totaling 17 receptions for 216 yards through those four weeks.

They need him to pick up where he left off, but it may take some time for him to knock off the rust. Johnson had surgery in the spring after developing a stress fracture in his foot at minicamp which sidelined him for most of the summer, including all 18 practices at the team’s Irvine training camp and two preseason games.

Still, he and Carr developed some chemistry down the stretch last year, and the Saints have more than two weeks until the regular season starts. Johnson projects as a good fit in Klint Kubiak’s offense but the first real steps to meeting that potential start in front of fans on Tuesday night.

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Free tickets still available for Saints practice at Yulman Stadium

Free tickets are still available for the New Orleans Saints’ open practice at Yulman Stadium on Tuesday night, but act fast to claim yours:

Have you been wanting to see your New Orleans Saints in action? The Saints are returning home from their monthlong training camp in Irvine, Calif., and they’ll be hosting two open practices this week for locals to come out and see the team. This will be your first opportunity of the offseason.

First up is an open practice at the 30,000-seat Yulman Stadium on Tulane’s campus. It’s free to attend, but tickets must be claimed in advance. The open practice is scheduled for Tuesday, Aug. 20 at 7 p.m. CT so act quickly.

There are also some tickets available  for their second open practice at the Caesars Superdome on Friday, Aug. 23 at 1 p.m. CT. Just like the Yulman Stadium practice, this event is free and open to the public, but fans must claim their tickets ahead of time.

It’s been a long time since locals had the opportunity to see their team in person. The Saints moved training camp to sunny Southern California to accommodate large-scale renovations to their training facility in Metairie, so it’ll be good to have them back in the area. They have spent the entirety of their preseason on the West Coast. Even their preseason games were in Arizona and California. During their practices in Irvine, the Saints didn’t open any practices to the public.

Everything leads up to their final preseason  game with the Tennessee Titans on Sunday, Aug. 25 before roster cuts on Aug. 27 and the regular season  kickoff game against the Carolina Panthers on Sept. 8. It’ll be here before we know it.

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How to get tickets for Saints practices at Yulman Stadium, Caesars Superdome

The New Orleans Saints announced information regarding open practices at Yulman Stadium and the Caesars Superdome, as well as how to register for tickets:

The New Orleans Saints have previously announced that they will be hosting open practices when they return to Louisiana from their training camp in Southern California, one at Tulane’s Yulman Stadium and the other at the Caesars Superdome. And now they’ve shared the times and dates for these events. Tickets are free but available on a first-come, first-served basis:

  • Yulman Stadium: Aug. 20 at 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. CT
  • Caesars Superdome: Aug. 23 at 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. CT

On Thursday the team shared information regarding how both season ticket holders and the general public can acquire tickets for each event. Ticket registration opens on Monday, July 29 for season ticket holders and Tuesday, July 30 for the general public. Tickets will for both practices will become available at 9 a.m. CT on each day.

Additional information regarding each practice, tickets, parking, and gates can be found at the following links:

The Saints and Tulane have a long history of working together and sharing facilities, as the Saints played for eight seasons at the old Tulane Stadium on the Uptown campus, and the Green Wave have used the Saints’ Metairie indoor practice facility to prepare for bowl games. It has been five years since the Saints have practiced at Tulane’s facilities, 2019 being the last time this occurred, so these will both be great opportunities for local fans to see their team in person.

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Saints’ explanations for lack of fans at California practices don’t add up

The Saints are the only team closing their training camp to the public this summer, and it isn’t due to NFL rules. Mickey Loomis says he never bothered to check:

32 NFL teams are practicing at training camp on Wednesday, and 31 of them will have fans in attendance in some form or fashion. The New Orleans Saints are the only team that has totally closed its training camp to the public this summer. We’ve gotten a couple of different answers from team leadership on why that is, but their responses don’t add up to a cohesive statement.

Let’s start with Dennis Lauscha. The Saints team president was the first to answer the question when asked about it back in May, saying that as far as he was aware NFL marketing rules wouldn’t be a problem for having fans at training camp.

“I think that (rule) maybe pertains more to sponsorship,” Lauscha said during a recent press conference. “I can tell you we have a great relationship with the Rams and the Chargers, and that’s not an issue for us that I’m aware of. I think there is some plans (to have fans at training camp), I don’t know if it’s going to happen based on the layout (at UC Irvine) and what’s happening there.”

Fast-forward a few months and the Saints never got around to revealing those plans Lauscha hinted at. They did announce that they’ll hold two open practices at the Caesars Superdome and Yulman Stadium upon returning to New Orleans in August, but it’s not the same. When head coach Dennis Allen was asked about moving training camp to Los Angeles, he mainly focused on the weather and construction in Metairie rather than any fan considerations.

“Obviously, being away from home and away from our fans in New Orleans, obviously that’s the tough part about being out here in California for this training camp,” Allen answered. He acknowledged that moving camp to a new environment can help with a team-building culture, but ultimately the work in Metairie was what forced their hand. “But yet I don’t think you have to come out to California to change the culture.”

He continued: “Certainly the facility upgrades was going to be a challenge to hold a training camp with all the things that are going on. I mean we’ve got a fence in our indoor facility that makes it difficult to use the indoor. I looked at the forecast, I think it’s going to rain for the next month in New Orleans. So that would have made it even more challenging. All those things came together and led us to this.”

And then came Mickey Loomis, who most directly addressed the issue. He says the Saints decided early on that they wouldn’t be hosting fans at the UC Irvine practice fields:

“I think for us here, you know we’re away from our home market, we’re not expecting a lot of fans. We weren’t expecting a lot of fans. It’s just the venue, all the logistics that are involved. It’s significantly more logistics that are involved when you open it up to the public as to when you don’t. So all those factors came into play.

“I didn’t really do much inquiry about what we were allowed to do with fans or not allowed to do,” Loomis admitted during his opening press conference. “Because pretty quickly we determined that, hey, it’s going to be a limited amount of people at practice.”

That’s a wrongful assumption. It’s a couple of wrongful assumptions. Saints fans were so well-represented at joint practices with the Chargers in 2019 that they weren’t allowed to attend the next round of exercises in 2023. Sure, maybe only a couple hundred fans would be willing and able to make it to Saints training camp every day this summer — but Loomis couldn’t be bothered to make it happen.

The logistics he’s talking about, like paying for onsite security, medics, food and beverage vendors and other amenities, weren’t something Loomis was interested in. The Saints were valued at more than $4 billion last year and they’re currently paying north of $41.4 million in dead money for players not on their roster. But Loomis couldn’t find room in the budget for a couple of Los Angeles food trucks and some daytime security service, and maybe a standby ambulance if someone gets overheated?

The Las Vegas Raiders are under similar restrictions while holding camp in the area but at least they put the effort into compromising with the Rams and Chargers to bring in 140 to 200 fans (all season ticket holders who live in the Los Angeles area) per day. The Saints could have done something. Loomis acknowledged that he chose not to do anything for the team’s supporters in California or those who would have made the trip from further out.

And it’s not like UC Irvine can’t host a crowd. The Saints specifically chose this venue because the Rams have been using it for training camp for many years. The Rams estimated that almost 100,000 spectators visited their 10 open practices in the summer of 2022.

Even if the NFL’s marketing rules were a problem — which Lauscha says he didn’t know about, and which Loomis says he didn’t care about — and even if UC Irvine’s campus would have restricted attendance (which didn’t stop nearly 10,000 Rams fans from showing up every day), this all could have been avoided by not going there in the first place.

The Saints could have gone anywhere in America for training camp. And when they were deciding on that, their fans were not a priority. Mild weather in Southern California was the concern, not whether the people who invest in their team can make the trip. If Loomis, Lauscha, or Allen would just say that, at least you could respect the honesty. Instead it’s being spun as something that was mostly out of their hands, or far enough out of their hands to where they didn’t feel compelled to fight for it.

A lot of questions have been raised about the Saints’ quality of leadership inn their three-year playoff drought. Unforced errors like this one, alienating the team from its fanbase, suggest those leadership questions extend to the front office.

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