The Saints may already be thinking beyond Alvin Kamara, and one name to keep on the radar is West Virginia running back Cam Cook.
Kamara has been the engine of New Orleans’ offense since 2017, and his résumé in black and gold is massive. He’s the franchise’s all-time leader in rushing yards, rushing touchdowns, all-purpose yards, and total touchdowns. That kind of production doesn’t just vanish, but time catches up with everybody, and some analysts are projecting 2026 to be his final season.
That’s why the Saints are smart to start lining up what comes next. Kellen Moore already made a move in that direction by adding Travis Etienne Jr. this offseason, but New Orleans still looks like a team that could use another explosive back to keep the room dangerous.
The best Saints rushing attacks have often come in pairs, and the 2017 combination of Kamara and Mark Ingram is the template that stands out. If the Saints want to keep that kind of balance, Cook makes sense as a possible fit.
Cook put together a huge season, leading the nation in rushing yards with 1,650 on 295 carries. At five-foot-nine and 200 pounds, the senior runs with the kind of short-area burst and vision that can make a defense look stuck in place.
He waits out his blocks, then hits the gas when a crease opens. If the lane closes, he can snap off a sharp jump cut and find another path.
He doesn’t have elite long speed, but he makes up for it with quickness and sudden movement.
That skill set gives him a chance to climb high in the 2027 NFL Draft, but there are real questions he’ll have to answer first. The biggest one is durability.
Cook’s smaller frame makes him vulnerable to heavy contact, and scouts want to see whether he can handle a full season against Power Four competition. He already spent two seasons at TCU in 2022 and 2023, but he wasn’t the featured back in either year.
This season will put him under the microscope, and staying healthy while staying productive will matter a lot.
It’s far too early to hand Cook the title of Alvin Kamara’s successor. Still, the fit is easy to see, and the upside is real. If everything breaks the right way, Cook could be wearing the black and gold next offseason.
In Other News...
One Offensive Problem Still Stands Between Saints And The NFC South
Ben Solak of ESPN sees a path for the Saints to climb back to the top of the NFC South in 2026, and the logic is easy enough to follow. The division has been shaky, New Orleans was competitive at the end of the 2025 season, and there is real optimism around Tyler Shough entering his second year with a better supporting cast around him.
The lingering question is whether the offense can do enough to make that projection matter. The Saints have spent the offseason trying to sharpen the attack, but the run game remains the part that could decide whether this team turns a hopeful forecast into a division title chase or settles for another year of what-ifs. [Read more 🡒]
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Gleason has used his platform to back Johnson publicly while also pointing to the work of his foundation for people living with ALS, a reminder that the fight goes well beyond one player or one team. His message was rooted in solidarity and hope, the kind of support that matters when a former star is still trying to absorb how far the disease has advanced. For Saints fans, it is another hard reminder of how ALS keeps testing people who once seemed larger than the game itself. [Read more 🡒]
Easton Kilty Faces A Defining Saints Camp Battle Up Front
Easton Kilty is back in New Orleans and trying to make the leap from developmental project to real roster candidate as he enters his second NFL season. The undrafted offensive tackle spent most of his rookie year on the practice squad after signing with the Saints in 2025, then returned on a reserve/futures deal that kept him in the mix heading into camp.
Now the battle gets more complicated, because Kilty is trying to carve out a place on an offensive line the Saints spent the offseason trying to strengthen. He brings a solid college rsum from North Dakota and Kansas State, but camp is where that background has to turn into proof, and for Kilty the next few weeks will go a long way toward showing whether he can stick when the competition tightens. [Read more 🡒]
