Countdown is on in New Orleans, and the Saints are already tying one of their newest rookies to the number 65. With 65 days left before the 2026 regular season opener, the Saints are set to open on the road against the Detroit Lions on Sunday, Sept. 13, and rookie guard Jeremiah Wright will wear No. 65 as training camp gets underway.
Wright arrives as a fourth-round pick out of Auburn and as part of the team’s effort to improve the interior of the offensive line. At 24 years old, the Selma, Ala., native checks in at 6-foot-5 and 331 pounds, and he comes to the NFL as a rookie with a 2026 salary cap hit of $1.14 million.
His path to New Orleans took a few turns. Wright was a three-star recruit at Selma High School before staying in Alabama for college.
He began at Auburn on the defensive line and made four tackles as a freshman in 2020. An ACL injury wiped out his 2021 season, and when he returned, he moved to offensive line.
From there, he worked mostly as a reserve and spot starter in 2022 and 2023 before winning the right guard job. Over his final two seasons with the Tigers, he started every game at that spot.
The Saints are betting on the edge in his game. Wright is described as playing with an old-fashioned nasty demeanor, the kind that stands out even when a player is still learning the finer points. He’ll need refinement in technique and defensive recognition, but his size, power, and overall ability were enough to draw New Orleans into the conversation during the pre-draft process.
Most of Wright’s college work came at right guard, which makes him relevant to a spot the Saints still need to settle. Cesar Ruiz currently holds that job, and the source material calls him the weak link on the New Orleans offensive line. The Saints already addressed one interior spot by signing left guard David Edwards in free agency, but right guard remains a problem area.
There’s no guarantee a fourth-round rookie can walk in and take Ruiz’s job right away. The more immediate expectation is that Wright strengthens the depth inside from day one, while giving the Saints a possible future answer at right guard - or at the very least, a player who can force better play from the spot.
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Shoughs comments also offered a glimpse into how he views Tyson beyond the highlights. He acknowledged the receivers injury history, but made it clear he is still eager to get to work with him this season. The Saints have spent plenty of time looking for more reliable explosiveness on the outside, and Shoughs confidence in both receivers suggests he already sees a pairing with real upside if they can stay on the field. [Read more 🡒]
