Every NFL training camp seems to hand out one surprise, and the Saints have made a habit of turning those surprises into real contributors.
New Orleans has already seen it happen with Rashid Shaheed and Carl Granderson, two undrafted players who found a way to matter once they got their shot. With Kellen Moore heading into his second season as head coach and jobs opening up all over the roster, this year’s undrafted rookie class has a real chance to make some noise.
The group to watch starts with Michael Heldman, a defensive end from Central Michigan who showed exactly the kind of production coaches love. He put up 48 tackles, 10.5 sacks and 16.5 tackles for loss in 2025, and he did it while serving as a captain and consistently bothering quarterbacks.
At 6-foot-3 and 268 pounds with nearly an 80-inch wingspan, he has the frame and the motor that can get a staff’s attention fast. The Saints have already invested heavily on the defensive front, but pass rush help is always in demand.
If Heldman keeps flashing in preseason, he could make the roster conversation uncomfortable.
Zxavian Harris is another name that jumps off the page. The Ole Miss defensive tackle is listed at 6-foot-7 and 335 pounds, and that size alone makes him hard to ignore.
He also brings more than bulk, posting 123 tackles, 17.5 tackles for loss and 5.5 sacks in his college career while also contributing on special teams with multiple blocked kicks. Even after the Saints took Christen Miller in the second round, there’s still room for more help up front.
Harris has the kind of upside that could land him a rotational role or at least a protected practice squad spot.
On the offensive side, Alan Herron may have one of the strongest cases. The Saints gave him $272,500 in guaranteed money after the draft, and teams do not hand out that kind of commitment to undrafted players unless they see something real.
Herron started 24 straight games at Maryland after transferring from Division II Shorter University, and his ability to play both tackle and guard only helps his chances. With depth on the offensive line always at a premium, he has a clear path to a roster push.
Brock Rechsteiner brings a different kind of attention. Yes, the name is familiar - he’s the son of WWE Hall of Famer Scott Steiner and cousin of WWE star Bron Breakker - but he earned his shot on the field.
At 6-foot-2 and 225 pounds, the Jacksonville State receiver plays with a physical edge that stands out in a UDFA group. He impressed the coaches in rookie minicamp and looks like the kind of player who could carve out value on special teams.
The Saints have a deep receiver room, so the climb will be steep, but toughness and blocking ability can separate a player in a hurry.
Then there’s CJ Donaldson Jr., a 230-pound running back from Ohio State who brings a different kind of punch. He scored 40 rushing touchdowns in college and built a reputation as a reliable short-yardage finisher.
The path is crowded with Travis Etienne, Alvin Kamara, Kendre Miller and Devin Neal already in the mix, so Donaldson faces a tough climb. Still, every team wants a runner who can hammer out yards in third-and-short situations, and a strong preseason could change how he’s viewed.
One more name belongs in the conversation: Keeshawn Silver. The USC nose tackle was a former five-star recruit, and at 6-foot-4 and 330 pounds, he has the kind of body that fits the position.
The question is consistency. If defensive line coach Bo Davis can bring that out of him, the Saints may have another hidden gem on their hands.
The common thread in this class is easy to spot. New Orleans went after size.
Harris is massive, Donaldson runs like a hammer, Heldman brings proven pass-rush production, and Herron offers flexibility. That fits the kind of team Kellen Moore wants to build.
If there’s one undrafted player who looks best positioned to become the camp story, it’s Heldman. Production matters, and his numbers speak loudly. Harris is right there too, with the frame and experience to become a useful piece on the defensive line.
And that’s the Saints’ formula again: find talent where others overlook it. If one or two of these rookies stick, it only adds to a reputation New Orleans has already built for uncovering useful NFL players in unexpected places.
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