Vernon Broughton’s rookie season never got the runway he expected, but the Saints defensive tackle turned the lost year into something useful.
Broughton, New Orleans’ third-round pick from Texas last year, appeared in just one game before a hip injury against the San Francisco 49ers ended his season. While the rest of the rookie class kept moving, he was stuck on the sideline. He didn’t waste the time.
“Studying the playbook, coming up here and watching film with the guys and sitting through film study,” Broughton said. “I didn’t leave, I stayed here the whole time. Throughout that process I got better.”
That approach matters now more than ever for New Orleans, which added Georgia defensive lineman Christen Miller with its first Day 2 pick in late April. On paper, that gave the Saints another young body for the interior. In reality, it puts Broughton and Miller at the center of the team’s next wave up front.
The timing fits the roster, too. Nathan Shepherd and Davon Godchaux started last season and are both in the final year of their contracts. Both are also in their early 30s, which makes the Saints’ push for younger help along the defensive line even more obvious.
Head coach Kellen Moore said Broughton is a good example of a player who used a bad break the right way.
“We have a number of guys who took advantage of what would be viewed as an unfortunate situation,” Moore said. “Injuries, missing a season, they were able to turn it into working their tails off with (Director of Sports Performance Ted Rath, Director of Sports Medicine Ben Stollberg and Head Athletic Trainer Shone Gipson) in the rehab process and then they get better and stronger during that time.
“Then they’re also in the classroom, they’re also in the meetings, they understand the football aspect. You can see it from Vern.”
Broughton said this was the first major injury of his football career. He also said it didn’t require surgery, only time to heal.
During the rehab process, he leaned on his faith and his family, with his wife playing a major role. He stayed in New Orleans the entire time and was cleared to return to normal activities in March, roughly six months after the injury.
That stretch away from the field left him with more than just a healthy body.
“I feel like now I’m far better than I was a year ago playbook wise,” Broughton said. “I’m more confident, for sure.”
The Saints had expected him to be part of the rotation last season, but the injury changed that plan. Even without him, New Orleans found success in Brandon Staley’s first season as coordinator, finishing ninth in total defense, fourth against the pass and sixth in rushing yards allowed per play.
The unit also stacked up well in the advanced numbers, ranking third in the league in expected points added per play against the run and finishing just outside the top 10 in overall EPA per play.
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