The New Orleans Saints are starting to get noticed for the work they did this offseason, and the praise is centered on one thing: an offense built to grow around Tyler Shough.
The Athletic’s Ted Nguyen listed New Orleans as one of five offenses that could break out heading into the 2026 season, pointing to a roster that has been carefully assembled through the draft and free agency.
“The Saints have quietly put together a strong offense through the draft," Nguyen wrote. "They drafted both their young, talented tackles: left tackle Kelvin Banks Jr. this year and right tackle Taliese Fuaga in 2024."
Shough sits at the heart of it all. The 2025 second-round pick finished second in NFL Offensive Rookie of the Year voting after helping New Orleans win four of its final five games. A second season in Kellen Moore’s offense should only help his growth, but the bigger swing factor may be the protection in front of him.
That part of the equation was a problem last season. The Saints finished 29th in pass-block win rate, and Shough ranked 41st among qualifying quarterbacks in pressure-to-sack rate.
Nguyen believes the line has a real chance to change that.
“With a season of development for Banks and Edwards playing inside of him, the offensive line should do a better job of keeping Shough clean, which is vital. If the Saints can protect Shough, he has a chance to produce like a tier 2 quarterback.”
New Orleans also added David Edwards, whom Nguyen viewed as the best guard available in free agency. He joins Banks and Fuaga in what could become a much sturdier group in both pass protection and run blocking.
The Saints didn’t stop there. They also brought in Arizona State wide receiver Jordyn Tyson with a first-round pick in the 2026 NFL Draft, adding another piece to a receiving room led by Chris Olave. Tyson brings legitimate No. 1 receiver upside, though his health will be something to watch after a lingering hamstring injury limited his work during organized team activities.
“The Saints' talent is mostly good, not elite. If the offensive line lives up to its potential, New Orleans has a chance to make a big jump,” Nguyen finished.
There may not be a superstar at every spot, but the Saints have built a deep group with few obvious holes. Whether that turns into real production will come down to Shough’s development and how well the offensive line holds up.
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