The Saints came out of the offseason with real buzz around them, and the moves they made are a big reason why. New Orleans added Travis Etienne, drafted Jordyn Tyson and others, and now heads into the 2026 NFL season with a roster that looks built to push past the postseason drought that followed the 2025 finish.
That’s the backdrop Seth Walder of ESPN used when grading the Saints’ work. His view starts with Tyler Shough, the 2025 second-round pick, who has apparently done enough to make New Orleans comfortable building around him as the quarterback of the future. With that in mind, the Saints attacked other spots on the roster.
Walder’s favorite move was the addition of Edwards from Buffalo. He pointed to last season’s pass block and run block win rates at guard, which landed in the 83rd and 86th percentiles, and called him a clear upgrade who fills a hole. He also liked the price, noting the deal came in at $15.25 million per year.
The Etienne signing, though, is where Walder drew the line. New Orleans gave him $12 million per year, and Walder said he could not get behind the move.
Etienne did post 44 rush yards over expected last season, per NFL Next Gen Stats, but Walder noted that he finished with fewer rush yards than expected in each of the previous two seasons. Even with the Saints needing running back help, he argued the contract was too rich for a player without a strong enough track record.
Tyson, taken with the No. 8 pick, gives Shough another potential weapon and could develop into a major playmaker for the offense.
On defense, the Saints watched Alontae Taylor leave for the Titans and Demario Davis move into the twilight of his career. But they did bring back Kaden Elliss, and Walder highlighted him as one of the league’s best blitzing linebackers. That matters for a pass rush that has not been especially strong.
Still, the Etienne addition stands out as the move that complicates the Saints’ offseason grade. The fit with Alvin Kamara could be dangerous - the two could form one of the NFL’s top backfield duos - and both backs should benefit from the upgraded offensive line Walder liked.
The Saints clearly spent the offseason trying to give Shough more support. The only question is whether every move was worth the price.
In Other News...
These 3 Saints Camp Battles Could Decide More Than Fans Realize
Training camp is about to turn a few Saints roster spots into real competitions, and the pressure is not limited to the obvious starters. New Orleans has three battles that could ripple through the depth chart: the third running back job, a spot on the interior defensive line next to Bryan Bresee, and the kicking role. Each one carries more weight than a typical summer battle because the outcomes shape not just how the roster looks, but how many players the Saints can trust when the season starts.
The running back race and the defensive line fight both figure to come down to who offers the safest mix of reliability and upside, while the kicking competition brings its own kind of urgency. Special teams jobs are often settled by the smallest margins, and for a team trying to get the roster right, these are the kinds of decisions that can quietly define the opening weeks of the season. [Read more 🡒]
One Offensive Problem Still Stands Between Saints And The NFC South
Ben Solak of ESPN is buying into a Saints path back to the top of the NFC South in 2026, and the logic is easy enough to follow. The division has been ripe for the taking lately, New Orleans finished the 2025 season looking competitive, and there is real optimism around Tyler Shough entering his second year with a chance to settle in as the offenses long-term answer.
Even with that upside, the biggest question still sits in the backfield and it has been there for a while. The Saints need their ground game to become a real weekly strength, especially after a stretch from Week 9 on when the rushing attack lagged well behind the standard required to control games and support a young quarterback, and the front offices offseason moves show they know that piece still has to come together. [Read more 🡒]
