The New Orleans Saints walked out of the 2023 season with little optimism for the future. Despite being on the cusp of winning the NFC South (low bar, I know) the constant letdowns throughout the year correctly outweighed New Orleans’ near-postseason berth. This perception deepened and was reaffirmed by multiple power rankings listing the Saints in the bottom half of the league to start the offseason.
We’ve now reached another checkpoint in the NFL offseason, the NFL draft. Bleacher Report’s Gary Davenport took the time to project the outlook for the 32 teams after the draft. It’s the final checkpoint of the offseason. The next influx of meaningful power rankings will likely come around training camp when the pads come on. These rankings are essentially a culmination of all offseason moves. Here’s why Davenport says the Saints are the 19th-best team in the NFL:
It’s been something of a typical offseason in New Orleans. They entered it in terrible salary-cap shape, cleared some room and made a signing or two. But it was the draft where the Saints really looked to improve.
That draft generated excitement in the fan base and led to a decent rise from New Orleans in the power rankings. They’re still listed below average but not near the basement dwellers of the NFL. The Saints did have a successful draft from Round 1. Picking up Taliese Fuaga should solidify the right tackle position for years to come.
The vision for Kool-Aid McKinstry should become clearer with time, but his talent isn’t to be questioned. Some believe this was a first round talent the Saints were able to get in the second. Khristian Boyd also provides late round value at defensive tackle, another position of need.
The draft was encouraging, but it didn’t propel New Orleans into the top half of the NFL. Actually, it still keeps them third in the division. There’s work to do and look for New Orleans to start adding veterans in free agency. They need to make up ground on division rivals ahead of them like the Tampa Bay Buccaneers (Davenport’s 15th-ranked team).