#_uuid:dfa175f3-0270-3c41-87de-9137cc2ff614
Explore tagged Tumblr posts
Text
NFL Power Rankings: How high can surprising Saints climb?
yahoo
New Orleans Saints coach Sean Payton noted something Monday that resonated. During his teamâs five-game winning streak, the Saints have won in some various ways.
âThatâs been encouraging,â Payton said.
For the past few years, the Saints had just one path to win. Drew Brees had to do it all. Brees is undeniably great, but more often than not he couldnât drag his team to wins. New Orleans has had three 7-9 seasons in a row. It was frustrating. Payton and Brees are one of the best coach-quarterback combinations in the NFL, and they hadnât had a winning record since 2013.
This season, the Saints are probably the best team you havenât heard enough about. Maybe they were under the radar because preseason expectations were low. Perhaps you tuned them out after an 0-2 start. Itâs possible you donât believe their defensive surge is real. But theyâre 5-2 and if they can keep playing this way on both sides of the ball, theyâre a contender in the NFC.
The Saintsâ defense has been one of the best in the NFL for its last five games. Yes, that sentence seems strange, but itâs true. Now the caveats: The schedule hasnât been that tough, and itâs not like the first two games didnât happen. Against Minnesota and New England, the Saints allowed a 141.4 passer rating and nearly 400 passing yards per game. Then it totally changed in Week 3 and hasnât stopped.
Here are the opponents, quarterbacks and their passer rating against the Saints during their five-game winning streak (their bye was Week 5):
Week 3, at Carolina, Cam Newton: 43.7 Week 4, vs. Miami (in London), Jay Cutler: 71.1 Week 6, vs. Detroit, Matthew Stafford: 62.3 Week 7, at Green Bay, Brett Hundley: 39.9 Week 8, vs. Chicago, Mitchell Trubisky: 46.9
Three of those games were pretty friendly for a defense. Cutler has been bad coming out of retirement, Hundley was making his first career start and Trubisky is a rookie who had completed 12 passes in his previous two games combined. Then again, Newton is a former NFL MVP and Stafford is obviously capable. Newton hadnât posted a rating that low since Oct. 30, 2014. Stafford hasnât had a rating of less than 80 in any other game this season.
The Saints caught some breaks on the schedule but itâs undeniable that since those first two games, theyâre shutting down whoever theyâre playing. This is a fairly young team, especially on defense, and the Saintsâ confidence is growing.
Cornerback Marshon Lattimore will start to get some defensive rookie of the year buzz. One cornerback canât transform an entire defense, but it helps. Lattimore has played at a high level all season and has been the biggest difference in this surge. He closed out a 20-12 win with an interception with less than 1:30 left. In previous years, if the Saintsâ offense scored just 20 points they had no chance. From a 17-13 win over the Atlanta Falcons on Nov. 21, 2013 through Week 2 of this season, the Saints were 1-19 in games in which they scored 20 or fewer points. In this five-game winning streak, theyâve won twice scoring 20 points. This is a different Saints team. Itâs not just Lattimore either. Their secondary is much improved and theyâre more disruptive up front, led by defensive end Cameron Jordan and his fantastic all-around season.
Yet, itâs OK if thereâs skepticism. The schedule will get tougher, and the Saints defense relies on a lot of young players. Five games is significant but not enough of a sample to prove the Saints defense has completely changed. We can count on Brees. Alvin Kamara and Mark Ingram will keep the running game going, too. The offense will be good. New Orleans has gained the second-most yards in the NFL, trailing only the Patriots. We just donât know yet if the defense can hang onto their gains all season.
This Saintsâ season started with a lot of uncertainty. There were the three losing seasons in a row. Breesâ contract voids after this season, and while itâs impossible to imagine Brees playing with any other team next year, thereâs no guarantee. The first two weeks of this season made it seem like the Saints would waste another year of the Payton-Brees combination. Then the Saints came alive.
Take a look around the NFC. No team is a sure thing. People have said often over the past few years that if the Saints could just put together an average defense, they could contend again. Finally, that defense has come along. The next step is finding out if that defense, and the Saints as a whole, are here to stay.
New Orleans Saints running back Alvin Kamara (41) celebrates his touchdown against the Bears. (AP)
Here are the power rankings following Week 8 of the NFL season:
32. Cleveland Browns (0-8, Last week: 32) If you were up early and watched the Browns lose to the Vikings, it seemed like progress. They were competitive for a while. And they still lost by 17 points. The Browns have trailed by double digits in the fourth quarter of seven of their eight games.
31. San Francisco 49ers (0-8, LW: 31) The question becomes when Jimmy Garoppolo gets his first start. San Francisco has two games and then a bye. Starting him after the bye would give him three weeks to learn the offense. But, maybe they put him in sooner than that. The 49ers didnât trade a second-round pick to keep watching C.J. Beathard play quarterback.
30. Indianapolis Colts (2-6, LW: 30) There was a report that the Colts would be willing to trade receiver T.Y. Hilton. If a contender is willing to give a ton for him, fine, and the Colts would probably need a great return to swing a deal. But how is trading a young receiver who led the NFL in receiving yards good for the franchise, now or in the future when Andrew Luck is back?
29. New York Giants (1-6, LW: 29) The Giants should be one of the most active teams at the trade deadline, as they try to get assets for the future and open up spots for younger players to get a shot. They also donât have a lot of tradeable contracts, though NJ.com suggested cornerback Dominique Rodgers-Cromartie as one.
28. Tampa Bay Buccaneers (2-5, LW: 27) DeSean Jackson has not had the impact the Buccaneers had hoped. Jackson has led the NFL in yards per catch two of the past three seasons but is averaging just 15.9 yards per catch this season, 2 fewer yards than last season. In Jacksonâs eight seasons since his rookie year, he has averaged fewer than 16 yards per catch only once. Heâs catching 49 percent of his targets, and that would be a career worst. His two touchdowns are from 25 and 4 yards. Itâs baffling that he and Jameis Winston havenât produced more big plays.
27. Arizona Cardinals (3-4, LW: 28) The Cardinals have to find some pass rushers in the offseason. Chandler Jones has eight sacks. The rest of the team combined has five, and no player besides Jones has more than one.
26. New York Jets (3-5, LW: 26) Matt Forte created a stir when he took a shot at offensive coordinator John Morton as he complained the Jets didnât run enough in a loss Sunday. It was a bit odd why he got only four carries in a rainstorm. âEverybody knows that that was the game plan and thatâs what we wanted to do,â Forte said, according to Newsday. âI donât have to get on a headset and tell somebody how to do their job.â Itâs also worth noting that Forte had just 7 yards on his carries and as a team the Jets averaged just 2 yards per carry. Itâs hard to keep calling runs when theyâre not going anywhere.
25. Chicago Bears (3-5, LW: 23) Remember all the early season excitement about Tarik Cohen? As Jordan Howard has gotten hot, Cohen has been marginalized in the offense. He had a 70-yard catch in Week 7, but that was his only touch. That and a 14-yard catch in Week 6 are his only 10-yard plays since Week 3. On Sunday, Cohen had only a couple rushing yards on four carries, and one catch for 6 yards. The Bears desperately need offensive playmakers, and they need to figure out a way to get Cohen going again.
24. Miami Dolphins (4-3, LW: 18) The most deceiving thing in the NFL is probably a team whose record is bolstered by a lot of close wins. A great record in close games is not sustainable, and it leads people to believe youâre better than you really are. The Dolphins are 4-0 in games decided by six points or less. If youâve seen them play, you know they look nothing like at team with a winning record.
23. Cincinnati Bengals (3-4, LW: 25) Weâve seen bits and pieces from Joe Mixon, but the breakout hasnât come yet. He looked great on a 67-yard catch Sunday, but gained only 18 rushing yards on 11 carries against a bad Colts team. Heâs averaging just 3 yards per carry this season. Itâs tough to tell how much a horrible offensive line is to blame.
22. Green Bay Packers (4-3, LW: 22) Itâs possible that the Saintsâ pass defense is really good, and thatâs why Brett Hundley struggled so much in his first start. Weâll get a long look at him in a home game against the Detroit Lions next Monday night, after he has had a bye week to prepare. Maybe he can rekindle some optimism for the Packers.
21. Oakland Raiders (3-5, LW: 20) The Raiders had the fewest sacks in the NFL last season. This season only one team (Tampa Bay) has fewer sacks per game than the Raiders, who have 12 in eight games. Thatâs hard to explain, given that the Raiders have Khalil Mack. The Raiders overcame the lack of a pass rush last season, but this season itâs catching up to them.
20. Denver Broncos (3-4, LW: 17) Take note of this quote from cornerback Chris Harris, via Nick Kosmider of the Denver Post: âItâs hard to win when you donât score points.â It has to be frustrating for this world-class defense to see a season slipping away. The Broncosâ next step is probably benching quarterback Trevor Siemian, but Iâm not sure that fixes everything.
19. Baltimore Ravens (4-4, LW: 24) The early indications are that Joe Flacco will be able to play Sunday, after suffering a scary collision on a dirty hit by Dolphins linebacker Kiko Alonso last week. Thatâs good for the Ravens because the thought of Ryan Mallett starting will keep their fans up at night.
18. Tennessee Titans (4-3, LW: 21) Rookie receiver Corey Davis should return from a hamstring injury this week. The Titans need something to spark them. They are 4-3 but havenât been too impressive. Davis has shown short bursts of his incredible talent, but itâs time for the first-round pick to stay healthy and do it consistently. That could give the Titans a boost they need.
17. Los Angeles Chargers (3-5, LW: 19) Itâs a little strange that Tyrell Williams isnât a bigger part of the offense. With Keenan Allen out last season, Williams had a fine 69-1,059-7 season and looked like he was on his way to being a nice target for Philip Rivers. With Allen back this season Williams has 22-322-1 through eight games and has games of 15, 22, 27, 11 and 24 yards. It seems like Los Angeles could benefit from having someone other than Allen be a factor in the passing game.
16. Detroit Lions (3-4, LW: 14) Sundayâs loss was disappointing, but they have a chance to get on a winning streak. Their next three games are at Green Bay, vs. Cleveland and at Chicago. If theyâre not 6-4 coming out of those three games, that will be the real disappointment.
15. Jacksonville Jaguars (4-3, LW: 15) I like the Marcell Dareus acquisition. The Jags gave up a conditional sixth-round pick this year, which is very little for a former All-Pro who was once the third pick of the draft behind Cam Newton and Von Miller. He was clearly out of the Billsâ future plans, but he could make the Jaguarsâ defensive line even nastier, and it was already very good without him.
14. Washington Redskins (3-4, LW: 12) Kirk Cousinsâ future became a lot tougher to figure out with the Jimmy Garoppolo trade. While Cousins will do just fine next offseason, the 49ers were a major bargaining chip for him. They had a much-publicized desire for Cousins and a ton of salary-cap space. Now thatâs off the table, and there arenât as many obvious suitors for a quarterback who will be 30 next August and will demand a record-setting contract.
13. Dallas Cowboys (4-3, LW: 10) We canât be sure if thereâs another legal turn coming in the Ezekiel Elliott saga. But if this is it and his six-game suspension starts now (and Iâm assuming so, which is why they drop in the rankings this week), Dallasâ next six games are vs. Kansas City, at Atlanta, vs. Philadelphia, vs. L.A. Chargers, vs. Washington, at N.Y. Giants. I think 3-3 is realistic. That would put the Cowboys at 7-6 and probably needing to win their final three games. Not impossible. And anything less than 3-3 might knock Dallas out of the playoff picture, depending if a 9-7 team can get in this season.
12. Houston Texans (3-4, LW: 11) Lost in the (justified) Deshaun Watson hype is the Texans did not pass their first non-Browns defensive test since losing J.J. Watt and Whitney Mercilus. They couldnât slow down Russell Wilson. Too many of those big plays Wilson made were easy. Thatâs not a good sign going forward. Watson has been playing at a record-setting level, and he might need to keep that up if the defense will struggle like this.
11. Buffalo Bills (5-2, LW: 16) Itâs not hard to figure out how the Bills are doing this. Theyâre plus-14 in turnover margin. No other NFL team is better than plus-8. Buffalo has turned it over just three times all season and have forced multiple turnovers in each game this season except one, a 9-3 loss at Carolina. Itâs hard to believe the Bills can sustain this pace in turnover margin, but itâs working so far.
10. Carolina Panthers (5-3, LW: 13) Because heâs not a quarterback, we probably donât talk enough about how valuable linebacker Luke Kuechly is. The Panthers are a totally different team without him, and not many defensive players have that impact. No other NFL inside linebacker is as valuable as Kuechly.
9. Atlanta Falcons (4-3, LW: 9) Kyle Shanahan did many things well as Falcons offensive coordinator, and one of them was to make sure Julio Jones got as many targets as he could handle. Jones had an insane 203 targets in 2015, and 129 in 14 games last season. Thatâs more than nine per game. This season, Jones has had more than nine targets just twice in seven games. This shouldnât be that hard: Get your potential Hall of Fame receiver the ball as often as possible.
8. Minnesota Vikings (6-2, LW: 7) The Dalvin Cook injury looked like it would wreck the Vikings, but Jerick McKinnon has taken a huge step this season. He was really good Sunday with 122 total yards and a touchdown. Cook is the superior player but McKinnon has played well enough that the drop hasnât been too steep.
7. Los Angeles Rams (5-2, LW: 6) Next up for the Rams is an interesting game at the Giants. The Giants arenât good, but the Rams are flying across country for an early game, which can be tricky. Itâs one of those games where if Los Angeles is for real â and thereâs no reason to believe it isnât â this shouldnât be a tough game.
6. New Orleans Saints (5-2, LW: 8) For the first time all season, rookie running back Alvin Kamara played more than half of the offensive snaps. His percentage of snaps has increased every week since Week 2. After Mark Ingram said repeatedly that he âsuckedâ on Sunday, itâs fair to wonder if Kamaraâs usage will continue to grow.
5. Seattle Seahawks (5-2, LW: 5) Russell Wilson has 786 yards and seven touchdowns in his past two games. Weâve seen this before: When Wilson gets hot, heâs scalding. It helps him that Paul Richardson has developed into a very nice target at receiver.
4. Pittsburgh Steelers (6-2, LW: 4) There doesnât seem to be any reason for the Steelers to give Martavis Bryant more snaps or targets than JuJu Smith-Schuster. Smith-Schuster looks like the real deal, and it seems like the rookie is popular among his teammates and through the city of Pittsburgh too.
3. New England Patriots (6-2, LW: 3) I hate the Jacoby Brissett trade even more now that the Patriots have dealt Jimmy Garoppolo. But trading Garoppolo was the only logical way that situation could have played out. Garoppolo is a free agent in March and the Patriots couldnât retain him unless they spent a ton to give him the franchise tag. Itâs also obvious the Patriots expect many more good years out of 40-year-old Tom Brady.
2. Kansas City Chiefs (6-2, LW: 2) Kareem Hunt hasnât scored since Week 3, and Monday night was his third game of the past four averaging less than 4 yards per carry. Hunt is still impacting every game but his pace from the first few weeks had to slow down, and it has.
1. Philadelphia Eagles (7-1, LW: 1) With how well Carson Wentz has played, itâs surprising Alshon Jeffery has been so quiet. His long touchdown catch against the 49ers was just one play, but maybe thatâs the spark. If Jeffery plays like the true difference maker he has been in the past, the Eagles get a lot better. And theyâre already pretty good.
â â â â â â â
Frank Schwab is the editor of Shutdown Corner on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at [email protected] or follow him on Twitter! Follow @YahooSchwab
#_author:Frank Schwab#_uuid:dfa175f3-0270-3c41-87de-9137cc2ff614#hidden:vv_3x4:eea878e3-1e96-3e63-8c31-4718e07d2e02#_lmsid:a077000000CFoGyAAL#hidden:vv_09x16:1e206faa-ed1c-36a4-a69b-2d197ee2668f#_revsp:99add987-dcd1-48ae-b801-e4aa58e4ebd0
0 notes