NEW ORLEANS — The New Orleans Saints weren’t supposed to be interesting this late in the year. When Derek Carr hung up his cleats following a nagging shoulder injury and the Spencer Rattler experiment stalled out by Week 8, the season looked dead on arrival. Then came Tyler Shough.
The rookie didn’t just manage the game; he injected a high-voltage current into a dormant offense, throwing for nearly 2,000 yards in just nine starts and dragging the Saints to a respectability that seemed impossible in September. But as the New England Patriots and Seattle Seahawks prepare to clash in Super Bowl LX on Sunday, the lesson for New Orleans is clear: You don’t win rings with just a quarterback. You win with a defense that suffocates.
The Shough Effect: A Rookie awakening
Shough’s emergence changes the entire calculus of the Saints’ offseason. We aren’t talking about a bridge quarterback anymore. We are talking about a franchise pivot point. The 6-foot-5 gunslinger showcased the kind of arm talent that scouts drooled over at Louisville, but it was his poise in the pocket that turned heads. He finished the season with a 94.2 passer rating over the final stretch, nearly snatching the Offensive Rookie of the Year award despite playing only half a season.
With the most expensive position in sports potentially solved on a rookie contract, General Manager Mickey Loomis has a golden ticket: cap flexibility. The offense needs weapons—specifically a vertical threat to pair with Shough’s deep ball—but the defensive side of the ball demands immediate surgery.
Target Acquired: Greg Newsome II
If you watch the Patriots and Seahawks this weekend, you’ll see secondaries that erase mistakes. The Saints need that eraser. Enter Greg Newsome II.
Newsome’s 2025 season was a rollercoaster. After a mid-season trade sent him from the Cleveland Browns to the Jacksonville Jaguars, he proved he can adapt on the fly. Now hitting free agency, the 25-year-old corner fits the Saints’ timeline perfectly. He isn’t a fading veteran looking for a final paycheck; he’s a prime-time defender entering his peak years.
- Ball Hawk Ability: 4 interceptions in the last three seasons.
- Versatility: Capable of playing both outside and in the slot.
- Age: 25 years old (fits the Shough competitive window).
Newsome brings the swagger this secondary has missed. He challenges receivers at the line and possesses the recovery speed to handle the NFC South’s track-star wideouts. While the Jaguars will likely push to keep him, the Saints can offer a clear role as the CB1 opposite Marshon Lattimore (or his successor), creating a “no-fly zone” that forces opposing QBs to hold the ball just a second longer.
“We saw what Tyler [Shough] did. The kid fights. Now it’s on us front office guys and the vets to give him a shield and a sword. We need dogs on defense who want to hunt.” — Anonymous Saints Defensive Veteran
Offseason Implications
Signing Newsome won’t be cheap. Cornerback is a premium position, and the bidding war will be fierce. However, the Saints have operated in “cap hell” for a decade and lived to tell the tale. With Shough on a rookie deal, they can afford to front-load a contract for a premier defender.
If New Orleans lands Newsome, they effectively check the biggest box on defense. This frees them up to attack the draft for offensive firepower. Imagine Shough entering his sophomore season with a top-tier defense and a shiny new weapon at wide receiver. That isn’t a rebuild; that’s a reload.

