Former Saints offensive line coach Doug Marrone is set to join Mike Vrabel and the New England Patriots ahead of the 2025 season:
The New Orleans Saints enter the NFL 2025 offseason with something less than optimism. Not much went right for the Saints this season. The campaign started with some degree of promise after a 9-8 finish in 2023,
The New England Patriots just took their first step toward fixing what some analysts believe was the worst offensive line in the NFL.
The New England Patriots have an interesting situation brewing heading into the NFL offseason. Joe Milton III has become a very intriguing piece for the team. He could end up being a quality backup to have behind Drake Maye.
In this episode of Inside Coverage, hosts Jason Fitz and Frank Schwab give their grades for every head coaching hire so far (looking at you, New Orleans Saints) and give their thoughts and analysis on the latest news around the NFL.
The only head coaching vacancy left in the NFL is the New Orleans Saints position. The Steelers will face three
Boston College staffer Doug Marrone has been hired by the New England Patriots. Marrone spent one season in Chestnut Hill where he served as the Senior Analyst for Football Strategy/Research under head coach Bill O’Brien. The 60-year-old is a veteran coach that has experience at both the professional and collegiate level.
The Saints traded Gardner-Johnson to the Eagles in 2022, along with a 2025 seventh round pick for a 2023 fifth-round pick and a sixth-round pick. He promptly tied for the NFL lead with six interceptions. After a year with the Lions, Gardner-Johnson returned to Philadelphia and had six more interceptions this past season.
The Philadelphia Eagles and Kansas City Chiefs will meet in New Orleans for the Super Bowl in a matter of weeks, and the teams will play at the Caesars Superdome. The city is no stranger to massive events,
Former New Orleans Saints and current New York Jets punter Thomas Morstead announced via social media that his “Punt for ALS” campaign in partnership with the Team Gleason Foundation raised more than $101,
Jalen Hurts bucked decades of history just by getting back to the Super Bowl after losing his first trip there as a starting quarterback.