Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette
Without Brees, Saints brace for Cowboys
NEW ORLEANS — Saints cornerback Eli Apple suggests that the high-powered Cowboys could bring out the best in a New Orleans defense that has been off to a shaky start.
“It’s a lot to stop, but it’s a great challenge,” Apple said. “This is a big game — for real. We know how good they are.”
Currently, just two NFL teams — the
New York Giants and Pittsburgh — have allowed more yards passing per game than the 301.7 yielded by New Orleans. And it would appear the Saints (2-1) have yet to face an offense as potent as that of the Cowboys (3-0), who have yet to score fewer than 31 points in a game.
Dallas quarterback Dak Prescott, who has passed for 920 yards and nine touchdowns already this season, enters tonight’s game in the Superdome with some added personal incentive to produce a memorable performance. He grew up in the Shreveport area — the one part of Louisiana nearly split between Cowboys and Saints fans — and will be making his first NFL start in his home state.
His biggest previous game in Louisiana was in 2014 at LSU, when his dynamism put a dent in the Death Valley mystique and ended the Bulldogs’ 14-game losing streak against the Tigers. That was also Mississippi State’s first victory in Tiger Stadium since 1991 — two years before Prescott was born.
Now Prescott will try to help the Cowboys win in the Superdome for the first time since 2009, when they ended the Super Bowl-bound Saints’ 13-game winning streak.
“It’s always fun, knowing this environment, knowing the Superdome, knowing how their fans are going to be, the intensity, the atmosphere,” Prescott said. “I’m excited to go in there with my team, the brotherhood we have, an usagainst-the-world mentality.”
Stopping Dallas can be hard enough when Prescott is extending plays with his scrambling ability, finding receivers such as Amari Cooper and piling up about 302 yards passing per game, which ranks fourth league-wide. Never mind the fact that Dallas’ running back tandem of Ezekiel Elliott and rookie Tony Pollard, who both gained 100plus yards against Miami last week, leads a ground game that ranks third in the NFL with 179 yards per game.
TED TALKS
The Saints are entering their second full game with QB Teddy Bridgewater taking first-team snaps in place of the injured Drew Brees and
expect to see progress from a unit that gained 265 yards and accounted for three of the Saints’ five touchdowns in a 33-27 victory at Seattle last week. Since Coach Sean Payton and Brees arrived in New Orleans in 2006, the Saints usually have been a top-five offense. But with Bridgewater under center for seven of 12 quarters, New Orleans ranks an uncharacteristic 21st in yards per game (339.7).
“The thing with this coaching staff is that they’re great for a reason,” Bridgewater said. “They’re able to call plays to where whoever’s in there can do well. They play to our strengths.
This past week we were able to do some things that I was comfortable doing and we had some success.”
Bridgewater said coaches dialed back some of the usual complexities of the game plan last week because crowd noise in Seattle has been known to cause communication problems for opposing offenses.
“Being back home, being able to do our own cadence, we can do more,” Bridgewater said.
PICKING UP PACE
Despite missing the entire preseason in a holdout and getting eased back in the first three games, Elliott has more yards through three games than in any of his first three seasons.
The two-time rushing champion is up to fourth in the NFL with 289 yards, 86 fewer than leader Dalvin Cook of Minnesota.
Elliott had 274 through three games in each of the seasons he went on to win the rushing title, as a rookie in 2016 and last year.