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Countdown to Kickoff: Jerry Fontenot is the Saints Player of Day 62

Countdown to Kickoff: Jerry Fontenot is the Saints Player of Day 62

USA Today20 hours ago
Fontenot is one of the best players to wear No. 62 in Saints history
There are 62 days left before the New Orleans Saints start their 2025 regular season. The Saints will open their year at home against the Arizona Cardinals, but with Kellen Moore on the sidelines as their new head coach. No New Orleans player is currently wearing number 62. Guard Lucas Patrick wore the number last season for the team. Instead, our choice for Saints Player of the Day is one of the best players to suit up in No. 62 for the franchise: Jerry Fontenot.
A local graduate of Lafayette High School in Louisiana, Fontenot would go on to star at Texas A&M. He'd cap his Aggies career as a 1st Team All-Southwest Conference selection in 1988. The Chicago Bears and head coach Mike Ditka then selected Fontenot midway through Round 3 of the 1989 NFL Draft. Fontenot played in every game as a rookie, but somewhat sparingly as a reserve. He'd see increasingly more playing time through 1990 and 1991, combining for nine starts while playing every contest.
By 1992, Ditka's last year with Chicago, Fontenot was the team's starting center. He remained in that role even after Ditka's departure. Between 1992 and 1996, Fontenot started all of the Bears 80 regular season games. During Fontenot's eight years with Chicago, he'd play in 128 games with 89 starts and never missed a game.
When Mike Ditka was hired as coach of the New Orleans Saints in 1997, Jerry Fontenot returned to his home state to join his former coach. Fontenot started all 16 games at center for the Saints in 1997. The following year, Fontenot missed the first game of his career as injuries limited him to only four outings. He'd bounce back in 1999 and would go on to make 80 consecutive starts at center for New Orleans between 1999 and 2003.
Jerry Fontenot anchored a strong offensive line for otherwise abysmal teams under Ditka. He remained a standout player once Jim Haslett arrived as coach in 2000 and was an underrated member of an explosive offense. Fontenot appeared in 100 games in seven years with the Saints, starting every contest. Only Saints Hall of Famer John Hill has worn No. 62 for more games with New Orleans than Fontenot.
After the 2003 season, New Orleans released Fontenot. He'd go on to play his final NFL season with the Cincinnati Bengals in 2004. After retirement, Fontenot was an offensive assistant with the Green Bay Packers for 10 years from 2006 to 2015. He was part of a Packers staff that won Super Bowl XLV over the Pittsburgh Steelers.
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The Grizzlies can bridge the rest of that salary-dump distance by moving John Konchar, who has two years and $12.3 million remaining; his $6.1 million slot would temporarily be replaced by a $1.2 million cap hold. The Wizards get a much more cap-friendly, offense-first young wing on which to take a gamble in Cam Whitmore than the rumored Jonathan Kuminga (team officials pushed back strongly on the idea that Washington had increased interest in the Warriors' restricted free agent). Whitmore, a Baltimore area native like Wizards guard Bub Carrington, starred locally at Archbishop Spaulding High School in suburban D.C. before going to Villanova. He'll get every chance to earn minutes on the wing, but he'll have to show more consistent effort and focus at the defensive end to stay on the floor. The Wizards under GM Will Dawkins and President of Monumental Basketball Michael Winger are emphasizing defensive switchability with their incoming players. Whitmore has yet to show that in his two years in the league with Houston. But he's a big, big offensive talent who'll turn 21 next week, and the Wizards need as much help at that end of the floor as they do the defensive side. The Wizards will stuff Cam Whitmore into the previous Pelicans trade so they don't have to use any of their exceptions to take in his salary. The outbound salaries of Jordan Poole and Saddiq Bey allow Washington to take back up to $47.7 million in salary. The combined inbound salaries of CJ McCollum, Kelly Olynyk and Whitmore are ... $47.65 million. Nice work. Houston and New Orleans will also need to exchange some small bit of consideration to meet the "touching" requirements for a three-way trade. By moving Whitmore, the Rockets are now approximately $1.3 million below the first apron, where they are hard-capped by the Dorian Finney-Smith acquisition. With their 14th roster spot, they can either retain the non-guaranteed Nate Williams or waive him and sign one more veteran to a minimum deal. The Rockets will also generate a $3.5 million trade exception, which is likely worthless but you never know. Kirby Lee / Imagn Images I can confirm via a league source that the Rockets are trading Cam Whitmore to the Wizards in exchange for two second-round picks. A team source tells our David Aldridge that the transaction will be an expansion of an earlier-agreed-to deal between Washington and New Orleans. Over the past two seasons, the Rockets attempted to harness Whitmore's talent on multiple occasions — sending the Villanova product down to the G League to aid his development and meeting with him periodically over his role — but the 20-year-old's frustration with a lack of playing time never waned. Head coach Ime Udoka, who had challenged Whitmore publicly and privately to adopt a more team-first approach on both ends of the ball, simply couldn't justify his place in the rotation ahead of other players. Still, Whitmore's combination of youth, athleticism and offensive talent are impossible to ignore and should serve him well on a younger team in the early stages of a rebuild like Washington. At his best, Whitmore is a powerful scoring force who has the potential to play a meaningful role on a Wizards team in asset-accumulation mode. Getting the third-year wing to buy into the team concept, having been traded while still on a rookie deal as a first-round pick, should be an easier task now. Kevin C. Cox / Getty Images I've seen lots of outside speculation about the possibility of the Lakers receiving something for Dorian Finney-Smith in a hypothetical sign-and-trade. Unfortunately for LA, there doesn't seem to be any traction on that — and I don't anticipate this reality changing. The Rockets are in the process of turning the Kevin Durant trade into a seven-team deal, a move that seems increasingly likely to happen, league sources tell The Athletic . And the reason that deal would go down is, in part, so they could acquire Finney-Smith with a straight signing. Houston has only the midlevel exception to sign a player, which meant they had to turn either the Finney-Smith or Clint Capela agreement into a sign-and-trade. That's what they're doing in this seven-team deal, which is not yet complete and which would include Capela heading from Atlanta to Houston. Because Capela will come to Houston in a sign-and-trade and thus isn't going into the midlevel exception, the Rockets can use the MLE to sign Finney-Smith straight up. And why would they choose to send a player or draft pick to the Lakers when they don't have to? As of now, Finney-Smith is not a part of this seven-team deal. The only players who were in the NBA last season who are part of it today are Capela, Durant, Dillon Brooks, Jalen Green, Daeqwon Plowden and David Roddy, league sources say. Stephen Lew / Imagn Something struck me as I walked through the Minnesota Timberwolves team store at Target Center before a game last season. The wall of jerseys included all of the usual suspects: Anthony Edwards, Julius Randle, Rudy Gobert, Jaden McDaniels, Naz Reid. Then one jersey caught my eye. On the bottom row of the wall was an entire rack of No. 9 jerseys with 'ALEXANDER-WALKER' arched over the number in the same way Nickeil Alexander-Walker would contort his spine to navigate around a screen at the top of the 3-point arc. There must have been a dozen of them there waiting for purchase. And I wondered how many team stores around the NBA felt compelled to stock the eighth man's jersey? How many teams got enough requests for a player averaging 9.4 points and 25 minutes per night that they stopped filling them on an order-by-order basis and just started making them in bulk? It is the perfect way to describe what Alexander-Walker meant to this organization and this fan base in 2 1/2 seasons in Minnesota. Like the Timberwolves, Alexander-Walker experienced many a dark day in the early portion of his career. Like Timberwolves fans, he was looked over and discounted when he first arrived here, considered a throw-in in the trade that brought Mike Conley to the Wolves. Like the City of Hoops, which is nestled in the State of Hockey, Alexander-Walker just put his head down and kept working amid all the sneers and dismissals, emerging as an inspirational symbol for basketball's renaissance in Minnesota. That is why a somber tone followed the excitement of last weekend, when the Timberwolves locked up two critical components of last season's run to the Western Conference finals by signing Julius Randle and Reid to long-term contracts totaling $225 million. As happy as Wolves fans were, especially for the folk hero that is Naz Reid, they knew that the moves came with a price. They knew that Alexander-Walker was going to have to go. For someone who spent a relatively small amount of time with the Timberwolves, Alexander-Walker leaves a lasting legacy. Read more here. GO FURTHER Nickeil Alexander-Walker was a true Timberwolves success story Kenneth Richmond / Getty Images We're a few days into free agency, and aside from the annual drawn-out saga of restricted free agents, we're basically done. Having prepped for recruiting dog-and-pony shows while working in an NBA front office, good riddance. But I think there's another key reason we aren't seeing as much of that game anymore: Players of that caliber just don't become unrestricted free agents, or if they do, it's a set piece that they'll rejoin their current team. One of the consequences of the more generous extension terms in the collective bargaining agreement is that it's in the interests of both players and teams to continue extending the contracts of most star and near-star players. As a result, both the market of unrestricted free agents and the number of teams with the salary-cap space to pursue them have rapidly diminished. All the action has moved to the trade market, and the hot part of the trade market isn't in summer; it's the deadline in February. In the last three years, that's when talent such as Jimmy Butler, Luka Dončić, De'Aaron Fox, Anthony Davis, Kevin Durant, Pascal Siakam, OG Anunoby, James Harden, Kyrie Irving and Mikal Bridges all changed teams, as well as countless starter-caliber players a rung or two below on the hierarchy. Once upon a time, teams made all their moves in June and July and then played out the season; the trade deadline was reserved for smaller tweaks. Occasionally, it works out that way, but much less often. Now, we're seeing a new phenomenon where some teams spend the summer prepping their rosters so they can wheel and deal the first week in February: by adding middle-class contracts or giving short balloon contracts to fringe players just so there is tradeable salary on the books come winter, or by lining up future draft picks so the Stepien rule doesn't torpedo a blockbuster trade, or by managing the tax aprons so their midseason trade flexibility isn't compromised. Sadly, we must conclude that it's a February league now, and when I decided to write a column on the biggest winners and losers of free agency so far, it wasn't hard to pick out the biggest loser. July. GO FURTHER Winners (Hawks), losers (July) and more from NBA free agency's first days One of the biggest takeaways from Houston's early playoff exit — aside from the lack of experience — was that its season-long half-court spacing (and subsequent 3-point shooting) issues had reached their apex. And it had become so entwined in their identity that the ineffectiveness took shape right from the opening tip in the most important game of their season. Houston shot just 5-of-17 from 3 in an elimination game, scoring a poor 78.0 points per 100 half-court plays. Charlotte, which ranked last in the league in the same category during the regular season, averaged 90.0 points per 100 plays. It was clear internally that the organization, which already had a talented defense, needed its offense to drastically improve outside of bullying teams on the offensive glass. In any trade that involved the now-departed Jalen Green and Dillon Brooks, Houston would need to bring in floor spacers. Those two comprised a large chunk of the Rockets' 3-point department, finishing first and third, respectively, in attempted 3s per game, and were among the top six in conversion rate. With Kevin Durant and Dorian Finney-Smith now in Houston, the Rockets can become one of the league's most efficient half-court offenses and deadliest outside shooting units. Read on here to see how, and watch my video on Durant's overall impact here. GO FURTHER How additions of Kevin Durant, Dorian Finney-Smith can fix Rockets' spacing woes Maddie Meyer / Getty Images We knew the Celtics would be taking a step back this year, but yikes. Jrue Holiday, Porziņģis and Luke Kornet are gone, Al Horford seems like he might be next, and the Celtics still are looking at deals to trim salary further. Boston knew this day was coming; the Celtics were openly talking about it even as they were smashing Dallas in the 2024 NBA Finals. The repeater penalty in the 2023 CBA basically demands that Boston finish 2025-26 below the luxury-tax line, and they still have to whittle down $20 million in salary to get there. That said, the Celtics have taken the scalpel about as painlessly as possible so far. Dumping Holiday and receiving two seconds was a minor miracle, and Boston can likely take back significant draft capital if deals emerge for mainstays like Derrick White, Sam Hauser and Jaylen Brown. Everything is on the table in a 'gap' year while Jayson Tatum rehabs a torn Achilles. Newcomers Anfernee Simons and Georges Niang shouldn't get too comfortable, and what would it take for you to drive off the lot with a lightly used Baylor Scheierman? The real challenge, perhaps, comes next summer. Having torn so much down, how can the Celtics quickly build it back up so they can thrive again with a healthy Tatum? For more, read my free agency winners and losers column. GO FURTHER Celtics depth chart: More changes coming, but where does the roster stand? Joshua Gateley / Getty Images This is an excerpt from The Bounce, The Athletic's daily NBA newsletter. Sign up here to receive The Bounce directly in your inbox. Let's run through some current tiers in the West. Tier 1: Championship contenders — Thunder 🏆, Nuggets The Nuggets took OKC to seven games despite not really being very good. Now they have reliable depth. Plus, Aaron Gordon's hamstring should be fine. Two true titans now. Tier 2: Worthy challengers — Rockets, Timberwolves Minnesota has made the conference finals two straight years. Losing Nickeil Alexander-Walker is tough, but they have some young players to fill the rotation. Continuity matters. Houston acquiring Kevin Durant, Dorian Finney-Smith and Clint Capela has the Rockets on the verge of jumping into contender status. Tier 3: I can see the vision, if all breaks well — Warriors, Clippers Both of these teams have to be really lucky with extended injuries. Enduring a long season is tough, but being healthy in the postseason would make them a nightmare opponent. Tier 4: You're good but missing something — Lakers, Mavericks, Grizzlies, Spurs The Lakers losing Finney-Smith hurts their defense quite a bit. Dallas is missing Kyrie Irving to start the season, and we don't know how he'll return from the ACL injury this year. I like what Memphis has done, but they have a very young core. The Spurs probably need a year of jelling. Tier 5: Let's hope for the best — Suns, Kings, Pelicans, Blazers, Jazz Portland is kind of here by default, but I like the way they're building. The rest of these teams? They're either falling apart or putting players together haphazardly. Jason Miller / Getty Images By Mike Vorkunov, Jon Krawczynski and James L. Edwards III Lawsuits and liens have trailed free agent guard Malik Beasley since he entered the league in 2016, and he has drawn concerns from at least one team about his off-court life. Now, he faces even more scrutiny. Beasley, 28, is a person of interest in a gambling investigation out of the U.S. Attorney's Office for the Eastern District of New York, his attorney, Steve Haney, confirmed to The Athletic over the weekend. No charges or formal allegations have been filed against him. 'This is simply an investigation,' Haney said. 'At this point, Malik has not been charged with any crime and there has been no formal accusation of wrongdoing. Hopefully, everyone will afford him that same presumption of innocence that everyone else deserves.' The investigation into Beasley came at what should have been a moment of triumph for him. After playing for five teams over his last four seasons, he was set to cash in this month following a strong campaign with the Detroit Pistons, where he averaged 16.3 points per game and made a career-high 41.6 percent of his 3s. The Pistons had been in talks with Beasley and his agent leading up to June 30's official start of free agency, and were prepared to offer him a three-year, $42 million contract that included a team option for the last year, according to two sources briefed on the negotiations. But the NBA reached out to the club several days before free agency began and let it know about the federal investigation involving Beasley. The Pistons quickly pivoted away and are now unlikely to sign him. The league has not said whether it has also investigated Beasley. The NBA has previously said it is cooperating with the federal investigation. The contract would have been a windfall, although Beasley has already made nearly $60 million over his nine seasons in the NBA, including $6 million with Detroit this past season. But he has a line of creditors who have taken to courts to try to recoup the money they believe they were owed. He has been sued at least five times over the last eight years, according to available public records, and has more than a dozen different liens filed against him. Read more here. GO FURTHER Malik Beasley facing complaint from former agency amid gambling investigation Page 3

Cameron Jordan declines 'sacrilegious' pitch to recruit Falcons QB Matt Ryan
Cameron Jordan declines 'sacrilegious' pitch to recruit Falcons QB Matt Ryan

USA Today

time9 hours ago

  • USA Today

Cameron Jordan declines 'sacrilegious' pitch to recruit Falcons QB Matt Ryan

'Absolutely not. That's sacrilegious' Credit where it's due -- when Cameron Jordan commits to a bit, he doesn't back down. He set an NFL record by sacking longtime Atlanta Falcons quarterback Matt Ryan 23 times, more than any other defender sacked a single QB in the history of pro football, and that rivalry isn't something the New Orleans Saints star wants to relinquish. But the Saints need a quarterback. Specifically, they could use a veteran quarterback who has seen everything the league can throw at him, which isn't something younger guys like Jake Haener, Spencer Rattler, and Tyler Shough can say just yet. When Kay Adams suggested the Saints could lure Jordan's old rival Ryan out of retirement on her "Up & Adams" show, he pushed back. "No, absolutely not," Jordan said, repeating himself. "Absolutely not. That's sacrilegious. But not saying he's not a great man or quarterback, but yeah, that would never. Kirko Cousins in that same realm, guess who he plays for now? Like had he played for any other team, we could possibly say so, but that team, Can'tlanta? Can't do it." Ryan last threw a football for the Indianapolis Colts in 2022, going 4-7-1 as their starter while completing 67% of his passes for 3,057 yards and scoring 14 touchdowns against 13 interceptions (and being sacked 38 times). Still, he led five fourth-quarter comebacks, tying a career-high he set in 2010, with four game-winning drives. Derek Carr didn't pull off a single fourth-quarter comeback in 27 games with the Saints, achieving a record of 14-13. And hey, he's younger than Aaron Rodgers (by about 17 months). Crazier things have happened. But don't expect Jordan to throw his weight behind this proposal. If the Saints need a veteran backup, he reasons, why not bring back Jameis Winston? In the meantime, he'll support the guys on the roster and bide his time until the team is ready to make a full-court recruiting pitch. "I'm gonna recruit a veteran quarterback properly when the time is right, and that's gonna probably take all the cap space that we have," Jordan grinned, pressing his hands together in focus.

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