When the New Orleans Saints determined to deliver quarterback Derek Carr again for the 2025 season it appeared to at the least solidify the place for yet one more yr. They could find yourself having to return to the drafting board, and maybe make the place a good greater precedence within the upcoming 2025 NFL Draft.
Based on a report from NFL Community’s Ian Rapoport on Friday, Carr is dealing with a shoulder injury that might put his 2025 season in jeopardy as he contemplates whether or not or to not have surgical procedure.
Earlier within the offseason there was hypothesis as as to if or not Carr and the Saints would break up given his contract, however they reworked his deal to tie him to the franchise for at the least yet one more yr.
Choosing a quarterback with the No. 9 total choose was definitely going to be an possibility, however as extra of a developmental scenario to sit down behind Carr for a yr.
It would now be a right away want and will change the Saints’ draft board.
The 2 most definitely quarterback choices at their spot can be Colorado’s Shedeur Sanders and Ole Miss’ Jaxson Dart.
Sanders is much from a given to be out there at that spot (the Cleveland Browns, New York Giants and Las Vegas Raiders are all potential spots for him forward of the Saints), however Dart may definitely be in play as he continues to stand up boards going into the draft.
It additionally creates the chance for a trickle-down impact within the draft if different quarterback-needy groups understand the Saints as a possible vacation spot for one of many prime quarterbacks out there. Might a workforce like Seattle or Pittsburgh attempt to make a daring transfer to leap up forward of the Saints? It’s one thing that has to at the least be thought of.
Carr has spent the previous two seasons with the Saints, and whereas he is likely to be overpaid with a problematic contract, he’s nonetheless a stable NFL beginning quarterback. If he’s unable to play the Saints are going to have much more points to take care of on an already flawed workforce.