Saints start over with linebackers

Published 8:14 am Friday, June 17, 2016

METAIRIE — James Laurinaitis sees a theme in the type of players the Saints brought in to bolster their linebacker corps this offseason.

<span class="R~sep~ACopyBody">They aren’t particularly flashy or considered rising stars. But they are seen as gritty, experienced and fundamentally sound, which might be what New Orleans needs to bind together a defense that has ranked second-to-last in the NFL the past two seasons.</span>

<span class="R~sep~ACopyBody">“You see guys who have played for a couple years in the league. They understand it. They get it, you know? They’re very quick to pick up the scheme,” Laurinaitis, the projected starting middle linebacker, said after a minicamp practice this week. “We’ve got a really good locker room here — high character guys and guys that are so hungry. You can see it in the way that they work from Day 1, whether it was doing extra drills after they were done with conditioning, you saw how they were working and it was refreshing.”</span>

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<span class="R~sep~ACopyBody">The 6-foot-2, 248-pound Laurinaitis was one of three veteran linebackers brought in as free agents this offseason, along with Craig Robertson and Nate Stupar. A 29-year-old, former Ohio State star, Laurinaitis started every game of his first seven NFL seasons for the St. Louis Rams, but was released after last season.</span>

<span class="R~sep~ACopyBody">Defensive coordinator Dennis Allen said Laurinaitis could bring the type of cohesion to his unit that Jonathan Vilma did for the Saints’ Super Bowl winning defense in 2009.</span>

<span class="R~sep~ACopyBody">“That was kind of the thought process,” Allen said, referring to the acquisition of Laurinaitis.</span>

<span class="R~sep~ACopyBody">The 6-1, 234-pound Robertson, who is 28, has been in the NFL for four seasons, all with Cleveland, and started most of the past three campaigns. The 6-2, 240-pound Stupar also is 28 and in his fifth NFL season. He has been a regular on special teams and has methodically increased his playing time on defense, starting three games for Atlanta last season.</span>

<span class="R~sep~ACopyBody">The top two linebackers returning from last season are Stephone Anthony, a first-round draft choice in 2015, and Dannell Ellerbe, who joined the Saints as a free agent last season.</span>

<span class="R~sep~ACopyBody">Anthony, who started at middle linebacker as a rookie, is moving to the outside so that Laurinaitis can take over in the middle, where he played for the Rams. Ellerbe, a weak-side linebacker, struggled with injuries last season, but when healthy for six games was in on 39 tackles, forced a fumble and recovered a fumble.</span>

<span class="R~sep~ACopyBody">Hurt most of the past two seasons, Ellerbe has expressed confidence that he’ll regain the form he demonstrated in 2012, when he helped Baltimore win a Super Bowl, and 2013, when he started 15 games for Miami.</span>

<span class="R~sep~ACopyBody">“When I’m healthy, I’m one of the best,” Ellerbe said.</span>

<span class="R~sep~ACopyBody">But linebackers take lots of punishment, so Robertson and Stupar are bound to see plenty of action as regular reserves, if not spot starters. Both have been around the ball during 11-on-11 drills this offseason, particularly during minicamp. Both have received first-team snaps.</span>

<span class="R~sep~ACopyBody">“Both of them have done well — good signs for us,” head coach Sean Payton said. “They’re guys that have versatility. Both have played snaps in our league in the base and the sub and both have been contributors on special teams and so they’re two good young players. I’m glad we signed them.”</span>

<span class="R~sep~ACopyBody">Some of the Saints’ more successful seasons were ones in which they didn’t have star linebackers, but did have players seen as assets because of their hustle and positional soundness. That was the case in 2006, also Payton’s first season in New Orleans, when the Saints went as far as the NFC title game. That year, they cobbled together a linebacker corps led by Scott Fujita, Scott Shanle and Mark Simoneau, who were acquired through free agency or trades.</span>

<span class="R~sep~ACopyBody">In some ways, Saints quarterback Drew Brees said, there are similarities in the way the 2006 and 2016 linebacker corps were assembled.</span>

<span class="R~sep~ACopyBody">“The approach in 2006 was — and we learned a lot from that — (was) to go out and get smart, tough, character guys. Everything else will take care of itself,” Brees said. “So, did we go out and get smart, tough, character guys? Yes we did.”</span>””<p>New Orleans Saints linebacker James Laurinaitis (53) takes part in a drill with defensive back Ken Crawley (46) and Vonn Bell (48) during the NFL football team’s minicamp in Metairie</p>Gerald Herbert