The New Orleans Saints are making all the right moves in this top Saints draft scenario for 2025. Instead of trading up, the Saints stay patient at pick 9 and see their future fall right into place.
Why This Saints Draft Scenario Makes Sense
Since Drew Brees retired, New Orleans has been in quarterback limbo. But by landing Shedeur Sanders—one of college football’s top quarterback prospects—at No. 9, the Saints finally find a long-term solution. Add in a savvy set of picks at wide receiver, offensive line, and defense, and this Saints draft scenario delivers the youth, speed, and leadership needed to compete in the NFC South. After 53 years of waiting for the right man, this year the Saints grab a franchise QB.
When and How to Watch the NFL Draft
2025 Saints Draft Picks and Analysis

1st Round, Pick 9 – QB Shedeur Sanders (Colorado)
Poised, accurate, and a true leader. Sanders offers the Saints the stability and upside they’ve lacked since Drew Brees retired. He has the tools to transform the New Orleans offense from day one.
2nd Round, Pick 45 – WR Emeka Egbuka (Ohio State)
Consistent, polished, and versatile. Egbuka gives Sanders a trusted weapon and deepens the Saints’ wide receiver corps, making the offense multidimensional.
3rd Round, Pick 76 – OT Josh Simmons (Ohio State)
A physical, athletic tackle with finishing ability. Simmons helps fortify an O-line that must protect its new franchise quarterback. Immediate starter potential.
3rd Round, Pick 89 – CB Cam Hart (Notre Dame)
Long, physical, and capable in man coverage. Hart adds depth and competition to the Saints’ defensive backfield and special teams units.
5th Round, Pick 145 – LB Payton Wilson (NC State)
High motor, football intelligence, and a knack for making plays. Wilson could become a key special teamer or even push for snaps as a rookie linebacker.
6th Round, Pick 193 – DT Brandon Dorlus (Oregon)
Powerful, high-energy defensive tackle. Dorlus brings valuable rotational depth and could develop into a reliable piece of the Saints’ defensive front.
Why This Saints Draft Scenario Wins
This is the ideal Saints draft scenario because it checks every box:
- Franchise quarterback? ✔️
- Offensive line help? ✔️
- Weapons for the new QB? ✔️
- Defensive depth? ✔️
- All without overpaying or trading away the future.
Gayle Benson Scandal
If the Saints want to contend again in the NFC, this 2025 NFL Draft scenario is the blueprint.
Publisher — Black Source Media
Jeff Thomas
Publisher • Opinion Columnist • Licensed General Contractor • Real Estate Appraiser • New Orleans
Jeff Thomas is the publisher of Black Source Media and one of New Orleans’ most direct voices on civic affairs, economic justice, and Louisiana politics. He writes from the intersection of experience and accountability — as a licensed general contractor,a tech company founder and executive with over 30 years experience, and a businessman who has worked across the city’s civic, media, and construction ecosystems for decades.
His Sunday column covers Louisiana legislative politics, insurance discrimination, housing policy, and the forces shaping Black community life in New Orleans and across the state. Thomas writes in the tradition of Black journalists who hold power accountable without apology — building arguments from data, delivering verdicts from evidence, and speaking to Black New Orleans with the directness the moment demands.
He is also the principal of Executive Appraisers Louisiana, an MBE-certified real estate appraisal firm, and EA Inspection Services, LLC, a government inspection services company. Black Source Media is his platform for the civic conversation New Orleans has needed and too rarely had.
Selected Articles by Jeff Thomas
Black Neighborhoods Pay the Highest Insurance Rates in Louisiana. Here’s What They Don’t Want You to Know.
They Didn’t Yell the N-Word. They Went to Law School, Bided Their Time, and Rewrote the Constitution Instead.
Vappie vs. Morrell: Why Does Justice Look Different in New Orleans?
The State Has the Money. New Orleans East Just Needs Them to Use It.
The Failure of Mitch Landrieu