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From “Not in the Long-Term Plans” to Perfect 100% Catch Rate on 7+ Targets – Saints’ Young WR Is Forcing New Orleans to Rewrite the Future

New Orleans, Louisiana – December 3, 2025

In the middle of a turbulent season for the New Orleans Saints, a player once considered an afterthought is quietly rewriting his story. Devaughn Vele, who not long ago was viewed as “no longer part of the long-term plans,” just delivered one of the most impressive breakout performances of Week 13 against the Miami Dolphins — a game that vaulted him into the Saints’ record books.

According to Ross Jackson, Vele became the first Saints WR to post a 100% catch rate on 7+ targets since Michael Thomas in 2020. It’s a number that speaks not only to precision, but to the growing trust head coach Kellen Moore has placed in him — trust that Vele is now repaying in full.

His emergence also comes at a critical time. After the Saints traded away Rashid Shaheed at the deadline, Vele was handed a larger role. Moore made it clear immediately that his workload would increase, and now everyone can see why.

With his big frame, willingness to absorb contact, and ability to win space in the red zone, Vele brings exactly the type of receiver the Saints have lacked all season. His chemistry with quarterback Tyler Shough is developing faster than expected, forming a connection that already shows real promise for the future.

After the game, head coach Kellen Moore offered a pointed, emotional reflection — not flashy, but powerful:

“What impresses me isn’t just that he caught every single ball thrown his way; it’s how he’s making the whole team believe they can count on him in the biggest moments. sometimes you see a player start to understand exactly where he belongs in this league. and if he keeps this kind of performance, we might be watching the rise of a true cornerstone.”

Vele may never become Michael Thomas — and no one is asking him to. But the Saints desperately need a big-bodied, sure-handed, dependable receiver who can be trusted when the pressure turns suffocating.

And if Week 13 is only the beginning, Devaughn Vele is showing that he’s not just fighting for a roster spot —
he’s proving he belongs in the NFL.

Texans Reach Verbal Agreement With Arizona State Lineman Who Logged Over 2,100 Snaps — C.J. Stroud and Houston’s Offense Have Found the Missing Piece for a Super Bowl Run
Houston is quietly preparing a move that could alter the trajectory of its franchise — not just for one season, but for years to come. According to sources close to the team, the Texans have reached a verbal agreement with a battle-tested offensive tackle who logged more than 2,100 collegiate snaps at Arizona State. While nothing is official yet, the picture is becoming clearer: Houston is determined to build the strongest possible foundation around C.J. Stroud. At the center of those discussions is Max Iheanachor, a rapidly rising prospect whose name has been climbing draft boards across the league. With prototype size for an NFL tackle (6-foot-6, roughly 330 pounds), elite arm length, and rare functional athleticism, Iheanachor is far from a raw projection. He is a product of real game reps — over 2,100 snaps — consistently holding his ground against top-tier edge rushers with smooth footwork, precise punch timing, and outstanding balance in pass protection. One member of the Texans’ coaching staff offered a deliberately measured comment on the team’s direction: “We need a player like that — someone who can stabilize the front, address the core issues on the offensive line, and bring clarity to the entire system. Given where this team is headed, it’s about having pieces that create order, reduce risk, and unlock flexibility for everything else we want to do offensively.” Iheanachor’s value goes beyond pass protection. He has proven himself against elite rushers by mirroring speed, disrupting momentum with well-timed hands, and avoiding being forced into bad angles. While his run blocking still has room for added edge and initial explosiveness, the foundation is there for him to grow into a true two-way tackle — exactly the profile Houston is searching for as it aims to balance protecting its quarterback with controlling games on the ground. Placed into Houston’s broader context, the short-term impact is obvious: fewer clean pressures on Stroud, a steadier pocket, and a wider offensive playbook. Long term, the Texans see a potential multi-year starter who can anchor the line while continuing to develop. Just as importantly, the environment matters. With a young franchise quarterback, a clearly defined system, and legitimate championship aspirations, Houston could become the ideal launchpad for Iheanachor to refine his power, sharpen technique, and step into a larger NFL role sooner than many expected. The bigger picture suggests this isn’t merely a roster patch. The Texans are laying a foundation. When the offensive line stabilizes, the offense can diversify its approach, avoid over-reliance on any single weapon, and fully maximize Stroud’s strengths. A verbal agreement today could be the first brick in a structure built for January football. Houston isn’t rushing an announcement. But if things proceed as expected, the missing piece the Texans have been chasing may already be within reach — close enough to turn Super Bowl ambition from rhetoric into a real plan.