3 overreactions from the Saints loss vs. Green Bay

NEW ORLEANS, LOUISIANA - SEPTEMBER 27: Marshon Lattimore #23 of the New Orleans Saints celebrates with Chauncey Gardner-Johnson #22 after stopping Aaron Jones (not pictured) of the Green Bay Packers on fourth down during the second half at Mercedes-Benz Superdome on September 27, 2020 in New Orleans, Louisiana. (Photo by Sean Gardner/Getty Images)
NEW ORLEANS, LOUISIANA - SEPTEMBER 27: Marshon Lattimore #23 of the New Orleans Saints celebrates with Chauncey Gardner-Johnson #22 after stopping Aaron Jones (not pictured) of the Green Bay Packers on fourth down during the second half at Mercedes-Benz Superdome on September 27, 2020 in New Orleans, Louisiana. (Photo by Sean Gardner/Getty Images) /
facebooktwitterreddit
Prev
1 of 4
Next
(Photo by Sean Gardner/Getty Images)
(Photo by Sean Gardner/Getty Images) /

The Saints have lost two in a row and it is in no way pleasing to fans. However, now is not the time to begin overreacting about the season.

The New Orleans Saints are going into Week 4 with a losing record of 1-2. In a promising season, things definitely could have started out better. However, that gives us no reason to overreact about the losses the Saints have faced thus far.

Even in their 13-3 season last year, the Saints lost a headscratcher to the Atlanta Falcons, an obviously inferior team. That didn’t leave fans wondering if the season was over though because they had already stacked up a handful of wins before that loss so it didn’t mean as much.

Now, because they were 1-1 and it led them to be 1-2, people are starting to question whether this is really the team we thought it was. That is foolish at this point in the year. If they win out, they still go 14-2.

They still have a great season ahead of them and a possibility at what might be a Super Bowl run.

As of right now, there is nothing to worry about. As a result of the loss to Green Bay, we are going to squash some overreactions that we have seen and heard from Saints’ fans. Here are the top three overreactions.