If it was up to the Saints’ center, New Orleans officially would have rushed 38 times for 140 yards and a touchdown in a 34-0 victory over New England last Sunday. But since the three kneel-downs in the red zone for minus-4 yards had to be factored in, the total came out to 41 carries for 136 yards, denting the per-carry average.
What McCoy did have a say in, though, was the Saints’ offensive line cohesively banding to help New Orleans, 3-2 entering Sunday’s game against the Texans (2-3) at NRG Stadium in Houston, produce its best running game of the season.
The Saints took an early lead – 7-0 in the first quarter, 21-0 by halftime – and pounded off 23 rushing attempts for 63 yards in the second half (20 for 67 by McCoy’s calculation) while gorging 20:42 of the 30 second-half minutes.
“It was nice,” McCoy said. “I feel like it’s something that every offensive line thrives on, wanting to run the ball, having a successful rushing average, having a successful run game week in and week out. But there’s still a lot that we left on the bone, and there’s still areas that we need to and we have to improve. We have way too much talent up front to not consistently do that every game.
“It’s something that we have to be better about as an offense, is we have to start faster. I feel like the last game one of the things that killed us throughout the game was penalties – whether that was holding, whether that was false starts – that put us in bad situations, that got us behind the sticks. Even though we ended up winning that game, those things hurt. It hurts the offense, it hurts the efficiency.
“Coming out fast, super important and incorporating the run game early, super important.”