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Saints agree to terms with TE Benjamin Watson on one-year deal

The 14-year veteran has appeared in 179 regular season games with 132 starts, posting 495 receptions for 5,485 yards (11.1 avg.) with 42 touchdowns.

Welcome back the newest addition to the Saints roster, veteran tight end Benjamin Watson

The New Orleans Saints announced today that they have agreed to terms with unrestricted free agent TE Benjamin Watson on a one-year contract. The announcement was made by Saints Executive Vice President/General Manager Mickey Loomis.

Watson, 6-3, 255 pounds, is a 14-year NFL veteran who has played for the New England Patriots (2004-09), Cleveland Browns (2010-12), Saints (2013-15) and the Baltimore Ravens (2016-17), returning to New Orleans after his first stint with the club. Watson was initially a first round pick (32nd overall) of the Patriots in the 2004 NFL Draft.

Over the course of his 14-year National Football League career, Watson has appeared in 179 regular season games with 132 starts, posting 495 receptions for 5,485 yards (11.1 avg.) with 42 touchdowns. In 11 postseason contests with nine starts, Watson has added 21 receptions for 222 yards with three touchdowns. Playing for New Orleans from 2013-15, Watson enjoyed his most productive season as a professional in 2015, when he posted 74 receptions for 825 yards (11.1 avg.) with six touchdowns, setting career-highs in receiving and receiving yardage and also tying his career-best in receiving touchdowns. After missing the entire 2016 season due to an Achilles injury suffered in the preseason for the Ravens, Watson rebounded in 2017 to lead Baltimore in receiving, appearing in all 16 games with 12 starts and recording 61 receptions for 522 yards with four touchdowns. He was voted by his teammates as the Ravens' recipient of the Ed Block Courage Award.

Watson, a native of Rock Hill, S.C., was a three-year letterman at the University of George (2001-03) after starting his college career at Duke in 1999. In three years for the Bulldogs, he recorded 65 receptions for 852 yards (13.6 avg.) and six touchdowns.

Watson has also built a reputation as one of the most respected players in the league, with community initiatives that he and his family have directed through his "One More" Foundation. In 2015 and 2017, he was a Walter Payton NFL Man of the Year Finalist was the winner of the 2017 Bart Starr Award, which is given to an NFL player who "best exemplifies outstanding character and leadership in the home, on the field and in the community."

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