Watched some all-22 on Bullard because I don't have anything better to do, and I gotta say I appreciate Parker's mindset defensively.
Bullard of course has absolutely no pass rush ability at this point in his career (if he ever had any), the Saints literally never put him on the field in clear passing situations in the five games I watched, and the only plays where he was actually on the field vs. a passing play was stuff like play action on 1st and 10 or down on the goal line when they were in base defense or lined up to play the run.
With all that said, the guy is a brawler vs. the run. He knows exactly who he is, he has no real interest in getting upfield to an OL's shoulder to go after the QB, he's just going to sit his big ass down against double teams and hold the POA to squeeze running lanes.
It kind of reminds me of what I appreciated about Zimmer, who was fine sacrificing a bit of pass rush in order to get bigger bodies like Linval Joseph on the field to make sure you could contain the run. It didn't really start to show until the second half of 2024, but I think the defense later in the season that year was actually half decent. If you could've transported that second half of 2024 defense to last season we would've 100% made the playoffs, and probably won the division.
Anyway, between Bullard and Ogbonnia (as opposed to lighter, more upfield players like Osa/Thomas) I appreciate the no-nonsense approach to stopping the run. Everybody knows they aren't going to provide a single whiff of pass rush, but I think having rotational guys to do the dirty work stuffing the run is really important when you have an elite pass rushing DT like Quinnen.
Throw in Gary's edge setting ability and I think we could be in business, if we can find another starting ILB.