The New Orleans Saints are walking into training camp with something they haven’t had in a while: real optimism.
After years of grinding along with an aging, cap-tight roster, the conversation around the 2026 team sounds different. The buzz in New Orleans is tied to a younger group, a new direction on both sides of the ball, and a belief from national voices that the Saints can climb back to the top of the NFC South. ESPN’s Ben Solak has already gone as far as projecting them to win the division.
The most common forecast lands at 10-7, with 11-6 also in the mix. That kind of record would fit the way the Saints finished 2025, when they won four of their last five games and carried momentum into the offseason.
Finishing fourth in the division last year also gives New Orleans a fourth-place schedule, which only adds to the case for a stronger season. In a division that has swung wildly from year to year, 10 wins looks like the number that gets the Saints back into the playoff picture and, in this projection, back on top.
Of course, the path there is not clean. The schedule opens with a pair of heavyweight road tests that could put the Saints in an early hole.
Week 1 sends them to Detroit to face a Lions team that is expected to hit hard from the start at Ford Field. Week 2 is even tougher in a different way, with a trip to Baltimore and a matchup against Lamar Jackson at M&T Bank Stadium.
Those two games are widely viewed as a rough opening stretch, and plenty of projections have New Orleans starting 0-2.
There’s also the Paris trip later in the season, when the Saints meet the Pittsburgh Steelers at Stade de France. International games always carry some chaos, and this one is being treated as another spot where New Orleans could come up short in a tight, low-scoring game against a tough Steelers defense.
Still, the reasons for the optimism are easy to spot. The Saints are being described as younger, faster and cheaper than they’ve been in years, and that shift starts with the quarterback.
Tyler Shough is the center of everything. After taking over last season, he won five of his nine starts and gave the Saints a glimpse of franchise-level upside.
Now he gets a second year in Kellen Moore’s offense, and that matters. The belief around this team is that Shough brings a vertical passing element New Orleans has not had since the prime Drew Brees days.
The offense around him has been rebuilt to help him succeed. Chris Olave remains the headliner at wide receiver, while the addition of Jordyn Tyson gives the unit another young piece with explosive potential.
The Saints also made a major move by signing running back Travis Etienne. Up front, guard David Edwards was brought in to give the line more youth and physicality as it opens lanes for Etienne and Alvin Kamara.
There’s a similar youth movement on defense, even with Cameron Jordan still serving as the veteran anchor in the locker room. Chase Young and Carl Granderson are expected to drive the edge-rushing group, and Tyree Wilson is among the younger players hoping for a reset under Brandon Staley’s top-10 defensive scheme. The idea is simple: more speed, more pressure, and a defense that can finish plays late in games.
So yes, a 0-2 start would make people nervous in the French Quarter. But the bigger picture is what has changed.
This is no longer the same Saints roster that spent years stuck in the middle. With Shough growing in Kellen Moore’s system and a younger defense under Staley, the 2026 version has the pieces to survive the rough spots, stack wins in the division, and get back to the postseason.
In Other News...
5 Saints Veterans Enter Camp With Everything To Prove
Training camp always has a way of sorting out the comfortable from the vulnerable, and this summer the Saints have a handful of veterans who are walking in with real questions hanging over them. Cesar Ruiz, Carl Granderson, Isaac Yiadom and Davon Godchaux all fit that category for different reasons, whether it is contract pressure, performance expectations or the simple reality that younger options are pushing hard for jobs.
Ruizs situation is especially worth watching after the draft added Jeremiah Wright, a move that signaled the starting spot is not guaranteed. Granderson has the kind of deal that raises the stakes if the production does not keep pace, while Yiadom could find himself squeezed by cheaper depth in the secondary and Godchaux is still the main body in the middle but not without competition behind him. For a roster that does not have many easy answers, camp could decide which veterans are part of the next Saints group and which ones are suddenly fighting just to stay in the conversation. [Read more 🡒]
Saints Could Face A Familiar Cornerback Problem Sooner Than Expected
The Saints have spent enough time living with uncertainty at outside cornerback to know how quickly the position can turn into a problem. If the front office decides the room needs another answer sooner rather than later, the market may not offer many obvious fits, which is why a veteran with starting experience and some long-term upside would be worth a closer look.
One name that makes sense in that conversation comes from a defense with enviable depth at the position, where a talented corner is already tucked behind an All-Pro and still faces questions about how he fits into the bigger picture. His profile is appealing for New Orleans because he brings enough upside to matter beyond this season, but the trade case is complicated by the kind of issues that can make a team hesitate before paying for help. [Read more 🡒]
Saints Fans Should Start Watching This Future Edge Name Closely
The Saints long-term edge-rush picture is already starting to come into focus, and it makes sense to keep an eye on Damon Wilson II as the calendar turns toward the 2027 NFL Draft. Wilson is now at Miami after earlier stops at Georgia and Missouri, and the appeal is easy to see: he brings the kind of athleticism and pass-rush burst that can jump off the screen, which is exactly the sort of trait New Orleans will be hunting if its front seven needs a refresh.
The fit is still very much in the early stages of speculation, though, because Wilson is not yet the finished product. His pass-rush upside is obvious, but his run defense remains the question, and he is still more of a designated pressure player than a complete edge defender. For a Saints team that could be looking to rework that spot as the years move on, he is the kind of name worth filing away now, even if the full answer on his value is still to come. [Read more 🡒]
