Tyler Shough is the obvious headliner in New Orleans, but he’s not the only Saints player staring at a make-or-break type of season in 2026.
The quarterback is the one carrying the biggest load. The Saints are banking on him to help drive them toward a five-year playoff drought ending, and Shough has leaned into that responsibility. He’s been organizing offseason workouts with teammates and stepping into more of a leadership role, all while trying to build on what was an electric rookie campaign.
“I’ve been able to learn over time just to be yourself,” Shough said. “To be a good leader, you have to serve others and you have to develop those relationships.”
That growth matters because Shough still has room to climb before he’s viewed as one of the league’s premier passers. One of the biggest issues last season was the sacks.
He was taken down on 8.7% of his dropbacks, and Pro Football Focus charged him with nine of his 31 sacks. The Saints have tried to help by adding veteran guard David Edwards and running back Travis Etienne in free agency to strengthen the run game and put Shough in fewer obvious passing situations.
But the quarterback has work to do, too. He’s spent this offseason talking about improving his footwork and getting through his progressions faster.
If that clicks, the upside is clear. Shough’s rookie calling card was his aggressiveness and his ability to fit the ball into tight windows, and he was statistically one of the league’s best on third down.
Keep that edge while trimming the mistakes, and the offense has a chance to really cook.
Kool-Aid McKinstry is another player who could take a major step. He’s already changed his jersey number more times than he’s played seasons, and now he’s back in No. 1 - the same number he wore when he became a star at Alabama and shut down an entire side of the field. The Saints would love to see that version show up again.
McKinstry has the résumé of a player on the rise, but the production still has to catch up. Pro Football Focus said he allowed the seventh-most yards among cornerbacks last season with 676, though he also gave up a passer rating of 101.1 on those plays, which ranked 74th.
On the brighter side, he came away with 3 interceptions and 12 pass breakups. With Alontae Taylor gone in free agency, McKinstry is now clearly New Orleans’ top corner, and this third year of his four-year contract could have real implications if extension talks come after the season.
Kelvin Banks looks like another Saints player ready for a jump. The first-round tackle nearly led all rookies in snaps before an ankle injury forced him out early in the season finale; even so, he still finished third among rookies with 1,066 snaps. His rookie year started with some growing pains - 28 pressures allowed in his first eight games - but he settled in and gave up only 18 in his final nine.
At 6-foot-5 and 315 pounds, Banks started using his size and athleticism more effectively as the year went on. Offensive line coach Brendan Nugent believes the leap could be coming soon.
“Rookies that play early like that usually take a pretty big jump from Year 1 to Year 2,” Brendan Nugent said. “And he’s on that path.
Everything I seen here from the offseason program, he’s figured out what worked, what we needed to tweak and he’s worked on it. We’ve worked on it.
And he keeps getting better.”
On the edge, Chase Young is carrying some real momentum after a 2025 season that finally turned pressure into production. He had 10 sacks in 12 games, his first double-digit sack season as a pro, and Cam Jordan said he thought Young could be capable of 20 sacks next.
That’s a steep number - Myles Garrett and T.J. Watt are the only rushers to reach it over the last five years - but Young’s last season made the idea sound a lot less far-fetched than it once did.
He’s still only 27, and the arrow is pointing up.
Then there’s Jonas Sanker, the third member of last year’s draft class to land on this list. The Saints have big plans for him in 2026, trusting him to replace Taylor at “STAR,” Brandon Staley’s inside-cornerback role. Sanker earned that opportunity after a surprising season in which he proved dependable once Will Blackmon’s season ended with an injury.
Safeties coach Terry Joseph said Sanker showed a “mental toughness” that should help him handle the switch.
“I think it's really hard to evaluate off of college film that this guy can (play the) STAR,” Joseph said. “I think you got to get him in your organization, in your building, and you gotta really get a feel for where that guy is mentally, how tough he is and how much can he handle, because a lot's on the plate of the star.”
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