It has been since late in the 2022 season, a span of 48 games, since the New Orleans Saints had a three-game winning streak. The Saints ended that with a 29-6 win over the New York Jets in the Superdome on Sunday. It happened with New Orleans setting season bests in offensive yardage (412), passing yards (328), rushing yards allowed (64), recorded sacks (8), and points scored.

Yes, it was against the Jets. But the Saints put on their most dominant performance of the season in improving their record to 5-10. It took a combination of their veterans and young emerging stars to do it. This is reflected in our Game Ball awards.

Cameron Jordan (age 36)

Jordan continued his age-defying season with 2 sacks against the Jets in the first half. That gives him 8.5 sacks on the year, his most since 2022. In the process, he ironically passed up Saints Hall of Famer Rickey Jackson with 130 career sacks and in 17th place in NFL history for official sacks. Jordan made an impact throughout the game against the Jets, stopping three screens or running plays at the line of scrimmage. Fifty-one different quarterbacks have gone down to Jordan, but he’s shown throughout the season that he’s not done yet.

Taysom Hill (age 35)

Taysom Hill has not played anywhere close to level we’re used to seeing this season. With the Saints without their top three running backs and a starting wide receiver on Sunday, Hill stepped up for by far his best game of the year. He bounced back from a lost fumble on the game’s second play and getting stuffed on a fourth and short to be the only semblance of a running game the Saints were able to muster.

Hill led New Orleans with 42 rushing yards, including a key fourth down conversion on a fake punt. He also caught 4 passes for 36 yards and had an 18-yard touchdown reception taken off the board because of penalty. For good measure on the next drive, Hill would throw a 28-yard touchdown pass to cap the victory. Hill had a career-high 17 touches in this game, accounting for a season-best 116 offensive yards. Coming into this game, Hill had only 95 total offensive yards in 10 contests. He may not be the constant threat he once was, but Taysom Hill showed that he can still come through when the Saints call upon him.

Charlie Smyth (age 24)

Until late, Smyth was the source of the only points the Saints were able to put on the board. He converted 3 of 4 field goals in the first half to give New Orleans a 9-6 lead at the break, with his only miss being a 61-yard attempt that had plenty of distance. Smyth added two more field goals in the second half to keep the pressure on New York. His 5 of 6 day left Smyth 9 of 11 in field goal attempts in his four games since replacing Blake Grupe.

Tyler Shough (26) and Chris Olave (25)

Olave led all players with 10 receptions for 148 yards, scoring 2 touchdowns. It was a career-high in receiving yards and matched his best in catches and scores, as Olave surpassed 1,000 receiving yards for the third time in four seasons. Remember that this was an offense without Alvin Kamara, Devaughn Vele, Devin Neal, and Kendre Miller. Olave stepped up to be the unit’s primary source of production. It’s something that primary weapons do, a question and a doubt that has hovered over Olave throughout his career.

Rookie quarterbacks Cam Ward, Jaxon Dart, Shadeur Sanders, and Brady Cook have a combined 6 victories in 31 combined starts. Tyler Shough now has 4 wins in seven starts, which also bests Archie Manning for the most wins by a rookie quarterback in Saints history. Shough threw for 308 yards against the Jets, completing 32 of 49 passes with a touchdown and no interceptions. He became the first New Orleans rookie to pass for 300 yards ever and also became the first Saints 300-yard passer in 34 games, while surpassing Spencer Rattler’s franchise rookie record for passing yards in a season.

More than just the numbers, we saw Shough take another important step in his development today. With the Saints having no running game, everyone knew it would be entirely on Shough for any offensive success. He would have to do it behind a poor offensive line and without the team’s top three running backs and a starting receiver. Shough did exactly that with his best statistical performance in yet another outing that showed that he might just be a franchise quarterback for the Saints to build around.