The ultimate dream is to win a Super Bowl
Jordan recorded 10.5 sacks last season and ranks 17th all-time with 132.0 career sacks, needing eight double-digit seasons to crack top 10. At 37, Jordan believes his Hall of Fame credentials are already secured through All-Pro selections and Pro Bowl appearances across his career.
- Cam Jordan, 37, re-signed with Saints for expected final season
- 132.0 career sacks, 17th all-time; needs one more double-digit season to crack top 10
- 10.5 sacks in 2025 despite playing unfamiliar two-point stance
- Drafted 24th overall in 2011 from Cal; never left New Orleans
Saints defensive end Cam Jordan re-signed for what he expects to be his final NFL season, aiming for a Super Bowl championship and Hall of Fame validation after 16 years of elite play.
Cam Jordan is 37 years old, and he has made peace with the idea that this will be his last season in professional football. The New Orleans Saints defensive end re-signed with the team for 2026 after spending the offseason thinking hard about what he still wanted from the game. The answer, he decided, was singular: a Super Bowl ring.
Jordan came out of Cal in 2011 as the 24th overall pick and has never left Louisiana. For 16 seasons, he has been a Saints fixture—a pass rusher who knows his job and does it with precision. Last year, he recorded 10.5 sacks while playing in an unfamiliar two-point stance, a position that raised eyebrows around the league but clearly worked. He ranks 17th all-time in sacks with 132.0, and if he can string together one more season of double-digit sacks, he'll crack the top 10. But the statistics, at this point, feel almost beside the point.
What drives Jordan now is not accumulation but completion. He has been selected to multiple Pro Bowls. He has earned All-Pro honors. He has built a body of work that, by his own assessment and by most reasonable measures, already qualifies him for the Pro Football Hall of Fame. He could write his Canton speech today and be confident in its substance. The missing piece—the one thing that has eluded him across 16 years of elite play—is a championship.
"The ultimate dream is to win a Super Bowl," Jordan told Fox News Digital. He spoke about how that dream takes root in childhood, how it becomes the measure by which players evaluate their own success. It is the ultimate team accomplishment, he said, and it is what separates a great career from a complete one in the eyes of history.
Jordan knows his role on the Saints defense under first-year head coach Kellen Moore and defensive coordinator Brandon Staley. He can do whatever the team needs. He feels good physically, better even for not participating in the offseason training activities. The fire still burns. He still believes he can make a difference in the Caesars Superdome, the only home he has known as a professional.
At 37, with 16 seasons behind him and one ahead, Jordan is clear-eyed about what this final chapter means. He is not chasing individual accolades anymore. He is chasing the thing that has mattered since he was a kid watching the greats play the game. Everything else—the Pro Bowls, the All-Pro selections, the Hall of Fame certainty—is already written. What remains is whether his last season will include the words "Super Bowl champion" in his story.
Citações Notáveis
The ultimate dream is to win a Super Bowl. You go into childhood, coming out of childhood, like, 'Man, I want to be just like the greats.' For some reason, we accumulate the idea of success in football to winning a Super Bowl because it's the ultimate team sport.— Cam Jordan
Personally speaking, I've done it all. All-Pro, Pro Bowls. Hell, I put together a Pro Bowl-esque season last year.— Cam Jordan
A Conversa do Hearth Outra perspectiva sobre a história
You've had an extraordinary career by any measure. Why does the Super Bowl still matter so much?
Because it's the one thing that doesn't belong to you yet. All the individual honors—they're yours. But a championship is different. It's the thing you can't earn alone.
Do you think the Saints can actually win it this year?
He believes they have potential. That's what he said. Whether belief becomes reality is another question entirely.
At 37, is this about legacy, or is it about something else?
It's about finishing the sentence. He's spent 16 years writing a story. He wants to know how it ends.
What if it doesn't happen?
Then he walks away knowing he did everything he could. But he's not thinking about that yet.