New Orleans Saints general manager Mickey Loomis said Monday there is a contract offer on the table for Cam Jordan, while making clear there is no offer out to Taysom Hill as the team’s offseason decisions continue to shape up around two of its longest-tenured players.
Jordan has talked publicly about leaving the door open to returning to New Orleans for a 16th season, and Loomis said the Saints are open to that possibility. But the veteran defensive end has not signed the offer, leaving one of the team’s most recognizable players still unsigned for the 2026 season. Hill is in a different spot. After the final 2025 home game, he delivered emotional words that may have been his last as a Saints player, and Loomis’ update made that uncertainty even more real by saying flatly there is no offer out to him.
The remarks came as Loomis also discussed Alvin Kamara, putting three key names at the center of a roster conversation that has already stretched into the spring. For New Orleans, the status of Jordan and Hill matters because both have been fixtures in the organization for years, and each represents more than just a contract decision. Jordan has been one of the defining players of the Saints era, while Hill has become a symbol of the team’s willingness to use a player in ways few clubs would.
That is what makes Monday’s update important now. The Saints are no longer speaking in hypotheticals about whether veterans might stay or go. Loomis gave a direct answer on Jordan’s contract and a direct answer on Hill’s lack of one, and those answers narrowed the field. Jordan can still come back, but only if he signs. Hill, for the moment, is being left outside the negotiating window entirely.
The friction point is that the feelings around both players point in different directions than the paperwork does. Jordan has talked about a return, and the team has left that door open. Hill’s emotional exit after the final 2025 home game suggested an ending, and Loomis did nothing Monday to reverse that impression. For now, the Saints have one offer in hand and one blank space where another could have been. What happens next will tell whether New Orleans is preserving the last chapter of one era or closing it for good.

