New Orleans Saints vs Tennessee Titans Match Player Stats (Dec 28, 2025)

NASHVILLE, Tenn. | December 28, 2025 | Week 17 | Nissan Stadium



Q1Q2Q3Q4Final
New Orleans Saints010101434
Tennessee Titans6143326
VenueNissan Stadium, Nashville, Tenn.
Attendance56,269
Weather71°F, 71% humidity, 14 mph wind
SurfaceGrass (outdoors)
Duration3:10
Vegas LineSaints -1.5
Over/Under39.5 (Over; combined: 60 pts)
BroadcastCBS

NASHVILLE, Tenn. — Tyler Shough walked off the field at Nissan Stadium with 333 passing yards, a career-best 142.7 passer rating, and his fourth consecutive win as the Saints’ starting quarterback. New Orleans trailed 20-10 at halftime, trailed again by six with under 13 minutes to play, then scored 14 unanswered points to beat the Tennessee Titans 34-26 on December 28, 2025.

The Saints outscored Tennessee 24-6 and outgained the Titans 331-152 yards in the second half. New Orleans finished the 2025 regular season at 6-10. Tennessee dropped to 3-13, finishing 1-8 at home.

Shough completed 22 of 27 passes for two touchdowns and no interceptions — a 142.7 passer rating, the best of his rookie year. Facing Cam Ward, the No. 1 overall pick of the 2025 NFL Draft, in the league’s third rookie quarterback head-to-head of the season, Shough improved his record as a starter to 5-3. Ward finished 21 of 40 for 251 yards, took four sacks, and lost a fumble that Chase Young returned 33 yards for a touchdown in the second quarter.

First-year Saints head coach Kellen Moore was measured but clear.

“He’s obviously having a special season. I know he doesn’t start the season as the starter, but just the way he’s handled himself through this whole journey, I think really, really special.”


Scoring Summary

QtrTimeTeamPlayNOTEN
Q19:10TENJoey Slye 50-yd FG03
Q14:31TENJoey Slye 38-yd FG06
Q212:57TENChig Okonkwo 43-yd pass from Cam Ward (Slye kick)013
Q25:53NOCharlie Smyth 56-yd FG313
Q23:51NOChase Young 33-yd fumble return (Smyth kick)1013
Q20:13TENElic Ayomanor 7-yd pass from Cam Ward (Slye kick)1020
Q310:34NOChris Olave 19-yd pass from Tyler Shough (Smyth kick)1720
Q37:20TENJoey Slye 28-yd FG1723
Q31:51NOCharlie Smyth 57-yd FG2023
Q412:50TENJoey Slye 58-yd FG2026
Q46:22NOKevin Austin Jr. 10-yd pass from Shough (Smyth kick)2726
Q43:44NOAudric Estime 32-yd rush (Smyth kick)3426

First Half: Tennessee in Control

Tennessee opened with back-to-back field goal drives, the first set up by a first-series Saints sack-fumble. Slye hit from 50 yards, then from 38, before Ward connected with tight end Chigoziem Okonkwo on a 43-yard touchdown pass early in the second quarter to push the lead to 13-0.

Chase Young cut it to 13-10 at 3:51 of the second quarter. He sacked Ward, stripped the ball, scooped it up, and returned it 33 yards for the score. That momentum lasted 98 seconds. A defensive pass interference penalty moved Tennessee to the New Orleans 7 late in the half, and Ward found Elic Ayomanor from seven yards out as time expired. Saints trailed 20-10 at the break.


Second Half: Saints Take the Game Over

Shough opened the third quarter on a nine-play, 74-yard drive that ended with a 19-yard touchdown pass to Chris Olave to make it 20-17. A Slye field goal pushed Tennessee back to 23-17, and Smyth answered from 57 yards to make it a three-point game heading into the fourth quarter.

Slye connected from 58 yards with 12:50 left to put Tennessee back up 26-20. Then Shough drove 80 yards in four plays. A 39-yard completion to Juwan Johnson moved past midfield. Olave’s 60-yard catch set up first-and-goal at the New Orleans eight. Kevin Austin Jr. caught the go-ahead touchdown from 10 yards out at 6:22.

Estime broke a 32-yard touchdown run up the middle with 3:44 remaining to make it 34-26. On Tennessee’s final possession, Cameron Jordan forced a Ward fumble as the clock hit zero.


Passing Stats

PlayerTeamCMPATTYDSAVGTDINTSACKSRTGPFF Grade
Tyler ShoughNO222733312.3202-13142.782.1
Cam WardTEN21402516.3204-2388.6

Per PFF, Shough’s adjusted completion rate held at 81.5% — every completion was catchable. Ward threw four throwaways and was hit as thrown twice. The Saints’ pass rush generated 40 total pressures against Ward’s offensive line; Tennessee’s generated 16 against Shough.


Rushing Stats

PlayerTeamCARYDSAVGTDLONG
Audric EstimeNO14946.7132
Tyler ShoughNO461.507
Evan HullNO231.503
Taysom HillNO300.001
Saints Total231034.5132
Tony PollardTEN18854.7025
Cam WardTEN2105.005
Chimere DikeTEN177.007
Kalel MullingsTEN144.004
Tyjae SpearsTEN620.301
Titans Total281083.9025

Estime forced seven broken tackles on 14 carries per Pro Football Reference. His 32-yard sealing touchdown run in the fourth quarter came on a pull-guard gap burst that he converted untouched through the second level.


Receiving Stats

PlayerTeamTGTRECYDSAVGTDLONGYAC
Chris OlaveNO11811914.916056
Juwan JohnsonNO449523.803937
Dante PettisNO435317.703240
Kevin Austin Jr.NO545213.013626
Moliki MatavaoNO22105.0065
Audric EstimeNO1144.0044
Saints Total272233315.1260
Chig OkonkwoTEN735518.314345
Chimere DikeTEN545513.80386
Van JeffersonTEN334615.30276
Elic AyomanorTEN74379.31140
Mason KinseyTEN113434.00340
Tony PollardTEN22105.001011
D. Martin-RobinsonTEN1199.0091
James Proche IITEN5155.0050
Gunnar HelmTEN2111.0015
Tyjae SpearsTEN21-1-1.004
Titans Total352125112.0243

Olave’s 60-yard catch late in the fourth set up Austin Jr.’s go-ahead score. Juwan Johnson earned the game’s top offensive PFF grade at 89.0, catching all four of his targets for 95 yards at 23.8 per reception.


Saints Defensive Stats

PlayerTOTSOLOSACKSTFLPDQB HTSFFTD
Alontae Taylor97004100
Kool-Aid McKinstry64002000
Danny Stutsman63000000
Demario Davis600.500100
Pete Werner53000000
Cameron Jordan521.010210
Chase Young431.510211
Quincy Riley43000000
Jonas Sanker33000000
Jonah Williams321.010100
Jonathan Bullard32020000
Nathan Shepherd32000000
John Ridgeway32000100
Justin Reid21011000
Davon Godchaux20000000

Alontae Taylor was targeted nine times and allowed a 79.4 passer rating against him, the best mark among Saints corners. He added four pass breakups. Cameron Jordan, PFF grade 86.7, had a sack, a forced fumble mid-game, and forced the final Ward fumble on the clock-expiring play.


Titans Defensive Stats

PlayerTOTSOLOSACKSTFLPDQB HTSPFF Grade
Cedric Gray129010080.4
Jeffery Simmons741.000191.9
Darrell Baker Jr.540000
Kendell Brooks540000
Kemon Hall440000
Jaylen Harrell430.5102
T’Vondre Sweat41000078.4
Cody Barton310000
Kaiir Elam220110
Amani Hooker220000
Arden Key210100
James Lynch100.5001

Jeffery Simmons earned a 91.9 PFF grade — the highest defensive mark on either team — and recorded a sack that gave him 10 on the season, a career high.


Special Teams

Kicking

PlayerTeamFGM-FGAPCTLONGXPM-XPAPTS
Charlie SmythNO2-366.7%574-410
Joey SlyeTEN4-4100.0%582-214

Slye went 4-for-4 including a 58-yarder in the fourth quarter to put Tennessee back in front 26-20. Smyth connected from 56 and 57 yards but missed an early 43-yarder that would have pulled New Orleans within three.

Punting

PlayerTeamNOYDSAVGLONG
Kai KroegerNO39632.041
Johnny HekkerTEN315150.361

Kick Returns

PlayerTeamNOYDSAVGLONGTD
Dante PettisNO49724.3320
Evan HullNO12929.0290
Chimere DikeTEN13333.0330

Punt Returns

PlayerTeamNOYDSAVGLONGTD
Dante PettisNO22211.0170
Chimere DikeTEN177.070

Chimere Dike Passes Tim Brown for the All-Time Rookie Record

Dike entered Sunday needing 75 all-purpose yards to break a record that had stood since 1988. He got there by halftime. His performance pushed his 2025 season total to 2,371 all-purpose yards, clearing Pro Football Hall of Famer Tim Brown’s 37-year-old rookie record of 2,317. The previous closest attempt before Dike was Danny Amendola’s 2,302 in 2009. Dike, a fourth-round pick selected 103rd overall, had already been named to the Pro Bowl as a return specialist earlier that week.


Full Team Stats

CategorySaintsTitans
Total Yards423336
Net Passing Yards320228
Rushing Yards103108
Total Plays5272
Yards Per Play8.14.7
First Downs1618
Passing 1st Downs1112
Rushing 1st Downs55
Penalty 1st Downs00
3rd Down Efficiency5/11 (45%)5/15 (33%)
4th Down Efficiency0/02/3
Red Zone (TD Conv.)2/21/3
Red Zone Scoring Eff.100%100%
Sacks-Yards Lost2-134-23
Turnovers11
Fumbles Lost11
Penalties-Yards6-844-35
Time of Possession28:1931:41
Total Pressures Allowed1640
EPA/Play (Offense)+0.235-0.188

The Saints ran 20 fewer plays and held the ball nearly four fewer minutes. They still outgained Tennessee by 87 yards and averaged 8.1 yards per play to the Titans’ 4.7. Tennessee actually scored on all three of its red zone trips — one touchdown and two field goals — but converting only one trip into a TD while New Orleans went 2-for-2 in the end zone was the difference.


PFF Grade Leaders

PlayerTeamPositionGradeSnaps
Jeffery SimmonsTENDI91.952
Juwan JohnsonNOTE89.039
Cameron JordanNOED86.738
Kevin ZeitlerTENG86.772
Audric EstimeNOHB84.441
Chris OlaveNOWR82.949
Tyler ShoughNOQB82.153
Cedric GrayTENLB80.454
T’Vondre SweatTENDI78.433

Down 20-10 at halftime, trailing again in the fourth quarter, the Saints kept finding an answer every time Tennessee pushed back. Audric Estime put it plainly after the final whistle.

“He’s a resilient guy, man. He’s a guy that I want to play for. He’s the guy that will make you run through a brick wall. Like you can see him stay in the pocket, take those hits and still pop up and deliver. He is a great leader.”

Tennessee interim head coach Mike McCoy was brief.

“We didn’t finish. Simple as that. We did not finish.”

The full Saints vs Titans player stats from Week 17 show the gap clearly: Shough completed 81.5% of his passes per PFF’s adjusted rate while Ward completed 61.8%, Shough’s offensive line allowed 16 pressures while Ward absorbed 40, and when New Orleans reached the red zone it came away with touchdowns both times. Ward had a final chance with the ball at the Saints 43 and two timeouts. Cameron Jordan ended it with a sack-fumble as the clock expired.

Jordan Berglund
Jordan Berglundhttps://dailynewsmagazine.co.uk/
Jordan Berglund started Daily News Magazine in January 2026 after spending the better part of a decade reporting for UK regional papers. He moved to London from Stockholm in 2018 and cut his teeth covering business, politics, entertainment, and breaking news across Europe, which gave him a front-row seat to how traditional newsrooms were struggling to adapt. He studied journalism at Uppsala University and later trained at the Reuters Institute, but most of what he knows about running a newsroom came from years of watching what worked and what didn't. He still reports on UK politics, celebrity news, sports, technology, and European affairs when he's not editing, and he's building Daily News Magazine around the idea that speed and accuracy don't have to be enemies.

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