New Orleans, Louisiana – Jordyn Tyson stepped out of his car into the warm, humid air of an early May morning. A faint mist hovered under the glow of streetlights outside the Saints’ training facility near the Caesars Superdome.
The team is currently in the early stages of the 2026 Offseason Program, a voluntary yet critical phase where chemistry and conditioning begin to take shape. Tyson, a promising new addition, wanted to absorb everything about his new environment as quickly as possible.

“I just wanted to feel the energy,” Tyson said quietly. “It doesn’t take long to realize — New Orleans isn’t just football. It’s culture. It’s rhythm. It’s something you live.”
Arriving well before sunrise, Tyson expected to be one of the first inside. He checked in at exactly 4:12 AM, anticipating silence and an empty building.
But the lights were already on.
The sound of weights echoed through the gym, cutting through the stillness. And then he saw him — Alvin Kamara.
Kamara, one of the most recognizable stars in the league and a cornerstone of the New Orleans Saints offense, was already deep into his workout. Alone. Locked in. Every rep controlled, every movement deliberate. Sweat dripped steadily under the bright lights.
“I froze for a second,” Tyson admitted. “You hear about the highlights, the touchdowns, the way he makes defenders miss. But seeing him here, at 4 in the morning, putting in that kind of work with nobody around… it’s different.”
There was no music, no cameras, no audience — just effort. Pure, relentless effort.
Kamara wasn’t performing. He was preparing.
Tyson stood there, taking it all in. No speeches. No hype. Just an example.
And in that moment, everything made sense.
This was the “Saints Way.”
It wasn’t about the cheers inside the Superdome on Sundays. It was about the unseen hours. The discipline. The commitment to show up before anyone else and outwork everyone.
Without saying a word, Tyson walked over, grabbed a set of weights, and joined in.
Soon, the only sounds in the room were the steady rhythm of iron and the synchronized breathing of two players chasing the same standard.
That early morning session taught Tyson more about the Saints than any meeting room ever could. He saw why Kamara is respected — not just for his talent, but for his consistency.
He wasn’t just a star.
He was the standard.
Tyson felt the weight of that realization immediately. This wasn’t just a roster spot. This was a responsibility.
And the message was clear: if he wanted to earn his place in New Orleans, he had to match that same quiet intensity.
Because at 4:12 AM, inside an empty facility near the Superdome, Jordyn Tyson finally understood what it truly means to be a Saint.