The team opened 1992 at
Philadelphia, their first road opener in 11 years. The usually steely defense showed some chinks as Eagles running back
Herschel Walker rushed for more than 100 yards. Turnovers caused by the two great defenses kept the game close, but the Eagles won 15–13. Offensive struggles continued the next week vs.
Chicago, as the Bears led 6–0 at halftime. Big plays on both sides of the ball broke it open for the Saints, as quarterback
Bobby Hebert connected with
wide receivers
Eric Martin and
Wesley Carroll on touchdown passes of 52 and 72 yards, respectively. Two second half scores by the Saints' defense capped the 28–6 win – a fumble return by
Robert "Pig" Goff and an interception return by
Reggie Jones. Those plays set the tone for the defensive unit throughout 1992. A 10–7 win over
Atlanta followed and set up the annual battle with
the San Francisco 49ers. The 49ers had worn the title of "Team of the Decade" for the 1980s and were the primary stumbling block for an otherwise resurgent Saints franchise during Jim Mora's tenure as head coach. The Sunday night, prime-time audience saw a tight contest throughout. With the Niners leading 16–10, the Saints faced first-and-goal at the San Francisco 2-yard line. Saints
guard Derek Kennard was flagged for holding and, on the next play, a pass into tight coverage was picked off by 49ers
cornerback Eric Davis. It was the Saints' sixth consecutive home game against the Niners decided by seven points or less. The team rebounded with five straight wins and stood at 7–2 in the road game vs. the Niners. For three quarters, the Saints dominated the clock and scoreboard, leading 20–7 on two touchdown passes by Hebert. But the defense couldn't hold the lead as
Steve Young led San Francisco on two touchdown drives in the 4th quarter to win 21–20. Most impressive of the Saints' 12 wins in 1992 came over the next three weeks, when the team won three home games in a 10-day span. The first was a
Monday Night win over the
Washington Redskins, 20–3, keyed by a Hebert-to-
Early touchdown pass and stifling defense. Another eventual playoff team came to the Superdome the following Sunday, as
the Miami Dolphins took a 13–10 lead into the second half. A blindsiding takeaway from Dolphins
quarterback Dan Marino by speed-rushing
linebacker Pat Swilling led to Robert Goff's second fumble return touchdown of the season. Later, cornerback
Vince Buck returned an interception for a score as the Dolphins were defeated, 24–13. The third game in this trifecta was a Thursday night tilt against Atlanta. Despite several marches up and down the field – and a memorable rumble by
fullback Craig "Ironhead" Heyward that left Falcons
safety Scott Case staring up at the ring of lights high above the field – the Saints offense managed just five field goals by late in the 4th quarter to lead 15–14. It was another defensive touchdown that saved the game for the Saints, this time an interception by
Toi Cook. The Saints won two of their last three to finish 12–4, which was the second-best finish in team history.
Schedule Standings ==Postseason==