The Atlanta Falcons and Saints don’t need mythology—the calendar supplies it. Twice a year, the rivalry resets, and a handful of chapters still shape how every meeting feels at Mercedes-Benz Stadium or in New Orleans. Here’s the timeline that explains the temperature.
1978: “Big Ben Right” and the Stress Test Begins
Realignment made the teams annual foils; 1978 made them memorable. Late at the Superdome with the game slipping away, Steve Bartkowski heaved a designed tip—“Big Ben Right”—that pinballed to Alfred Jackson for a 20–17 win. Two weeks later in Atlanta, the Falcons did it again with a last-minute drive. The lesson that still travels: one snap can rewrite a month in this rivalry.
1991: Playoff Proof in the Superdome

The stakes went national in the NFC Wild Card: Atlanta 27, New Orleans 20 at the Superdome. Quarterback Chris Miller hit Michael Haynes for a late 61-yard winner; the Falcons claimed the only postseason meeting between the clubs to date. That night set a standard—late, leveraged throws will decide this matchup.
2006: “Rebirth” and a City’s Return
After Hurricane Katrina, the Saints’ first game back in the Superdome carried weight beyond football. A Steve Gleason blocked punt on the opening series turned into a touchdown, and New Orleans beat Atlanta 23–3. The moment, memorialized in bronze outside the dome, sits in the rivalry’s canon because it framed what the game meant to the city and because it happened against Atlanta.
2009–2012: Prime-Time Turns and Tight Margins

The Brees–Ryan era turned routine Sundays into network windows. Red-zone calls and pass-protection math decided most of these nights. The sequence repeated enough that fans on both sides learned the same script: convert third-and-medium, protect field position, and avoid the one mistake that flips a quarter.
2019: The Underdog That Ruined a Roll
Records didn’t matter on November 10, 2019. A 1–7 Atlanta team sacked Drew Brees six times, held New Orleans without a touchdown, and won 26–9 in the Superdome. For Falcons fans, it was a reminder that this rivalry ignores point spreads and form; for Saints fans, it was the game that forced a January path few expected.
What Endures
The personalities change—Deion Sanders to A.J. Terrell, Jamal Anderson to Bijan Robinson, Steve Smith Sr. to a new Carolina (and divisional) cast—but Falcons–Saints keeps the same demands: win first down, protect the middle third, and let stars tilt the night without forcing it. The smallest margins decide it because both sides know the other’s tricks.
