Orchard Park, N.Y. -- This is becoming a familiar refrain from teams that shut down Buffalo Bills quarterback Tyrod Taylor.

In a 47-10 loss, Taylor had his worst outing of his career, completing nine of his 18 passes for 56 yards and an interception. The Bills' offense was an eyesore all afternoon, as the Saints limited the Bills to 198 yards on 45 offensive plays. Saints defensive end Cameron Jordan was blunt in talking about New Orleans' dominance after the game.

"I don't even know, what was there, 16 defensive snaps in the first half?" Jordan said. "I was contemplating running extra half gas just to keep my conditioning. I think we came out and did what we had to do. I knew that Tyrod Taylor would try and scramble and we pretty much eliminated that except we got a little hungry on some sacks and he spun out and did exactly what we knew he was going to do. We kept him in the pocket and made him a quarterback."

That's been a common thread for teams that slow Taylor down. Ravens defensive tackle Brandon Williams said "the game plan was to make him a quarterback" after Baltimore shut down the Bills to open the season in 2016. A week later, Jets safety Calvin Pryor said "you just have to keep him in the pocket and make him be a quarterback."

Taylor has managed to shred a few teams through the air this season. He was proficient as a passer against the Broncos and Buccaneers. He's still taking care of the football and making some big plays, but Sunday was his worst game as a pro. The Saints rolled coverage to Kelvin Benjamin after the first series of the game, and Taylor had no answer.

Despite a decent season from Taylor to this point, it's clear the view of him in other locker rooms hasn't changed drastically.