1967 New Orleans Saints season

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1967 New Orleans Saints season
Head coach Tom Fears
General manager Bert Rose
Owner John W. Mecom, Jr.
Home field Tulane Stadium
Results
Record 3–11
Division place 4th Capitol
Playoff finish did not qualify

The 1967 New Orleans Saints season was the inaugural season for the franchise. The team went 3–11, finishing in last place in the four-team NFL Eastern Conference Capitol Division.

Offseason

Expansion draft

The Saints made a splash in the expansion draft by selecting Green Bay Packers running back Paul Hornung. Lombardi was distraught when the Saints selected Hornung in the draft.[1] In later years, Hornung revealed that he spoke to Saints coach Tom Fears prior to the draft. Fears was a former assistant in Green Bay and Fears felt that Hornung would help sell tickets in New Orleans.[1] Several weeks later, the Saints also signed Packers running back Jim Taylor. Taylor had felt underpaid and underappreciated under Lombardi.[2] An examination at the Scripps Clinic in California found the severing of the fifth, sixth, and seventh verterbrae, and damaged nerve roots in the spinal cord of Hornung. It was decided that Hornung would retire and he would never play a game for the Saints.[2]

NFL draft

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1967 New Orleans Saints draft
Round Pick Player Position College Notes
1 26 Les Kelley  Linebacker Alabama
      Made roster    *   Made at least one Pro Bowl during career

[3]

Personnel

Staff

1967 New Orleans Saints staff
Front office
  • President – John W. Mecom, Jr.
  • Executive Vice President/General Manager – Bert Rose
  • Director of Player Personnel – Vic Schwenk

Head coaches

Offensive coaches

Defensive coaches



[4]

Regular season

Things couldn't have looked better for the Saints and their inaugural season. A 5–1 preseason record was followed by a 94-yard kickoff return for a touchdown by rookie John Gilliam to begin the 1967 season against the Los Angeles Rams. (There is a rumor in the annals of New Orleans Saints legends that following this play many fans allegedly heard another fan in Tulane Stadium shout out aloud "This is going to be the greatest football team in history!" – thus jinxing the Saints for their first 20 years of existence). Apparently the Rams were not informed of this declaration as they quickly recovered from the opening blow to win 27–13. The first-ever win for the Saints came in week 8 when rookie wide receiver Flea Roberts scored 3 touchdowns in a 31–24 victory over the Philadelphia Eagles. With additional triumphs over Atlanta and Washington the 3 wins for the year matched the most for an expansion team. Former Green Bay great Jim Taylor led the team with 390 yards rushing and 17th round pick rookie Danny Abramowicz from Xavier College led in receiving with 50 grabs for 721 yards and 6 touchdowns. Defensive back Dave Whitshell led the team as well as the NFL in interceptions with 10 steals—still a New Orleans Saint season record.

Schedule

Date Opponent Result Attendance
September 17 Los Angeles Rams L 13–27
80,879
September 24 Washington Redskins L 10–30
74,937
October 1 Cleveland Browns L 7–42
77,045
October 8 at New York Giants L 21–27
62,670
October 15 at Dallas Cowboys L 10–14
64,128
October 22 at San Francisco 49ers L 13–27
34,285
October 29 Pittsburgh Steelers L 10–14
68,911
November 5 Philadelphia Eagles W 31–24
59,596
November 12 Dallas Cowboys L 10–27
83,437
November 19 at Philadelphia Eagles L 28–41
60,751
November 26 Atlanta Falcons W 27–24
83,437
December 3 at St. Louis Cardinals L 20–31
41,171
December 10 at Baltimore Colts L 10–30
60,238
December 17 at Washington Redskins W 30–14
50,486

Game summaries

Week 14

1 2 3 4 Total
• Saints 0 7 9 14 30
Redskins 0 0 7 7 14

Standings

NFL Capitol
W L T PCT DIV CONF PF PA STK
Dallas Cowboys 9 5 0 .643 4–2 8–2 342 268 L1
Philadelphia Eagles 6 7 1 .462 3–2–1 5–4–1 351 409 W1
Washington Redskins 5 6 3 .455 2–3–1 4–5–1 347 353 L1
New Orleans Saints 3 11 0 .214 2–4 2–8 233 379 W1

Note: Tie games were not officially counted in the standings until 1972.

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 When Pride Still Mattered, David Maraniss,p. 407, Simon & Schuster, 1999, ISBN 978-0-684-84418-3
  2. 2.0 2.1 When Pride Still Mattered, David Maraniss,p. 408, Simon & Schuster, 1999, ISBN 978-0-684-84418-3
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External links