I had season tickets in 1967 and 68. Like many, I remember the John Gilliam kickoff return very well. We were in the north end zone just under the upper deck. Gilliam was running right towards us. When he reached about the Saint's 30 you could see he was in the open and going to go the distance. But after that, we couldn't see him anymore because everyone was jumping up and down in front of us... Great memory.....
andyr1313 The Saints had a tremendous postgame brawl with the Giants in New York in 1967. Too bad that's when the NFL used to censor what was shown on TV.
+major600 Also notice no names on the backs of the jerseys of either team. The NFL didn't start putting them on until 1970, the first year following the NFL-AFL merger. If I'm not mistaken, the AFL started putting the players' names on the jerseys from the beginning in 1960.
the AFL did start putting player names on the jerseys from the start of their league. they did it to build stars in their league and so the fans could get to know the players quicker.
some may find this interesting, but in the highlights from the Falcon game, number 8 making the touchdown catch for the Falcons was Hall of Famer Tommy McDonald, who made his name with the Eagles. Tommy was the last player in league history to play without a facemask.
Actually, the last player in the NFL to play without a facemask was Bill Hewitt, #56 with the 1950's Chicago Bears. Facemasks were mandatory with the start of the 1960's.
When I was in High School in San Diego, the Saints use to have their training camp at a college near the ocean in Point Loma, San Diego. I use to watch them train for at least a couple of summers.
I wish people were like they were back then. Imagine being able to go to New Orleans and not worry about being shot by some thug. I live near N.O. And we used to go to saints games as teenagers and never worried about anything.
Members of the 1967 Saints in the Pro Football Hall of Fame Doug Atkins Jim Taylor Paul Hornung (offseason, retired before season began) Tom Fears (coach, elected as player)
I wasn't around during that time, so I wouldn't know, but I think our best years were definitely in the Brees/Peyton era. Our second best era was the Dome Patrol era
Sorry guys I'm gonna have to disagree. I like to call this gold "bumblebee gold" bc of how similar the color is to a bee, but let me just tell you guys this color would just look very outdated on the Saints uniforms today in the 21st century.
I really like both retro and current, but I'd definitely prefer a melding of the two. There are elements of both that are very attractive. If you could go back throughout the years and pick this or that and tie it all together in just the right style/combo, they would be perfect!
8:27--linebacker Steve Stonebreaker, who started a Saints tradition of unique names. Later would come the likes of Jubilee Dunbar, D'Artagnian Martin, Tinker Owens, Hoyle Granger, Bivian Lee, Delles Howell, Elois Grooms, Derland Moore, Hokie Gajan, Hoby Brenner, and Jumpy Geathers.
Crazy what I’m about to say but you can’t make it up...I’m a life-long die hard fan of the saints (never been to a game though, SAD i know) but having never even known about Tulane stadium, my brain surmised a crazy dream of going to a home game and it was outside for some reason...I’m 25 and they’ve always played in the super dome so i found that peculiar. Nevertheless, I think I was always meant to be a fan!
Wow, they cheered the visitors in the first game! Has that happened since? And I have a feeling they had more fun back then. Now it's all corporate advertising and bs like that dominating everything. I hate how loud games have become between the ads and the stuff I hesitate to call music they play.
Hey, Man. First of all, congrats on your material, as it brings back quite the memories and it's been really helpful in filling some historical voids. And on that note, you think that it'd be possible to use some clips of it for educational, researching and custom purposes? It'd be greatly appreciated. Thanks.
The kickoff shown at 1:20 was not the opening kickoff of the inaugural game. That return was 94 yards and if you watch the video there was another player next to Gilliam when he received the kick. Nice video though.
Nice catch! However, it looks like only the beginning of the run was inserted in.. he actually took the ball in at the 6 or 7 yard line, not the goal line. But the rest of the run looks legit, all the way to where he tosses the ball into the stands while standing on the Saints shield logo.
I worked with a guy who attended that first New Orleans Saints season opener in 1967 against the Rams. Legend has it that after that Saints opening kickoff touchdown, there was so much pandemonium in the stand that the game was delayed 20 minutes. Anyone has the real story?
Love this living in Nashville tn Saturday morning cartoons nfl game of the week this week in pro football Saturday night creature feature sir Cecil creep wish I could go back thanks very much
3:50--looks like the Saints had a bench-clearer in their first ever game. They would have a near-riot at Yankee Stadium against the Giants a couple of weeks later.
Number 42 John Gilliam who took the opening kickoff for a touchdown. Is this the same John Gilliam who would later play for the Minnesota Vikings in 2 Super Bowls?
Yes, it is. Gilliam played with the Saints and Cardinals before joining the Vikings for the 1972-1975 seasons. Gilliam was an incredible receiver and kick returner (for example, besides the opening Saints return for a TD, Gilliam had a very long kickoff return, if not a TD, in the Vikings Super VIII defeat by the Dolphins, called back due to a Vikings penalty). In his writeup in the official book on the Vikings players voted the 50 best for the franchise's 50th anniversary in 2010, Gilliam is quoted as saying something like most of his life he loved to run so much, he would make every effort to run 8 miles a day.
ColoradoGreenHills Yeah. I was about 10 years old when he came to the Vikings, and one of the most underrated and perhaps underappreciated Viking. Tarkenton really liked him. I think Ahmad Rashad made people forget about him, but I never forgot about number 42.
I want to know if anyone remembers the noise in Tulane Stadium. I remember when the Saints made a good play, we would stomp our feet on the metal flooring and yell at the same time. It sounded like the whole stadium was going to fall down. When I got to the Superdome, it just didn't seem like enough noise for me. I tried slaming the seats up and down but no one caught on. That made a good pounding noise......Yes, I agree, this was the "hayday" of the NFL and AFL. It was called KILL YOUR APPONENT!! Eat your heart out Roger Goodell with your Bounty Gate BS. This was real football. They gave their bodies up for the game and loved it..... I can just about remember all of the players names that year and the year after. But if we had 4 wins we would call that a winning season. We've come a long way since then and got the respect we long deserved. I just hope our unfortunate changes will bring us a new fortune.
My Dallas Cowboys look so beautiful. WOW, that Cowboys game is really amazing. Here is the box score of the game. You will see Dan Reeves fumbled after hand off from #13 Jerry Rhome. Jerry was our third string QB. Meredith was injured and they must have pulled Morton or Landry was rotating Morton and Rhome at QB. In the box score Jerry is not a record of playing so they must have pulled Morton or he was injured and Jerry did not throw a pass. Thankfully GOOD OLE Billy Kilmer, the deadskin that he is fumbled. **ALSO.., they played the Cowboys twice this season and they used those highlights in this film as well. The Cowboys wore their blue jerseys against them at New Orleans. I so love those uniforms and do NOT believe the bullshit rumor of them being "bad luck" since they had a wining record in those jerseys. OMG my Cowboys blue uniforms were so amazing for that time. What makes me mad is this exciting finish for the game played in Dallas was NOT included in the Cowboys 1967 highlight film so now I have to save for my Cowboys video collection. Thanks for posting here are both Cowboys box scores. www.pro-football-reference.com/boxscores/196710150dal.htm and second game www.pro-football-reference.com/boxscores/196711120nor.htm
I went to the first game between the Cowboys and Saints in the Cotton Bowl and it was a mudd pit. I had a broken arm from a elementary school football injury and it was so rainy my cast dissolved down to the elbow.
Read the Atlanta paper after the Falcons' loss in New Orleans and the writer said the dejected silence in the Atlanta locker room was deafening. The Falcons would only tie the woebegone, defenseless Redskins and beat the Vikings in 1967. A Saints player said he wished they could get the Falcons every week and, needless to say, the Atlanta players cared nothing for it. THIS...is where the rivalry started; a bitter, last-minute defeat to an upstart team they were sure they'd beat, and then, the gloating. Next year in Atlanta Stadium (pre season, Falcons won it) a bench-clearing free-for-all erupted towards the end of the game because of a late hit. It was completely out of control. NFL Films has it somewhere in a piece called, "Your Father's Mustache." Today, the rivalry is total bullcrap, cooked up off the fumes of something that was ONCE real during THAT time with THOSE players from each team, and fanned around by phony PR departments from both teams. In the late 1960's, those guys on the Saints and the Falcons had a genuine dislike for one another. Back in the 80's a reporter asked a Falcon about the rivalry. He responded that the Saints were the same guys as the Falcons, except that they wore gold uniforms and to him, it was just another game.
Tommy Thomason bruh trust me I hate Atlanta more then any team in the league they play dirty and the whole 90’s playoffs with them trust me it’s more then u think
@@randompolishguy6476 May very well have been. Guys don't hang around with the same team for an entire career like they did back then, what with free agency and all. The early Saints/Falcons had a genuine distate for each other, but that vanished when those players moved on. Falcons' 62-7 pasting of the Saints in New Orleans in 1973 kind of rekindled the rivalry. In later years, long after that game, one of the '73 Falcons said, "We didn't run up the score, they were just sorry."
Never knew the N.F.L. had a player with the #0, saw some #00(Really "100" but of course, no room on a jersey for the three digits), but never knew there was #0 worn by any N.F.L./Professional football player.
ALLTHOUGH I AM NOT A SANTS FAN I LOVE THOSE OLD UNIFORMS YHEY WORE IN 1967 YES THAT IS THE SAME JONH GILLIAM HE PLAY FOR THE VIKINGS & AND THE ST LOUIS CSRDINALS TOO KENNETH O
in those days it was called sportsmanship, many teams did this, cowboys had the goal posted padding of the opponent...nfl should return to this kind of sportsmanship
They painted the endzone every game. One side for the opposing team. I remember being on the field during the week, watching the guy paint it with a spray gun.
@@EddieCalandro yeah right (respectfully )....they won't stand for the national anthem (in spite of the fact that the NFL emblem/sheild has the red, white and blue stars and bars on it).
Jeffrey T. Steptoe That's exactly why they did it. Even today many teams back east will choose white in September due to the heat and humidity. Come mid-October they wear dark jerseys to keep warm.
Ali Frazier No they didn't. Starting in the mid 60s both the AFL and NFL enacted a policy of allowing home team choice of color which persists to this day. It is still common as I mentioned for teams in the eastern half of the country to choose white in September then by mid-October you'll see them in dark jerseys.
The biggest mistake was trading the #1 pick in the whole draft for Gary Cuozzo, the Colts backup QB. Cuozzo was a pretty good QB, but was not going to do much with a expansion team. They could have had Bubba Smith, who would have anchored their defensive line for many years. Billy Kilmer was not bad for an expansion QB, and I am sure they could have traded for a serviceable QB like King Hill or Bob Berry for a mid-round draft pick.
Love those Saints uniform with the gold numbers and black outline very sharp 👌
Im From Delaware . I love My Saints .
AMAZING footage. I became a die hard Saints fan two years later in 1969 (I was 7).
Damn, first play of the franchise is a kickoff return touchdown
All downhill from there.
Are you back after 5 years
I love these types of videos from the "old NFL" days! The Saints original uniforms were pretty cool too. They should bring those back sometime.
Agreed
I had season tickets in 1967 and 68. Like many, I remember the John Gilliam kickoff return very well. We were in the north end zone just under the upper deck. Gilliam was running right towards us. When he reached about the Saint's 30 you could see he was in the open and going to go the distance. But after that, we couldn't see him anymore because everyone was jumping up and down in front of us... Great memory.....
+Ali Frazier: That's funny, I don't remember seeing you there.
You were too busy jumping up and down. Remember?
+Ali Frazier: Now I remember! Boy, those were the days! :)
How old r u 😂
Ah, the good old days- beat-up fields, fights, and one of the best football names ever- Steve Stonebreaker...
andyr1313 The Saints had a tremendous postgame brawl with the Giants in New York in 1967. Too bad that's when the NFL used to censor what was shown on TV.
I like the original Saints' uniforms more than any other they've ever had. I even like the oversize fleur-de-lis and striped socks.
major600 I prefer the larger and more squared numbers on the 1969 jerseys myself.
major600 But then ALL of the NFL and AFL teams had cool uniforms in 1967. Better uniforms than the ones of today.
threeby8887 Amen, to that!!! That's why I love when teams wear their throwbacks!!!
+major600 Also notice no names on the backs of the jerseys of either team. The NFL didn't start putting them on until 1970, the first year following the NFL-AFL merger. If I'm not mistaken, the AFL started putting the players' names on the jerseys from the beginning in 1960.
the AFL did start putting player names on the jerseys from the start of their league. they did it to build stars in their league and so the fans could get to know the players quicker.
some may find this interesting, but in the highlights from the Falcon game, number 8 making the touchdown catch for the Falcons was Hall of Famer Tommy McDonald, who made his name with the Eagles. Tommy was the last player in league history to play without a facemask.
Actually, the last player in the NFL to play without a facemask was Bill Hewitt, #56 with the 1950's Chicago Bears. Facemasks were mandatory with the start of the 1960's.
Detroit defensive back Wayne Rasmussen used to take off his face mask when holding for kickers. He did this until he retired in 1972
Wish I could relive those days all over again. So much better than today.
Are you serious?
WOW! thanks for this! I was at all of those first season home games.
I would have loved to be on Bourbon Street after that inaugural win. It must have been one helluva night back in 67.
Great video! Thanks for sharing!!!
Billy Kilmer was actually a half back at one time hard to believe looking at him in this clip.
Abramowicz was ballin' in that Steelers game.
Thanks for posting my friend
Been to numerous Tulane Stadium Saints game, and one Super Bowl, Steelers vs Vikings, 16-6 Steelers.
STEELERS MAKE IT TOUGH by APOLOGETIX a great football song
When I was in High School in San Diego, the Saints use to have their training camp at a college near the ocean in Point Loma, San Diego. I use to watch them train for at least a couple of summers.
Cal Western University.
I wish people were like they were back then. Imagine being able to go to New Orleans and not worry about being shot by some thug. I live near N.O. And we used to go to saints games as teenagers and never worried about anything.
I love the cool, cooool music on this video Daddy-O!
We may have not been so good back then, but since 2009 and 2010, we will become the dominant team! #IBleedBlackAndGold
Members of the 1967 Saints in the Pro Football Hall of Fame
Doug Atkins
Jim Taylor
Paul Hornung (offseason, retired before season began)
Tom Fears (coach, elected as player)
Tom Fears was playing against his old team. Deacon Jones, Merlin Olson, Tom Mack are Los Angeles Rams Hall of Fame members.
These were the best years of the Saints. Best years of the NFL. Best years of our lives!
BTW, good Sixties music at 17:10. Has that Herb Alpert & the Tijuana Brass sound.
"Best years" of the Saints, weren't they a first-year expansion team, did they not win the Super Bowl in 2010?
Love, Herb Alpert!!!
You must have pretty low standards considering how bad the Saints were in those days.
I wasn't around during that time, so I wouldn't know, but I think our best years were definitely in the Brees/Peyton era. Our second best era was the Dome Patrol era
Why can't they get the same color gold as this? The current uniforms don't look half as good as these.
I agree. Maybe it's the material they're made out of?
The helmets are not the same gold as the originals, either.
Sorry guys I'm gonna have to disagree. I like to call this gold "bumblebee gold" bc of how similar the color is to a bee, but let me just tell you guys this color would just look very outdated on the Saints uniforms today in the 21st century.
I really like both retro and current, but I'd definitely prefer a melding of the two. There are elements of both that are very attractive. If you could go back throughout the years and pick this or that and tie it all together in just the right style/combo, they would be perfect!
8:27--linebacker Steve Stonebreaker, who started a Saints tradition of unique names. Later would come the likes of Jubilee Dunbar, D'Artagnian Martin, Tinker Owens, Hoyle Granger, Bivian Lee, Delles Howell, Elois Grooms, Derland Moore, Hokie Gajan, Hoby Brenner, and Jumpy Geathers.
+threeby8887 Oh yeah, I forgot Monty Stickles.
+threeby8887 ....and Bum Phillips brought over Guido Merkens over from Houston.
Tim Warneking Thank you. I knew I was forgetting somebody.
Also: Happy Feller, Wimpy Winther, Remi Prudhomme, Elex Price, Emanuel Zanders, Toussaint Tyler, Jitter Fields, Toi Cook, Othello Henderson, Mike Stonebreaker (yes, Steve's son), Mercury Hayes, Ink Aleaga, Jerry Fontenot, La'Roi Glover, and Jake Delhomme.
Don't forget in the late '90s when they had a quarterback controversy between Billy Joe Tolliver and Billy Joe Hobert.
Monty Stickles was a good tough tight end.
Bring back that large logo on the helmets , They wear that jersey as a throwback now
Narrated by the great Don Criqui !
Amen! He was the best, wasn't he? I always loved listening to him call a game.
He must have been young.
The New Orleans Saints head coach was Hall of Fame wide receiver Tom Fears.
The team he played against was his old team.
Great uniforms on both teams.
Crazy what I’m about to say but you can’t make it up...I’m a life-long die hard fan of the saints (never been to a game though, SAD i know) but having never even known about Tulane stadium, my brain surmised a crazy dream of going to a home game and it was outside for some reason...I’m 25 and they’ve always played in the super dome so i found that peculiar. Nevertheless, I think I was always meant to be a fan!
Wow, they cheered the visitors in the first game! Has that happened since? And I have a feeling they had more fun back then. Now it's all corporate advertising and bs like that dominating everything. I hate how loud games have become between the ads and the stuff I hesitate to call music they play.
Hey, Man. First of all, congrats on your material, as it brings back quite the memories and it's been really helpful in filling some historical voids. And on that note, you think that it'd be possible to use some clips of it for educational, researching and custom purposes? It'd be greatly appreciated. Thanks.
The kickoff shown at 1:20 was not the opening kickoff of the inaugural game. That return was 94 yards and if you watch the video there was another player next to Gilliam when he received the kick. Nice video though.
Nice catch! However, it looks like only the beginning of the run was inserted in.. he actually took the ball in at the 6 or 7 yard line, not the goal line. But the rest of the run looks legit, all the way to where he tosses the ball into the stands while standing on the Saints shield logo.
Very good film work for the 60s
Tulane stadium was a blast
I wasn't Born this year and have grown up with the Saints and have been there Good and Bad
In the opening game the Rams made a rare appearance in the blue jerseys
The Rams switched to blue & yellow colors in 1973 to adapt to color TV which had become common.
@@tonyaltano7992No, it was because Carroll Rosenbloom became the owner about that time, he hated the just blue and whites
I worked with a guy who attended that first New Orleans Saints season opener in 1967 against the Rams. Legend has it that after that Saints opening kickoff touchdown, there was so much pandemonium in the stand that the game was delayed 20 minutes. Anyone has the real story?
I've never heard that legend before, so it sounds like a fish story.
I was there. I recall no delay.
Love this living in Nashville tn Saturday morning cartoons nfl game of the week this week in pro football Saturday night creature feature sir Cecil creep wish I could go back thanks very much
3:50--looks like the Saints had a bench-clearer in their first ever game. They would have a near-riot at Yankee Stadium against the Giants a couple of weeks later.
John Gilliam,Doug Atkins, Jim Taylor, & Bill Kilmer were all on this team...
Should have kept Gilliam.
@@theprofessor8589 Jazz Legend Al Hirt plays When The Saints Go Marching In. It is the fight song.
Chills
Number 42 John Gilliam who took the opening kickoff for a touchdown. Is this the same John Gilliam who would later play for the Minnesota Vikings in 2 Super Bowls?
Yes, it is. Gilliam played with the Saints and Cardinals before joining the Vikings for the 1972-1975 seasons. Gilliam was an incredible receiver and kick returner (for example, besides the opening Saints return for a TD, Gilliam had a very long kickoff return, if not a TD, in the Vikings Super VIII defeat by the Dolphins, called back due to a Vikings penalty). In his writeup in the official book on the Vikings players voted the 50 best for the franchise's 50th anniversary in 2010, Gilliam is quoted as saying something like most of his life he loved to run so much, he would make every effort to run 8 miles a day.
ColoradoGreenHills Yeah. I was about 10 years old when he came to the Vikings, and one of the most underrated and perhaps underappreciated Viking. Tarkenton really liked him. I think Ahmad Rashad made people forget about him, but I never forgot about number 42.
+Bill Brown YOU MEAN BOBBY MOORE NOT AHMAD RASHAD! THAT WAS HIS NAME WHEN HE CAME INTO THE NFL!
When did Bobby Moore changed his name to Ahmad Rashad? It had to be before he became a Viking.
I THINK HE WAS WITH THE VIKINGS WHEN HE CHANGED HIS NAME!
That kick return was the very first play in the saints history how ironic considering their history.
My brother was original member of the team #66
Now hanging on
He gave me abramowitz' cleats
I want to know if anyone remembers the noise in Tulane Stadium. I remember when the Saints made a good play, we would stomp our feet on the metal flooring and yell at the same time. It sounded like the whole stadium was going to fall down. When I got to the Superdome, it just didn't seem like enough noise for me. I tried slaming the seats up and down but no one caught on. That made a good pounding noise......Yes, I agree, this was the "hayday" of the NFL and AFL. It was called KILL YOUR APPONENT!! Eat your heart out Roger Goodell with your Bounty Gate BS. This was real football. They gave their bodies up for the game and loved it..... I can just about remember all of the players names that year and the year after. But if we had 4 wins we would call that a winning season. We've come a long way since then and got the respect we long deserved. I just hope our unfortunate changes will bring us a new fortune.
Absolutely was deafening
Loudest I've ever heard.
@@williamsanderson4514 👍
Don Criqui was one of the best announcers.
You can trust your car to the man who wears the star...
Don Criqui must have been young when he narrated this film. I don't think he was even 30 years old.
The year and city I was born!
Billy Kilmer on the Saints?I didn't know.
My Dallas Cowboys look so beautiful. WOW, that Cowboys game is really amazing. Here is the box score of the game. You will see Dan Reeves fumbled after hand off from #13 Jerry Rhome. Jerry was our third string QB. Meredith was injured and they must have pulled Morton or Landry was rotating Morton and Rhome at QB. In the box score Jerry is not a record of playing so they must have pulled Morton or he was injured and Jerry did not throw a pass. Thankfully GOOD OLE Billy Kilmer, the deadskin that he is fumbled. **ALSO.., they played the Cowboys twice this season and they used those highlights in this film as well. The Cowboys wore their blue jerseys against them at New Orleans. I so love those uniforms and do NOT believe the bullshit rumor of them being "bad luck" since they had a wining record in those jerseys. OMG my Cowboys blue uniforms were so amazing for that time. What makes me mad is this exciting finish for the game played in Dallas was NOT included in the Cowboys 1967 highlight film so now I have to save for my Cowboys video collection. Thanks for posting here are both Cowboys box scores. www.pro-football-reference.com/boxscores/196710150dal.htm and second game www.pro-football-reference.com/boxscores/196711120nor.htm
I went to the first game between the Cowboys and Saints in the Cotton Bowl and it was a mudd pit. I had a broken arm from a elementary school football injury and it was so rainy my cast dissolved down to the elbow.
Read the Atlanta paper after the Falcons' loss in New Orleans and the writer said the dejected silence in the Atlanta locker room was deafening. The Falcons would only tie the woebegone, defenseless Redskins and beat the Vikings in 1967. A Saints player said he wished they could get the Falcons every week and, needless to say, the Atlanta players cared nothing for it. THIS...is where the rivalry started; a bitter, last-minute defeat to an upstart team they were sure they'd beat, and then, the gloating. Next year in Atlanta Stadium (pre season, Falcons won it) a bench-clearing free-for-all erupted towards the end of the game because of a late hit. It was completely out of control. NFL Films has it somewhere in a piece called, "Your Father's Mustache."
Today, the rivalry is total bullcrap, cooked up off the fumes of something that was ONCE real during THAT time with THOSE players from each team, and fanned around by phony PR departments from both teams. In the late 1960's, those guys on the Saints and the Falcons had a genuine dislike for one another.
Back in the 80's a reporter asked a Falcon about the rivalry. He responded that the Saints were the same guys as the Falcons, except that they wore gold uniforms and to him, it was just another game.
Tommy Thomason bruh trust me I hate Atlanta more then any team in the league they play dirty and the whole 90’s playoffs with them trust me it’s more then u think
@@randompolishguy6476 May very well have been. Guys don't hang around with the same team for an entire career like they did back then, what with free agency and all. The early Saints/Falcons had a genuine distate for each other, but that vanished when those players moved on.
Falcons' 62-7 pasting of the Saints in New Orleans in 1973 kind of rekindled the rivalry. In later years, long after that game, one of the '73 Falcons said, "We didn't run up the score, they were just sorry."
Im a real Saints fan And I actually dont hate Atlanta. It is what it is.oh well everyone isnt the same lol
I hate the Panthers and The Buccanneers!
Even tho The Falcons are our rival but still. I cant hate a team and city that a lot of my folks are from.
I've seen this on ESPN classic
Were they Tulane or new Orleans
Played in Tulane Stadium until they moved to the Superdome in 1975
We are told that players now days are bigger,stronger and faster I don't think so.
Starting in 2000 they ruined the New O. helmet logo making the emblem smaller & added another lined layer around it.
Who wore no(0) for New orleans?
Obert Logan from Dallas Cowboys in the expansion draft
Can't do much better than their first ever play
Never knew the N.F.L. had a player with the #0, saw some #00(Really "100" but of course, no room on a jersey for the three digits), but never knew there was #0 worn by any N.F.L./Professional football player.
Jeffrey T. Steptoe Jim Otto #00 Kenny Burroughs who played 1 yr with the Saints also #00 only 2 i'm aware of
Jeffrey T. Steptoe Obert Logan wore #0 with the 1967 Saints. His nickname, fittingly, was the BIG O.
+Jeffrey T. Steptoe Redskin running back Johnny Oslewski (I think that's the correct spelling) wore #0 in the late 1950s and early '60s.
+threeby8887 Yes, and I believe Jim Otto of the Raiders also wore a "double zero' on his jersey.
Don't forget Ken Burroughs who wore "00" with the Houston Oilers.
ALLTHOUGH I AM NOT A SANTS FAN I LOVE THOSE OLD UNIFORMS YHEY WORE IN 1967 YES THAT IS THE SAME JONH GILLIAM HE PLAY FOR THE VIKINGS & AND THE ST LOUIS CSRDINALS TOO KENNETH O
The saints looked like the University of purdue.
It was a college atmosphere back then
Even the names of the players back then were cooler.
Ernie,the wheell,Wheelright,from the Giants
Third and short...."give it to da wheel"!! I was a kid and remember.
Why did they have the visiting team's name in one of the endzones?
in those days it was called sportsmanship, many teams did this, cowboys had the goal posted padding of the opponent...nfl should return to this kind of sportsmanship
Ryan Bohannon Just what the N.F.L. used to do, a practice I did not like cause it's hard to tell whom the home an visiting teams are.
They painted the endzone every game. One side for the opposing team. I remember being on the field during the week, watching the guy paint it with a spray gun.
@@EddieCalandro yeah right (respectfully )....they won't stand for the national anthem (in spite of the fact that the NFL emblem/sheild has the red, white and blue stars and bars on it).
LOT OF LATE HITS IN THE 60'S
I/2 a gigabyte for a 30 minute program..interesting.
The wins were presented in wrong order , Redskins win was last not the Falcons
Wonder why the Saints in the day wore their white jerseys at home, possibly the humidity of the south?
Jeffrey T. Steptoe All teams wore white at home back then......
Jeffrey T. Steptoe That's exactly why they did it. Even today many teams back east will choose white in September due to the heat and humidity. Come mid-October they wear dark jerseys to keep warm.
Ali Frazier No they didn't. Starting in the mid 60s both the AFL and NFL enacted a policy of allowing home team choice of color which persists to this day. It is still common as I mentioned for teams in the eastern half of the country to choose white in September then by mid-October you'll see them in dark jerseys.
The Saints didn't wear their black jerseys at home until 1969. They went back to wearing white at home from 1971 through mid-1975.
@@3243_ White at home for one game against Houston in 1976 and all of 1981 and 1982
I don't think Jim Taylor played the whole season.
He did, actually. He retired in the 1968 season, before the regular season started.
The Philadelphia Eagles
Don Criqui. Awesomeness.
Was he the Voice of the Saints at that time?
who dat beat them saints!!
"Gumbo"(LOL).
WHO DAT
yes the saints foolishly traded him to st. louis, he ended up in minnesota, they also foolishly traded ken burrough to the oilers
The biggest mistake was trading the #1 pick in the whole draft for Gary Cuozzo, the Colts backup QB. Cuozzo was a pretty good QB, but was not going to do much with a expansion team. They could have had Bubba Smith, who would have anchored their defensive line for many years. Billy Kilmer was not bad for an expansion QB, and I am sure they could have traded for a serviceable QB like King Hill or Bob Berry for a mid-round draft pick.
eddie gabriel Yeah, but my Oilers made up for that a decade later by firing Bum Phillips and you guys got him.
Now they got trashy rap music. Disgusting. America is doomed.
My dad and I had season tickets from day one till they traded Archie and he gave up on them
Why would a team that had such great uniforms go to that godawful black from neck to shoes "leotard" look of today?
Every team has a leotard look in 2025
@@michaelleroy9281 Yeah, I think it sucks. The Saints won the SB in gold pants and I don't know if they've worn them since.