New Orleans Saints: This franchise is family (1 Viewer)

  • Admin
1547285778814.png
Saintsreport Volunteers at a "Rock 'n Bowl" fundraiser for the "Hammer 'N Nails" refurbishing project

By Bill Randall | Communities Digital News

NEW ORLEANS: The inaugural season for the New Orleans Saints was 1967. Once the news was official that New Orleans was getting their own NFL team, some feared that the local area may not be able to sustain enough revenue with ticket sales. That fear was quickly dispelled once ticket sales were made public.

The Saints first home game, in Tulane Stadium (with a seating capacity of over 80,000) was sold out in less than a week.

The team’s principal owner was oil tycoon John W. Mecom Jr., who chose the official Saints’ team colors to be Black and Gold because his commodity “OIL,” was widely referred to as Black Gold. New Orleans and Gulf Coast region of New Orleans embraced the franchise and had high hopes.
Although the expansion team was very competitive, it failed to produce a winning record for the first 20 years.

The team came close achieving its first winning season after Mecom personally recruited and brought in coach Owid Allen (O.A.) “Bum” Phillips as Head Coach. Bum instilled a winning culture in the team, and also built the team to be more competitive through solid choices in the NFL draft. The team was on the cusp of a winning season AND the NFL playoffs as it entered the final week of the 1984 season.

The Saints had a lead late in the 4th quarter, but could not hold off a comeback by the Los Angeles Rams, fell short, and missed the playoffs.

Owner John Mecom was so discouraged that he opted to sell the team the following year, in 1985 after that disappointing loss....

Full Story - commdiginews.com
 
Andrus Whitewing

Andrus Whitewing

Admin

Create an account or login to comment

You must be a member in order to leave a comment

Create account

Create an account on our community. It's easy!

Log in

Already have an account? Log in here.

Users who are viewing this thread

    Back
    Top Bottom