NFL team season
The 1975 New Orleans Saints season was the Saints ninth season and their first in the newly opened Louisiana Superdome . Despite the new stadium, they failed to match their 1974 output of 5–9, winning only two games and tying the San Diego Chargers for the league’s worst record.
Coach John North , who was hired four games into the 1973 exhibition season , was fired following a 38–14 road loss to the Los Angeles Rams in the sixth game. Director of Player Personnel Ernie Hefferle took over for the final eight games. His only win was his first game in charge, a 23–7 victory at home over the hated Atlanta Falcons .
The Saints were winless on the road for the fourth time in six seasons, leaving them 3–36–3 away from New Orleans since 1970.
The Saints wore white pants for the first time after wearing old gold pants for their first eight seasons. After 1975, New Orleans did not wear white jerseys and white pants again until introducing their Color Rush set in 2016 .
Offseason
NFL draft
[ 1]
Personnel
Staff
1975 New Orleans Saints staff
Front office
President – John W. Mecom, Jr.
Executive Vice President – Richard F. Gordon, Jr.
Vice President of Administration – Harry Hulmes
Business Manager and Treasurer – Eddie Jones
Head coaches
Offensive coaches
Defensive coaches
Special teams coaches
[ 2]
Roster
Regular season
Schedule
Week
Date
Opponent
Result
Record
Venue
Attendance
1
September 21
at Washington Redskins
L 3–41
0–1
RFK Stadium
54,414
2
September 28
Cincinnati Bengals
L 0–21
0–2
Louisiana Superdome
52,531
3
October 5
at Atlanta Falcons
L 7–14
0–3
Atlanta–Fulton County Stadium
29,444
4
October 12
Green Bay Packers
W 20–19
1–3
Louisiana Superdome
51,371
5
October 19
at San Francisco 49ers
L 21–35
1–4
Candlestick Park
39,990
6
October 26
at Los Angeles Rams
L 14–38
1–5
Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum
54,723
7
November 2
Atlanta Falcons
W 23–7
2–5
Louisiana Superdome
49,342
8
November 9
at Oakland Raiders
L 10–48
2–6
Oakland–Alameda County Coliseum
51,267
9
November 16
Minnesota Vikings
L 7–20
2–7
Louisiana Superdome
52,765
10
November 23
San Francisco 49ers
L 6–16
2–8
Louisiana Superdome
40,328
11
November 30
at Cleveland Browns
L 16–17
2–9
Cleveland Municipal Stadium
44,753
12
December 7
Los Angeles Rams
L 7–14
2–10
Louisiana Superdome
39,958
13
December 14
at New York Giants
L 14–28
2–11
Shea Stadium
40,150
14
December 21
Chicago Bears
L 17–42
2–12
Louisiana Superdome
33,371
Note: Intra-division opponents are in bold text.
Standings
References
External links
Franchise Stadiums Culture Lore Rivalries Wild card berths (5) Division championships (9) Conference championships (1) League championships (1) Retired numbers Ring of Honor Current league affiliations