New Orleans Saints The
New Orleans Saints selected Rowe in the second round of the
1967 NFL/AFL draft (53rd overall). The Saints were an expansion team, and 1967 was their first season in the NFL. Rowe played for four seasons with the Saints (1967-70), starting every game each of those four seasons. He was the Saints left defensive tackle in 1967, and came in tied for fourth in the AP Defensive
Rookie-of-the-Year voting, behind future Pro Football Hall of Famers
Lem Barney and
Alan Page, and Pro Bowl safety
Rick Volk.
United Press International (UPI) named him to its All-Rookie team. He had 5.5
quarterback sacks as a rookie, second on the team to future Hall of Fame defensive end
Doug Atkins's 9.5 sacks. Right defensive tackle
Mike Tilleman had two sacks. The team ended its first season with a 3–11 record. Rowe suffered torn hand ligaments playing against fellow rookie
Dick Hart of the Philadelphia Eagles in Week 10, and had surgery the day after the 1967 season ended. Rowe and Tilleman switched positions in 1968, and Rowe continued to start every Saints game at right defensive tackle from 1968 to 1970; with Tilleman starting the majority of Saints games at left defensive tackle over that same time. In 1968, Rowe again had 5.5 sacks, and was selected for the first, and only time, to the
Pro Bowl. He developed bone chips in his elbow that required post-season surgery again. Rowe had 4.5 sacks in 1969, but only one in 1970. In August 1970,
Tom Fears, who had coached the Saints since their inception, was inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame. At mid-season, Fears reached an agreement with the
Atlanta Falcons'
Norm Van Brocklin to trade Rowe for a Falcons' running back to fill Fears’s perceived need for a better running back on the Saints. Fears had always treated Rowe fairly and explained his reasoning to Rowe directly; even telling Rowe that Van Brocklin thought the Falcons were getting the better deal. However, Saints owner
John Mecom intervened and stopped the trade because he did not want to lose an established young player. Fears protested and Mecom replaced Fears with
J. D. Roberts as head coach. Rowe understood the possibility of being traded was part of playing professional football, a fact that had to be accepted; and had no personal aversion to the trade.
Houston Oilers and New England Patriots Despite Mecom having told Rowe that Rowe's future was with the Saints, Five months later, the Oilers traded for Tilleman and by the Oilers' late summer training camp it appeared that the two tackles would be reunited on the Oilers starting defensive line once the 1971 season started. However, Rowe would never play a regular season game for the Oilers. Less than two weeks before the season started, Oilers offensive lineman
Elbert Drungo suffered a serious knee injury. Within days, on September 6, the Oilers traded Rowe to the
New England Patriots for offensive lineman
Tom Funchess. Rowe observed "'They say you're a piece of furniture to be moved around when you play football and I guess that's the way it is'". Drungo came back to start 11 games for the Oilers in 1971, and Funchess started in only two. It has also been reported that the Oilers traded Rowe because of concerns over a bad back. After being traded, he had back surgery and went on to play as a starter for the Patriots. 3–11 under Mazur and
Phil Bengston in 1972; and 5–9 under
Chuck Fairbanks in 1973. He played at left tackle for the Patriots, starting nine games in 1971, 10 games in 1972 and all 14 games in 1973. == San Diego Chargers, Oakland Raiders, Baltimore Colts ==