Willie Roaf
COLLEGE: Louisiana Tech
POSITION: Offensive tackle
BORN: April 18, 1970 in Pine Bluff, Arkansas
JOINED SAINTS: NFL draft: 1993 / Round: 1 / Pick: 8
YEARS WITH SAINTS: 1993–2001
Willie Roaf's Career Background
Willie Roaf was elected to 11 Pro Bowls during his 13-year NFL career, tying Cincinnati's T Anthony Munoz (Class of 1998) and Baltimore's T Jonathan Ogden for most selections by an offensive tackle. In 2012, Roaf was inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame.
As a member of the Saints from 1993-2001, Roaf was named to seven Pro Bowls, occurring from 1994-2000, with him being named as a starter each time. No Saint has been selected to the Pro Bowl as many times as Roaf. He received Associated Press first team All-Pro recognition four times during his NFL career, twice as a Saint in 1994 and 1995. In recognition of him being one of the most dominant players during his era, he was named to the 1990s and 2000s All-Decade Teams, as selected by members of the Hall of Fame selection committee. He was a first team selection for the 1990s squad and a second-team member for the roster covering the 2000s.
Roaf entered the NFL out of Louisiana Tech as the club's first-round draft choice in 1993 (eighth overall). He immediately entered the starting lineup at right tackle. In 1994, he moved over to the left side, where he would play for the remainder of his career and earned his first of seven consecutive Pro Bowl starting berths as the New Orleans offense improved in the NFL rankings from 21st to 12th, ranking eighth in passing yards per game, ninth in points per game and surrendering only 24 sacks. In 1995, Roaf became the first Saints offensive lineman to be voted to the All-Star game more than once as the line gave up only 28 takedowns. In 1996, he anchored a line that gave up only 22 sacks, tied for third-fewest in the league. In 2000, Roaf was a member of a Saints squad that won the first playoff game in franchise history and was ranked 10th in the NFL in yards per game and points per game. He was a key to a resurgent rushing offense that ranked eighth in the league and featured the club's first 1,000-yard runner since 1989.
Roaf would start 131 regular season games and two playoff contests in his career as a Saint. After spending the final four seasons of his career in Kansas City, he retired having started 189 regular season games and three postseason games.
Willie Roaf's College Career
Willie Roaf was a four-year letterman at Louisiana Tech from 1989-1992. Roaf became the school's first consensus All-American in 1992 as he was a finalist for the Outland Trophy for the country's best offensive lineman.
Willie Roaf's Career Honors
Pro Football Hall of Fame
1st Team All-Pro - 1994, 1995, 2004
2nd Team All-Pro - 1996, 1997, 2000, 2002, 2003, 2005
2000s NFLÂ All-Decade Team
1990s NFL All-Decade Team
Pro Bowl - 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006
New Orleans Saints Ring of Honor
New Orleans Saints Hall of Fame
Offensive Lineman of the Year (NFL Alumni) - 1995
NFC Offensive Lineman of the Year (NFLPA) - 1994, 1995
PFWA All-Rookie Team - 1993
Consensus All-American - 1992 (Louisiana Tech)