College Football Hall of Famer, former Central and Alabama star Woodrow Lowe dies
He was not on the list.
College Football Hall of Famer Woodrow Lowe, a former Central-Phenix City High School star, has died. Lowe, brother of Phenix City Mayor Eddie Lowe, died Thursday at home in Collierville, Tennessee, while receiving hospice care, Central football historian Mark Clark told the Ledger-Enquirer. He was 71. Clark, managing editor and sports editor for The Citizen of East Alabama, who has documented Central football for more than 50 years, considers Lowe to be the best player in the program’s history. His obituary and funeral arrangements weren’t available before publication, but the website for the College Football Hall of Fame, which inducted him in 2009, documents Lowe’s greatness. Woodrow Lowe’s playing career As a 6-foot, 227-pound linebacker, Lowe was the second player in Alabama history to be a three-time first-team All-America (1973-75). He led the Crimson Tide to undefeated regular seasons in 1973 and 1974. In 1973, Lowe set an Alabama single-season record with 134 tackles as a sophomore. During his junior year, he earned consensus All-America honors and led the Crimson Tide to a third straight SEC title. In his final season, he again earned first-team All America honors and served as team captain as the Crimson Tide wrapped up their fourth straight SEC title. Lowe left the Tide ranked as the program’s third all-time leader in tackles with 315 in his career. The San Diego Chargers drafted Lowe in the fifth round of the 1976 NFL draft. He missed only one game in 11 seasons with the Chargers, made 21 interceptions and returned four of them for touchdowns. With the Chargers, Lowe was a team captain and earned All-AFC honors from the UPI and a Pro Bowl selection in 1981. He was selected for the Chargers’ 40th Anniversary All-Time Team in 2000. Lowe was named to Alabama’s First Team All-Decade Team and a Second Team All-Century selection. He was inducted into the Alabama Sports Hall of Fame in 2001 and the Chattahoochee Valley Sports Hall of Fame in 1998. Clark recalled what it was like to watch Lowe dominate football games while playing for Central. “He’d line up on one side and make the tackle on the other side,” Clark said. As ferocious as he was on the field, Clark said, Lowe was “just about the kindest person I’ve ever known. He was a tough player and a tough coach. But once he got off the field, he was mild-mannered and just so humble.” Woodrow Lowe’s coaching career Lowe spent six years in the NFL as a defensive assistant coach for the Oakland Raiders and the Kansas City Chiefs. He returned to Central as an assistant under head coach Wayne Trawick and helped the Red Devils win a state championship in 1993. After spending five years with the UAB Blazers, Lowe again returned to the high school ranks, this time as head coach at Central rival Smiths Station, The Panthers went 12-19 in Lowe’s three seasons (2005-07) with Smiths Station.
After serving as an assistant coach at Jackson-Olin High
School in Birmingham, Lowe returned to his alma mater as Central’s head coach
in December 2009. The Red Devils went 33-13 in four seasons (2010-13) under
Lowe, including an appearance in the 2011 state semifinals. Phenix City Mayor
Eddie Lowe on his brother Woodrow Lowe Mayor Lowe idolized Woodrow, his older
brother by six years, as a hero while growing up playing sandlot football with
other Central stars, such as Jeremiah Castille and Billy Jackson. “He had a lot
of athleticism, and he was probably better than any of us,” Mayor Lowe, who
also played linebacker at Alabama (1980-82) and for nine years in the Canadian
Football League with Saskatchewan, told the L-E. “But he just didn’t have the
desire to play football and go far. He cared about people.” Mayor Lowe said he
wouldn’t dispute Clark’s assessment of his brother being the best football
player in Central’s history. “I just know he prepared himself,” Mayor Lowe
said. “He was dedicated to it. … He had a lot of values and morals and
integrity and put the work ethic. That was with everything he did but
particularly in football. He was just a good person. He never, ever, did
anything deliberately to hurt anyone.”
Lowe was inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame. He
was named to the Chargers' 40th and 50th anniversary teams.
Lowe became one of only two Crimson Tide players to be named
an All-American three times (the other being Cornelius Bennett) when he was
named an All-American in 1973, 1974, and 1975. Lowe also played on four
Southeastern Conference (SEC) championship teams, and one national championship
team, while he was at Alabama.
Personal information
Born June 9, 1954
Columbus, Georgia, U.S.
Died November 6,
2025 (aged 71)
Collierville, Tennessee, U.S.
Height 6 ft 0 in (1.83
m)
Weight 227 lb (103 kg)
Career information
High school Central
(Phenix City, Alabama)
College Alabama
(1972–1975)
NFL draft 1976:
5th round, 131st overall pick
Career history
San Diego Chargers (1976–1986)
Awards and highlights
San Diego Chargers 50th Anniversary Team
San Diego Chargers 40th Anniversary Team
National champion (1973)
Consensus All-American (1974)
2× First-team All-American (1973, 1975)
3× First-team All-SEC (1973, 1974, 1975)

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