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Brian Sipe

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
American football player (born 1949)

American football player
Brian Sipe
refer to caption
Sipe c. 1979
No. 17
Position:Quarterback
Personal information
Born: (1949-08-08)August 8, 1949 (age 75)
San Diego, California, U.S.
Height:6 ft 0 in (1.83 m)
Weight:185 lb (84 kg)
Career information
High school:Grossmont (El Cajon, California)
College:
NFL draft:1972: 13th round, 330th pick
Career history
Career highlights and awards
Career NFL statistics
Passing attempts:3,439
Passing completions:1,944
Completion percentage:56.5%
TDINT:154–149
Passing yards:23,713
Passer rating:74.8
Stats atPro Football Reference

Brian Winfield Sipe (born August 8, 1949) is an American former professionalfootball player who was aquarterback for theCleveland Browns of theNational Football League (NFL) from 1974 to 1983. He then played in theUnited States Football League (USFL) for two seasons.

Sipe was born and raised in California. He competed in the1961 Little League World Series forEl Cajon, California, and attendedGrossmont High School. Although mostly sidelined for the first several years of his NFL career, Sipe was eventually recognized as one of the better quarterbacks in Browns history, winning the league'sMost Valuable Player Award in 1980. He was acollege football star under head coachDon Coryell atSan Diego State University, where he studiedarchitecture and became the team's quarterbacks coach in 2009, remaining in that role for five years, through 2014.[1]

Playing career

[edit]

National Football League

[edit]

Drafted in the thirteenth round of the1972 NFL draft bythe Cleveland Browns, Sipe spent the first two years of his career as a member of the teamʼs reserve squad, seeing no action on the field.

In1974, Sipe started four games after helping the Browns come back from a 12-point deficit againstthe Denver Broncos on October 27. However, after winning just one of these four contests (a 21–14 victory againstthe New England Patriots on November 11), he was replaced byMike Phipps.

The team's disastrous1975 season saw Sipe enter the starting lineup after three consecutive losses in which the Browns were outscored 124–26. Sipe's three starts saw the Browns become more competitive, but still resulted in a trio of defeats, sending him back to the sidelines. The following year, he finally moved into a consistent starting role following an opening game injury to Phipps on September 12,1976. As the team's signal caller that season, he led them to a 9–5 record, a six-game improvement over the previous season. 1976 was the team's second year under head coachForrest Gregg.

During the first half ofthe 1977 season, Sipe led the team to five wins in their first seven games. However, on November 13 of that year, Sipe suffered a season-ending shoulder injury atThree Rivers Stadium againstthe Pittsburgh Steelers in the second quarter of the team's 35–31 defeat. With Phipps gone tothe Chicago Bears, the Browns turned to back-up quarterbackDave Mays, who went 1–3 as a starter. The 1977 season also saw a head coaching change as Gregg was fired and defensive coordinatorDick Modzelewski took over for the final game.[2] Sipe came back the following year to throw for more than 2,900 yards and 21 touchdown passes, but the team's overall inconsistency resulted in an 8–8 finish.

Serving as the catalyst for many thrilling moments during the1979 and1980 seasons, Sipe helped the team earn the nickname "Kardiac Kids." The designation was in recognition of their tendency to produce heart-stopping comeback victories in the final minutes of many games. Over the course of these two seasons, Sipe led the Browns to eight comebacks and eleven game-winning drives in the fourth quarter or overtime.[3]

Sipe led Cleveland to a 4–0 start in 1979, including a season opening overtime win overthe New York Jets.

1980 Most Valuable Player award season

[edit]

In1980, Sipe passed for 4,132 yards and 30 touchdowns, helping to lead the Browns to their first postseason berth since1972. Individually, his efforts earned him theNFL Most Valuable Player award and a selection to the1981 Pro Bowl. To this day, it is still the Browns single season passing yards record, as well as the only time a Browns quarterback threw for 4,000 yards in a season.

At the end of the divisional playoff game the Browns played against the Raiders, the Browns trailed by a score of 14–12. After the Browns forced the Raiders to turn the ball over on downs on the Browns' 15-yard line, Sipe led the Browns back down the field, reaching the Raiders 13-yard line in 9 plays. With just 49 seconds remaining, the Browns could have kicked a game-winning field goal, but due to the brutally cold and windy weather in Cleveland that day, which made a field goal attempt significantly more risky than usual, Browns'head coachSam Rutigliano instead opted to pass the ball. Sipe attempted a pass to tight endOzzie Newsome, but it was intercepted in the end zone by Raiders safetyMike Davis. That play brought the Browns' season to a heartbreaking close, while the Raiders went on to winSuper Bowl XV over thePhiladelphia Eagles. The play call - "Red Right 88" – was immortalized in Cleveland sports infamy.

1981 and 1982 seasons

[edit]
Sipe signing autographs in Canton, Ohio in 1979.

Despite throwing for 3,876 yardsthe following season, Sipeʼs Browns struggled to a 5–11 mark. In1982, Sipe and the Browns won just two of the team's first six games in the strike-marred NFL season, and Sipe was benched in favor of third-year signal callerPaul McDonald.

United States Football League

[edit]

Sipe regained his starting rolethe following year, but angered Browns management by negotiating withNew Jersey Generals of theUnited States Football League during the season. Sipe finished the 1983 season with 3,566 passing yards and 26 touchdown passes. Sipe had led Cleveland to a 9–7 record and the team just missed qualifying for the American Football Conference playoffs. He then signed with the Generals and played for them in 1984, before concluding his career with theJacksonville Bulls in 1985. Sipe's contract with the New Jersey was a three-year deal for $600,000 annually.[4]

Post-playing career

[edit]

Sipe lives inSan Diego and coached the football team atSanta Fe Christian School inSolana Beach, California, where he helped the Eagles to four CIF titles and a combined record of 75–21–1. Sipe was hired on January 18, 2009, as the quarterbacks coach for his alma mater, San Diego State. Sipe served in that role through the end of the 2014 season.[1]

Career statistics

[edit]

NFL career

[edit]
Legend
APNFL MVP
Led the league
BoldCareer high
YearTeamGamesPassing
GPGSRecordCmpAttPctYdsAvgTDIntRtg
1974CLE1052–35910854.66035.61747.0
1975CLE720–2458851.14274.91354.4
1976CLE14127–517831257.12,1136.8171477.3
1977CLE995–411219557.41,2336.391461.8
1978CLE16168–822239955.62,9067.3211580.7
1979CLE16169–728653553.53,7937.1282673.4
1980CLE161611–533755460.84,1327.5301491.4
1981CLE16165–1131356755.23,8766.8172568.2
1982CLE662–410118554.61,0645.84860.7
1983CLE15148–629149658.73,5667.2262379.1
Career12511257–551,9443,43956.523,7136.915414974.8

USFL career

[edit]
YearTeamGPPassing
CmpAttPctYdsTDIntRtg
1984New Jersey Generals1619232459.32,540171582.3
1985Jacksonville Bulls558961.86854291.5
Career24741356.53,225211784.3

See also

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References

[edit]
  1. ^abKiesel, Connor (January 7, 2015)."Former Browns QB Sipe reportedly removed as San Diego State QB coach".Fox Sports. RetrievedJanuary 20, 2016.
  2. ^"1977 Cleveland Browns Statistics & Players".Pro-Football-Reference.com.
  3. ^"Brian Sipe's Career 4th quarter comebacks and game-winning drives" Pro-Football-Reference.com
  4. ^"Brian Sipe, a 13th-round draft pick who survived 12".
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