User interaction and blog updates

Aztec fans –

Hope everyone is doing well and ready to move on to the next game against Fresno State.

Last week was a tough loss, but it’s behind us and we are ready to start our conference games. The road to the 19th conference championship begins on Friday!

As for the blog, I am still looking for ways to improve and enhance it. To help me with this, I would appreciate as much user interaction as possible!

Comments, suggestions, criticism, and whatever else you guys have to say would be very helpful for me. I want this blog to have material that the readers want, so let me know what you guys would like to see and I’ll try to accommodate to your requests.

Some things I am hoping to do to help add more to the blog include:

  • Feature Friday video interviews
  • “Aztecs in the NFL” Sunday recaps with stats and updates on SDSU players currently in the NFL
  • “Historical stat of the day” – post about a notable statistic in the SDSU history books

If you guys have any ideas, please let me know! I am always looking for new ideas, and your help is greatly appreciated.

I will also be posting a couple polls in the near future, to see who the fans would like to see featured in a story.

Thanks everyone!

GO AZTECS

 

Photo Credit: Ernie Anderson/SDSU Media Relations

Warrior Wednesday: Tom Ables

“SuperFan” Tom Ables (Ernie Anderson/SDSU Media Relations)

In today’s world of sports, the term “diehard fan” is often misused. Many sports fans are content with casually supporting their team, and assume that wearing their jersey the day after a win makes them a major supporter.

These same fans typically have trouble naming more than a dozen players on their favorite team’s roster, and are quick to badmouth a team when losing streaks occur.

In a world filled with casual fans and bandwagoners, San Diego State supporter Tom Ables is the epitome of a diehard fan.

A graduate of SDSU, Ables has displayed what it means to truly support your team through thick and thin. Although his team has not always been the most successful program, he never turned his back on his alma mater.

Ables enrolled at SDSU in 1946, and since then has been to over 700 football games and over 1,000 basketball games. He attended his 700th football game in 2010, when SDSU defeated the University of Wyoming, 48-38.

Since 1946, Ables has only missed two Aztec football games. He missed a game in 1952 because of money concerns and one in 1964 because of an illness.

In 1993, Ables became the first non-athlete and non-coach to be elected into the Aztec Hall of Fame. He has also received national recognition, as he was listed as No. 3 in an ESPN story about the top 20 “super fans” before the 2010 season.

For his continued support of SDSU athletics, Tom Ables is this week’s Wednesday Warrior.

Tom Ables interviewed at his 700th Aztec football game

Throwback Thursday: Brian Sipe

Former SDSU quarterback Brian Sipe (Ernie Anderson/SDSU Media Relations)

If ever a hall of fame was created for multi-talented, all-around sports figures, the candidate list would be quite impressive.

The shrine would not be for the typical superstar athletes, who enter their respective professional sports leagues, have record-breaking careers, and spend the rest of their lives living off of the large surplus of money made during their playing days.

This shrine would be for a select group of individuals; those who have left their footprints in the history of more than just one sport and continue to find ways to stay involved even when their playing days have ceased.

If ever such a thing were created, Brian Sipe would be a worthy candidate.

Growing up in California, Sipe was a sports fanatic from the very beginning. Although he was the only boy in a family with three sisters, he was able to dodge the dollhouses and dress-up parties and find his way onto the local little league baseball team in El Cajon.

In 1961, the small-town El Cajon Little League baseball team shocked the country with an undefeated season that ended with Sipe and his teammates winning the Little League World Series Championship.

The young boys turned into rock stars around the neighborhood, and this success prepared Sipe for the rest of sports career. He expected to succeed.

Although he began with baseball, Sipe experimented with many sports. He played baseball, basketball and football in high school.

“When I was young, baseball was the only option because there weren’t as many youth sports like there are today,” Sipe said. “But as soon as I got a taste of football, I fell in love with it.”

The competitive nature and team camaraderie turned Sipe into a football fiend, and he became obsessed with the sport.

He also became very good.

As a quarterback, Sipe was named the CIF Player of the Year in high school after a dominant senior year. He was fortunate enough to receive a football scholarship to nearby San Diego State University.

In college, Sipe excelled for three years under legendary coach Don Coryell, displaying his talent and athleticism every time he took the field. He finished his career with 5,707 total passing yards, and is currently ranked seventh on SDSU’s all-time list.

After flourishing at the collegiate level, it was time for Sipe to take his game to the next level, and he was selected in the 13th round by the Cleveland Browns in the 1972 NFL Draft.

After a few seasons of injuries and role changes, Sipe began to establish himself as a prominent quarterback in the NFL. His most successful season was in 1980, when he led his team to the playoffs with an 11-5 record. He threw for 4,132 yards and 30 touchdowns, and was named the 1980 NFL MVP.

Sipe is known throughout the sports world for being a member of the “Kardiac Kids”, his team’s nickname during the 1979 and 1980 seasons. Those two seasons consisted of several nail-biting victories that brought an incredible amount of excitement to the city of Cleveland and a much-needed boost for the economically burdened town.

Once his playing career was over, Sipe found himself back in San Diego with his wife and their three children. Although he was never a religious man, he and his wife began attending a local Christian church; an idea that they agreed would be beneficial for their family.

He was intrigued at the idea of joining a Bible study group, and doing so helped him grow fond of the religion and its teachings.

“The scripture described everything I believe about mankind,” Sipe said. “After a year or so of attending the study, I was able to surrender my defenses to God.”

Unable to get away from the game he loves, Sipe has spent the last decade of his life in the coaching profession. Ironically, Sipe was invited by his daughter to a Sante Fe Christian High School football game to watch her boyfriend play.

After the game, Sipe decided to offer some help, and the coaches could not turn down the former NFL MVP. In 2000, the head coach retired, and Sipe was asked to take over.

He spent the next eight years as the head coach, making sure to teach his players about God and life first, and football second. A relatively small school, Sante Fe Christian earned respect in San Diego, capturing four CIF section titles during Sipe’s tenure.

In 2008, Sipe was hired as the quarterbacks coach at his alma mater SDSU, a dream job for the former gunslinger. He spent his first three seasons coaching Ryan Lindley, a record-breaking quarterback who is now in the NFL.

Lindley, now a member of the Arizona Cardinals, has nothing but praise for his former coach

“He is an amazing coach on the football field, and even better in life,” Lindley said. “He is a man I can come to about anything from football, to school, to the Bible.”

As for the future, Sipe says that he loves his current job, and hopes to continue coaching for years to come. He has been instrumental in helping to incorporate past traditions into the current football program, and has been a huge asset to the team.

From Little League World Series Champion, to NFL MVP, to Division 1 football coach, Sipe has accomplished a lot. When you look back at his life, it is clear to see that he has left his footprints all over the world of sports.

The best part of it all? He’s not done walking yet.

Brian Sipe coaching the quarterbacks at SDSU (Ernie Anderson/SDSU Media Relations)