Previous Thread
Next Thread
Print Thread
Joined: Sep 2006
Posts: 13,205
D
Dave Offline OP
Legend
OP Offline
Legend
D
Joined: Sep 2006
Posts: 13,205
How Brian Sipe continues to lead the Kardiac Kids toward a signature weekend 35 years later

By Tom Reed, Northeast Ohio Media Group
July 17, 2015



BEREA, Ohio – Old enough to draw Social Security, Brian Sipe forever remains a Kardiac Kid.

At age 65, the former Browns quarterback and NFL Most Valuable Player is again rallying his offense in Cleveland, getting everyone involved for a memorable weekend on the lakefront.

Sipe headlines a Kardiac Kids reunion event at the Great Northern Mall on Saturday starting at 1 p.m. The quarterback and many members of the prolific 1980 offense, including Hall-of-Fame tight end Ozzie Newsome, will sign memorabilia for fees.

Organizers of the event, Ohio Sports Marketing and 4th & Goal, were thrilled to land Sipe and could have built an entire show around just him. But one of the franchise's most popular players wanted to involve as many teammates as possible and expand the weekend beyond just a few hours of signing autographs for a pay day. Sipe and former Browns offensive lineman Robert E. Jackson have arranged for teammates to attend a dinner, golf outing and barbeque, spanning Saturday and Sunday.

"It's nice coming to do these events, but it usually means there is no social time for us," said Sipe, who rarely does autograph shows. "This is a chance for us to spend the afternoon meeting fans and the rest of the weekend we can let our hair down and be a team again. That's important because that hasn't happened since I can remember."

Autograph prices for the Kardiac Kids reunion show Saturday at 1 p.m. at Great Northern Mall.



Sipe not only encouraged event organizers to include other starters, but paid travel expenses for a handful of other teammates, according to several players.

Thirty-five years later, Sipe remains the leader of the Kardiac Kids.

"That says a lot about the kind of guy Brian is," Browns radio analyst and former left tackle Doug Dieken said. "He saw this as an opportunity to get the band back together."

Sipe has spent the past 15 years coaching at San Diego State and in the high school ranks in Southern California. For the former quarterback and Newsome, the Ravens general manager, it was often difficult to commit to an entire weekend. Sipe cannot recall the last time he spent time with Newsome.

"Ozzie won't be coming back as the Ravens GM, but as old No. 82," Dieken said. "It's going to be great sitting around and chewing the fat with these guys. A lot has happened in our lives over the last 35 years and it will give us a chance to catch up on how everyone is doing.

"(Running back) Calvin Hill is coming in for the weekend. His wife said she can't recall the last time she saw him so excited."

There will be plenty of stories from their days on and off the field. Dieken remembers Jackson breaking his ankle in the final game of the 1983 regular season against the Steelers and making an unscheduled stop on the way to the hospital.

"Robert talked the ambulance driver into dropping by Pat Joyce's (Tavern) to pick up a six pack," Dieken said.

The Kardic Kids represent one of the Browns most beloved teams of the Super Bowl era in part because of their string of thrilling finishes and the organization's lack of success since their 1999 return.The club is warmly remembered despite a devastating 14-12 playoff loss to the Raiders in which Sipe's interception in the closing minute became known by the play's condensed name, Red Right 88.

Although many fans associate the team with the 1980 season, Sipe contends the Kardiac Kids had their genesis the year prior.

The Browns went 9-7 in 1979 and followed it with an 11-5 campaign. It marked the best two-stretch since the 1971-72 seasons when there was still a whisper of empire surrounding the organization.

They played 25 games decided by a touchdown or less in 1979-80 – the most ever by the franchise in a two-year span. They are antithesis of the post-1999 Browns, who too often find ways to lose close games.

"We were just confident that someone would make a big play," Sipe said. "It was just that way. It really started in 1979, that's why we had so much focus and media attention on us in 1980. It was for two years. That's why I think we operated better than anybody else has in that situation.

"We were front and center at a time when the city was in rough shape and people needed something to have hope in. We were the underdogs, picked to finish last and we beat the odds and did the unexpected. The fans' hearts were aching for something like that at that time."

Sipe was the darling of Browns' fans, an undersized 13th round draft pick in 1972 who waited four years to become the starting quarterback. He often absorbed a beating, but stood in the pocket spraying the ball around the field, involving everyone in the offense.

"What people forget about Brian is how tough he was and what a great leader he became," Dieken said.

Sipe said he hasn't followed the team close enough to make judgments on why the organization has failed to develop a franchise quarterback. He offered no comments on Johnny Manziel other than to say, "it doesn't make sense" to write off the troubled 2014 first-round pick after just two starts.

Sipe plans to return to coaching prep football in the next few years. His immediate focus is reuniting with Browns fans on Saturday and spending the rest of the weekend with old teammates.

"It's going to be great to see Brian," Dieken said. "Nowadays, we're more like the Geriatric Gentlemen instead of the Kardiac Kids, but we're going to have a great time regardless."


http://www.cleveland.com/browns/index.ssf/2015/07/how_brian_sipe_continues_to_le.html#incart_river

Joined: Mar 2013
Posts: 55,499
V
Legend
Offline
Legend
V
Joined: Mar 2013
Posts: 55,499
I loved Brian Sipe. He was a true warrior. Very underrated in Brown's lore.

Here is an example of why he is an all-time Brown's great.

We were playing the Steelers. Sipe drops back and doesn't see anyone open, so he rolls right, buying time. Jack Lambert is sprinting towards him. The sideline is right there. Sipe was small and you figure he should duck out of bounds, but no.............he throws a pass for a completion and Lambert unloads on Sipe. Hits him helmet to chin and sends Brian flying into the Brown's sideline.

There is a huge fight and I see Dieken slamming Lambert and Harry Holt [a pretty big TE] stomping on Lambert. Afterwards, Jack walks back to the Steeler's sideline like he had something stuck in his hind end.

In the post-game press conference, Lambert was asked about the play. He said something like:

I knew I was going to try to kill Brian, and Brian knew I was going to try and kill him. He stood in there anyway and that is why he is a great QB.

When you get praise like that from a guy like Jack Lambert, than you know you have truly arrived.

Brian Sipe was a great qb for the Browns. He is the best QB I have ever seen play for the Browns. I never got to witness Otto, but Brian had the best all-around game that I have seen in my lifetime as a Brown's fan.

Joined: Mar 2013
Posts: 9,145
M
Hall of Famer
Offline
Hall of Famer
M
Joined: Mar 2013
Posts: 9,145
Man I wish I could be there! My first football hero was Dave Logan! He could pull anything out of the air.

Wouldn't it be great to have a couple guys like Deiken and Holt around when James Harrison does his dirty crap?

Those were the days of football man.


WE DON'T NEED A QB BEFORE WE GET A LINE THAT CAN PROTECT HIM
my two cents...
Joined: Sep 2006
Posts: 13,205
D
Dave Offline OP
Legend
OP Offline
Legend
D
Joined: Sep 2006
Posts: 13,205
That playoff game with the Raiders remains as my most painful Cleveland sports memory. I was almost-literally speechless for 2-3 days after it ended. I remember a buddy asking me "what's wrong?" a few days after the game, and I said "I can't believe he threw that pass.".

I agree with you on Sipe as my Browns post-dynasty-years QB, as much as I loved Bernie. But one guy who gets short shrift, imo, when it comes to discussions of Browns QBs, is Frank Ryan. For 3-4 years in the 60's he was very good-to-great. Not a lot of posters here old enough to remember the 60's era, I guess.

Oh, and Ted, I read in another thread where you said you thought the Cleveland curse started when Ahmad Rashad caught the Hail Mary in 1980 vs the Vikes. If you're old enough to remember the 60's Browns, there were some pretty curse-worthy events back then:
* Ernie Davis (beyond the tragedy of his death; we had also traded HOF Bobby Mitchell for him).
* Jim Brown retiring in his prime.
* I think it was the post-1965 Pro Bowl when Frank Ryan got body-slammed by Merlin Olsen, or Carl Eller, and separated his throwing shoulder. (Players still cared about winning the Pro Bowl back then - winners got $1000 instead of $500.) But Ryan never threw over the top again, could only throw sidearm with nowhere near the same zip on the ball.
* Traded HOF Paul Warfield for Mike Phipps.

The curse is much older than 1980.

Joined: Sep 2006
Posts: 27,361
Legend
Offline
Legend
Joined: Sep 2006
Posts: 27,361
It has been 10 years since the team all got together in Youngstown Ohio. It was a blast that night cool


I AM ALWAYS RIGHT... except when I am wrong.
Joined: Sep 2006
Posts: 27,361
Legend
Offline
Legend
Joined: Sep 2006
Posts: 27,361
Quote:
There is a huge fight and I see Dieken slamming Lambert and Harry Holt [a pretty big TE] stomping on Lambert. Afterwards, Jack walks back to the Steeler's sideline like he had something stuck in his hind end.


Henry Shepperd came off the bench and went after Lambert as well. He told me a few years ago he remembers it well and he would have killed him if he could lol


I AM ALWAYS RIGHT... except when I am wrong.
Joined: Sep 2006
Posts: 27,361
Legend
Offline
Legend
Joined: Sep 2006
Posts: 27,361
BTW I still get a kick out of Brian's sense of humor. He found out my wife was crazy about him back in the day and when he signed a 8x10 for me he signed it "To Suzie from the other Brian" lol


I AM ALWAYS RIGHT... except when I am wrong.
Joined: Mar 2013
Posts: 55,499
V
Legend
Offline
Legend
V
Joined: Mar 2013
Posts: 55,499
Yeah, there were a bunch of guys going after Lambert. Dieken and Holt were the two who caught my eye, but yeah, there were all kinds of guys going after Lambert.

It's amazing how individual plays can last a lifetime in our minds. I knew we had something special in Sipe after that play and I knew our team had really come together.

Joined: Sep 2006
Posts: 30,826
A
Legend
Offline
Legend
A
Joined: Sep 2006
Posts: 30,826
j/c

Does anyone have a video of that? I was just on youtube and couldn't find one.

Joined: Mar 2013
Posts: 55,499
V
Legend
Offline
Legend
V
Joined: Mar 2013
Posts: 55,499
I don't. I'm just going by memory.

Joined: Sep 2006
Posts: 27,361
Legend
Offline
Legend
Joined: Sep 2006
Posts: 27,361
I can close me eyes and see it over and over Arch smile


I AM ALWAYS RIGHT... except when I am wrong.
Joined: Sep 2006
Posts: 30,826
A
Legend
Offline
Legend
A
Joined: Sep 2006
Posts: 30,826
I wish I could.

Joined: Mar 2013
Posts: 55,499
V
Legend
Offline
Legend
V
Joined: Mar 2013
Posts: 55,499
Here is an excerpt about the play from an article I found about Lambert:

Quote:
Then there were the three Brian Sipe incidents, during the '78, '81, and '83 seasons, three set pieces from the same script. Each time Lambert hit the Cleveland quarterback as he was releasing the ball. Too late, decided the referee, who was Ben Dreith the last two times. Each time Lambert got mobbed by the Browns' bench, each time he was flagged, and twice he was ejected from the game and fined by the league.

After the '78 hit he spent 20 minutes in Pete Rozelle's office. Lambert explained he had crossed both arms in front of him to soften the blow. The hit was still late, Rozelle said. [Ed. Note: This was the hit that spawned Lambert's famous "Quarterbacks should wear dresses" quote during a Monday Night interview with Howard Cosell the following week.]

"I asked him, 'How about the guys who came off the bench and mobbed me?'" Lambert says. "'Were they fined?' He said, 'No, but they got very strong warnings.'"

In the dressing room after the '81 game, the writers asked Lambert about the play.

"Dreith said I hit Sipe too hard," Lambert said.

"Did you?"

"I hit him as hard as I could."

Noll defended Lambert in '83. He said what the Browns did to Lambert on the sidelines was "criminal... they kicked him where no young man should be kicked."

In the locker room the writers asked Lambert abut it again. Same play, same ref. It was getting a bit old. He capsuled the situation in his terse and hard-bitten style: "Brian has a chance to go out of bounds and he decides not to. He knows I'm going to hit him. And I do. History."

Joined: Jul 2014
Posts: 7,612
R
Hall of Famer
Offline
Hall of Famer
R
Joined: Jul 2014
Posts: 7,612
I agree. Sipe is definitely underrated in Brown's lore.

The 1980 NFL MVP.

I got his autograph at Hiram College at a Browns players reunion during the dark years. (~1997)



At Hiram College.

I have a picture of Sipe too but not digitized.

The float says 804 days to go. Seeing several Browns legends during such a depressing time was some consolation. At the time, 804 days seemed like an eternity.

Joined: Mar 2013
Posts: 9,145
M
Hall of Famer
Offline
Hall of Famer
M
Joined: Mar 2013
Posts: 9,145
I was born in '67 Dave, fortunately I missed those tragedies. I didn't even know Ernie Davis was gonna be a Brown until The Express came out. Still angry about the Paul Brown firing though. Just another one of those things you shake your head about when look king back on our history concerning Modell.


WE DON'T NEED A QB BEFORE WE GET A LINE THAT CAN PROTECT HIM
my two cents...
Joined: Sep 2006
Posts: 13,205
D
Dave Offline OP
Legend
OP Offline
Legend
D
Joined: Sep 2006
Posts: 13,205
Just had to post this picture from Bernie Kosar's Twitter page - two of my all-time most favorite Browns - Bernie Kosar and Brian Sipe at the recent Kardiac Kids reunion.


Joined: Sep 2006
Posts: 27,361
Legend
Offline
Legend
Joined: Sep 2006
Posts: 27,361
I have a lot of pictures of Kosar and Sipe on my facebook.


Of course that's my dogs names The big clumsey one is Kosar and the Little one is Sipe thumbsup


I AM ALWAYS RIGHT... except when I am wrong.
Joined: Sep 2006
Posts: 16,195
Legend
Offline
Legend
Joined: Sep 2006
Posts: 16,195
Are both your dogs going bald?


#GMSTRONG
Joined: Sep 2006
Posts: 27,361
Legend
Offline
Legend
Joined: Sep 2006
Posts: 27,361
They will if they live as long as those two guys have.


I AM ALWAYS RIGHT... except when I am wrong.
DawgTalkers.net Forums DawgTalk Tailgate Forum Brian Sipe Still Leads Kardiac Kids

Link Copied to Clipboard
Powered by UBB.threads™ PHP Forum Software 7.7.5