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The fuck is a Chargers?
Disagree.The fuck is a Chargers?
San Diego Chargers
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
"Chargers" redirects here. For other uses, see Charger (disambiguation).
San Diego Chargers
Current season
Established 1960
Play in Qualcomm Stadium
San Diego, California
Headquartered in Chargers Park
San Diego, California
San Diego Chargers logo
Logo
League/conference affiliations
American Football League (1960–1969)
Western Division (1960–1969)
National Football League (1970–present)
American Football Conference (1970–present)
AFC West (1970–present)
Current uniform
AFCW-Uniform-SD.PNG
Team colors
Navy, Gold, Powder Blue, White
Fight song San Diego Super Chargers
Personnel
Owner(s) Alex Spanos
George Pernicano, minority owner with 3% share
CEO A.G. Spanos
President Dean Spanos
General manager Tom Telesco[1]
Head coach Mike McCoy
Team history
Los Angeles Chargers (1960)
San Diego Chargers (1961–present)
Team nicknames
The Bolts, San Diego Super Chargers
Championships
League championships (1)
AFL Championships: (1)
AFL: 1963
Conference championships (1)
AFC: 1994
Division championships (15)
AFL West: 1960, 1961, 1963, 1964, 1965
AFC West: 1979, 1980, 1981, 1992, 1994, 2004, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009
Playoff appearances (18)
AFL: 1960, 1961, 1963, 1964, 1965
NFL: 1979, 1980, 1981, 1982, 1992, 1994, 1995, 2004, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2013
Home fields
Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum (1960)
Balboa Stadium (1961–66)
Sun Devil Stadium (October 27, 2003 due to Southern California Wildfires)
Qualcomm Stadium (1967–present)
a.k.a. San Diego Stadium (1967–80)
a.k.a. Jack Murphy Stadium (1981–97)
The San Diego Chargers are a professional football team based in San Diego, California. They have been members of the West division of the American Football Conference (AFC) in the National Football League (NFL) since 1970. The club began play in 1960 as a charter member of the American Football League, and spent its first season in Los Angeles, California before moving to San Diego in 1961.[2] The Chargers play their home games at Qualcomm Stadium. The Chargers continue to be the only NFL team based in Southern California, with no teams in Los Angeles since 1994.
The Chargers won one AFL title in 1963 and reached the AFL playoffs five times and the AFL Championship four times before joining the NFL (1970) as part of the AFL-NFL Merger.[2] In the 43 years since then, the Chargers have made thirteen trips to the playoffs and four appearances in the AFC Championship game.[2] At the end of the 1994 season, the Chargers faced the San Francisco 49ers in Super Bowl XXIX and fell 49–26.[2] The Chargers have six players and one coach enshrined in the Pro Football Hall of Fame in Canton, Ohio: wide receiver Lance Alworth (1962–1970), defensive end Fred Dean (1975–1981), quarterback Dan Fouts (1973–1987), head coach/general manager Sid Gillman (1960–1969, 1971), wide receiver Charlie Joiner (1976–1986), offensive lineman Ron Mix (1960–1969), and tight end Kellen Winslow (1979–1987).[3]
Contents [hide]
1 Franchise history
1.1 1959–1969: AFL beginnings
1.2 1970–78: Post-merger
1.2.1 1978
1.3 1979–1988: Fouts and Air Coryell
1.3.1 1979
1.3.2 1980
1.3.3 1981
1.3.4 1982–88
1.4 1989–1995: Super Bowl bound
1.4.1 1994: AFC Champions
1.4.2 1995
1.5 1996–2003
1.6 2010–2012: End of the Norv Turner/AJ Smith era.
1.6.1 2010
1.6.2 2011
1.6.3 2012
1.7 2013-present: A New Era
1.7.1 2013
1.7.2 2014
2 Logo and uniforms
3 Players of note
3.1 Current roster
3.2 Retired numbers
3.3 Pro Football Hall of Famers
3.4 Chargers Hall of Fame
3.5 50th Anniversary Team
3.6 San Diego Hall of Champions
4 Staff
4.1 Head coaches
4.2 Current staff
5 Radio and television
5.1 Radio Affiliates
5.1.1 English
5.1.2 Spanish
6 Theme song
7 References
8 External links
Franchise history[edit]
Main article: History of the San Diego Chargers
The following text needs to be harmonized with text in History of the San Diego Chargers.
1959–1969: AFL beginnings[edit]
The San Diego Chargers were established with seven other American Football League teams in 1959. In 1960, the Chargers began AFL play in Los Angeles.[2] The Chargers' original owner was hotel heir Barron Hilton, son of Hilton Hotels founder Conrad Hilton.[2]
According to the official site of the Pro Football Hall of Fame, Barron Hilton agreed after his general manager, Frank Leahy, picked the Chargers name when he purchased an AFL franchise for Los Angeles: “I liked it because they were yelling ‘charge’ and sounding the bugle at Dodgers Stadium and at USC games.” The Chargers played in Los Angeles in 1960 and moved to San Diego in 1961. From 1961 to 1966 their home field was Balboa Stadium in Balboa Park. As of August 1967, they moved to the newly constructed Qualcomm Stadium (then named San Diego Stadium), where they still play their home games.
The Chargers only spent one season in Los Angeles before moving to San Diego in 1961.[2] The early AFL years of the San Diego Chargers were highlighted by the outstanding play of wide receiver Lance Alworth with 543 receptions for 10,266 yards in his 11-AFL/NFL-season career. In addition he set the pro football record of consecutive games with a reception (96) during his career.[4]
Their only coach for the ten-year life of the AFL was Sid Gillman,[2] a Hall of Famer.[5] who was considered the foremost authority on the forward passing offense of his era.[5] With players such as Lance "Bambi" Alworth, Paul Lowe, Keith Lincoln and John Hadl,[6] the high-scoring Chargers won divisional crowns five of the league’s first six seasons and the AFL title in 1963 with a 51–10 victory over the Boston Patriots.[2] They also played defense, as indicated by their professional football record 49 pass interceptions in 1961,[7] and featured AFL Rookie of the Year defensive end Earl Faison.[8] The Chargers were the originators of the term "Fearsome Foursome" to describe their all-star defensive line,[9] anchored by Faison and Ernie Ladd (the latter also excelled in professional wrestling).[10] The phrase was later appropriated by the Los Angeles Rams.[11] Hilton sold the Chargers to a group headed by Eugene Klein and Sam Schulman in August 1966.[12] The following year the Chargers began "head to head" competition with the older NFL with a preseason loss to the Detroit Lions.[2] The Chargers defeated the defending Super Bowl III champion New York Jets 34–27 before a record San Diego Stadium crowd of 54,042 on September 29, 1969.[2] Alworth once again led the team in receptions with 64 and 1,003 yards with four touchdowns.[2] The team also saw Gillman step down due to health and offensive backfield coach Charlie Waller promoted to head coach after the completion of the regular season. Gillman did remain with the club as the general manager.[2]
1970–78: Post-merger[edit]
In 1970, the Chargers were placed into the AFC West division after the NFL merger with the AFL.[12][13] But by then, the Chargers fell on hard times; Gillman, who had returned as general manager, stepped down in 1971, and many of the Charger players from the 1960s had already either retired or had been traded.[14] The Chargers acquired veteran players like Deacon Jones[15] and Johnny Unitas,[16] however it was at the later stages of their careers and the team struggled, placing third or fourth in the AFC West each year from 1970 to 1978.
1978[edit]
Main article: 1978 San Diego Chargers season
1978 was marked by the "Holy Roller" game, or as Chargers fans call it, the "Immaculate Deception". It was a game-winning play executed by the Oakland Raiders against the Chargers on September 10, 1978, in San Diego at Jack Murphy Stadium.[17] With 10 seconds left in the game, the Raiders had possession of the ball at the Chargers' 14-yard line, down 20–14. Raiders quarterback Ken Stabler took the snap and found himself about to be sacked by Chargers linebacker Woodrow Lowe on the 24-yard line. Stabler fumbled the ball forward, and it rolled forward towards the San Diego goal line. Running back Pete Banaszak tried to recover the ball on the 12-yard line, but could not keep his footing, and the ball was pushed even closer to the end zone. Raiders tight end Dave Casper was the next player to reach the ball but he also could not get a hand on it. He batted and kicked the ball into the end zone, where he fell on it for the game-tying touchdown as time ran out. With the ensuing extra point by kicker Errol Mann, the Raiders won 21–20.[17] What many Charger fans believed should have been called an incomplete pass (and possibly intentional grounding) was seen as a fumble and the rest of the play involved batting of the ball forward towards the end zone where the Raiders ultimately recovered it for a touchdown.[17] As a result of this play, NFL rules were changed so that, in the last two minutes of a half or game, the only offensive player allowed to advance a fumble is the player who originally fumbled. If any other offensive player recovers the fumble and advances the ball, after the play the line of scrimmage is the spot of the original fumble.
1979–1988: Fouts and Air Coryell[edit]
1979[edit]
Main article: 1979 San Diego Chargers season
The fuck is a Chargers?
You gonna break it to the Arizona fans that think they are part of the west coast?The fuck is a Chargers?
Now the only west coast team to never win the Super Bowl
The fuck is a Chargers?
Now the only west coast team to never win the Super Bowl
They don't exist yet. My LA Raiders won one though
They don't exist yet. My LA Raiders won one though