- "Chargers" redirects here. For the Indian
cricket
team, please see Deccan
Chargers.
The
San Diego Chargers are an American professional football team based in
San
Diego
, California
. They are currently members of the Western
Division of the
American
Football Conference (AFC) in the
National Football League (NFL). The
club began play in
1960 as a charter
member of the American Football League.
The club spent its
first season in Los Angeles, California
before moving to San Diego in 1961.
The
Chargers play their home games at Qualcomm Stadium
.
The Chargers are the only team to start a season 0-4 and make the
playoffs, and the only team to start a season 4-8 and make the
playoffs.
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 (
) as part of the
AFL-NFL Merger. In
the 34 years since then, the Chargers have made ten trips to the
playoffs and four appearances in the AFC Championship game. At the
end of the
1994 season, the Chargers
faced the
San Francisco 49ers in
Super Bowl XXIX and fell 49-26.
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 ( - ), quarterback Dan Fouts ( - ), head coach/general manager Sid
Gillman (1960-1969, ), wide receiver
Charlie Joiner ( - ), offensive lineman Ron
Mix (1960-1969) and tight end Kellen Winslow ( -1987).
Franchise history
1959–1969: AFL beginnings
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. The Chargers' original owner was hotel heir
Barron Hilton, son of
Hilton Hotels founder
Conrad Hilton.
The Chargers only spent one season in Los
Angeles before moving to San Diego
in 1961. 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.
Their only coach for the ten year life of the AFL was Sid Gillman,
a Hall of Famer. who was considered the foremost authority on the
forward passing offense of his era. With players such as Alworth,
Paul Lowe,
Keith
Lincoln and
John Hadl, 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.They also played defense, as indicated by their
professional football record 49 pass interceptions in 1961, and
featured AFL Rookie of the Year defensive end
Earl Faison. The Chargers were the originators
of the term "
Fearsome
Foursome" to describe their all-star defensive line, anchored
by Faison and
Ernie Ladd (the latter also
excelled in
professional
wrestling). The phrase was later appropriated by the
Los Angeles Rams. Hilton sold the Chargers to
a group headed by
Eugene Klein and
Sam Schulman in August 1966. The
following year the Chargers began "head to head" competition with
the older NFL with a preseason loss to the Detroit Lions. 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.
Alworth once again led the team in receptions with 64 and 1,003
yards with 4 touchdowns. 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.
1970–1978: Post-merger
In 1970 the San Diego Chargers were placed into the AFC West
division after the NFL merger with the AFL. 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. The Chargers acquired veteran players like
Deacon Jones and
Johnny Unitas, 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 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, in San Diego at Jack Murphy Stadium. With
10 seconds left in the game, the Raiders had possession of the ball
at the Chargers' 14-yard line, trailing 20-14. Raiders quarterback
Ken Stabler took the snap and found
himself about to be sacked by Chargers linebacker
Woody 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
placekicker
Errol Mann, the Raiders won, 21-20.. 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.. 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 fumbled ball 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
1979 marked a turning point for the Chargers franchise as
The Sporting News named team general manager
John Sanders NFL
Executive of the Year after balloting of other NFL executives.
Fouts set an NFL record with his fourth consecutive 300-yard
passing game, in a game in which he threw for 303 yards against the
Raiders. Coached by
Don Coryell (with an
offense nicknamed "
Air Coryell"),
featuring Fouts throwing to tight end Kellen Winslow and wide
receivers
John Jefferson and
Charlie Joiner, they clinched their first
playoff berth in 14 years with a 35-0 victory against the
New Orleans Saints. On
December 17, the Chargers defeated the
Denver Broncos 17-7 for their first AFC West
division title since the
AFL-NFL
merger before a national
Monday Night Football television
audience and their home crowd. Their time in the
playoffs was short as they would lose
to the
Houston Oilers 17-14 loss in
the divisional round. Ron Mix became the second AFL player and
second Charger to be named to the Pro Football Hall of Fame, during
halftime of the AFC-NFC Pro Bowl.
The team saw the team trade for running back
Chuck Muncie, and Fouts set a club record with
444 yards passing in the Chargers' 44-7 victory over the
New York Giants. Kellen Winslow caught 10
passes for 171 yards and Chargers clinched their second straight
AFC West title by defeating the
Pittsburgh Steelers 26-17 and finished
the regular season with an 11-5 record. Jefferson (1,340), Winslow
(1,290), and Joiner (1,132) became the first trio on the same team
to have 1,000 yards receiving in a season. The Chargers' defense
led the NFL in sacks (60) spearheaded by the frontline of 1975
Chargers' draftees Dean,
Gary "Big Hands" Johnson
and
Louie Kelcher. The trio, along
with
Leroy Jones
formed a defensive frontline that was locally nicknamed The Bruise
Brothers, coined from a popular act at the time,
The Blues Brothers. In the
playoffs, they won the divisional
round 20-14 over the
Buffalo Bills.
However, they fell one game shy of
Super
Bowl XV in a 34-27 loss to the eventual-champion Raiders.
In , the Chargers won their third straight AFC West title with a
10-6 season. They traded wide receiver John Jefferson to the
Green Bay Packers after he held
out for an increase in salary but replaced him with Wes Chandler.
Defensive end Dean also became involved in a hold out and was
traded to the 49ers. Dean contends he was making the same amount of
money as his brother-in-law who was a truck driver. Dean would win
UPI NFC Defensive Player of
the Year (while playing in only 11 games) that same year en
route to a Super Bowl victory and help the 49ers to another Super
Bowl title two years later. Dean's loss was particularly damaging
to the Chargers' Super Bowl chances as the defense weakened
afterwards, surrendering the most passing yards in the NFL in both
1981 and 1982.
In the
1981 playoffs, the
Chargers managed to outlast the
Miami
Dolphins in the divisional round, 41-38, in a game that became
known as
The Epic in Miami. The
game was voted as the best game in NFL history by a panel of ESPN
journalists.
The temperature was 85°F with high humidity
(29.4°C) at the Miami Orange
Bowl
, but it did not stop either team's offense.
The Chargers were led by quarterback Dan Fouts who made the Pro
Bowl for the third year in a row, setting an NFL single season
record at that point and time of 4,802 yards and 33 touchdowns. The
Dolphins were led by head coach
Don Shula
and featured a defense that gave up the fifth-fewest points in the
NFL in the regular season.
This game set playoff records for the most points scored in a
playoff game (79), the most total yards by both teams (1,036), and
most passing yards by both teams (809). Chargers placekicker
Rolf Benirschke eventually kicked
the winning 29-yard field goal after 13:52 of overtime to help San
Diego beat Miami, 41-38. The image of an exhausted tight end Kellen
Winslow, who finished the game with 13 receptions for 166 yards and
a touchdown and one blocked field goal, being helped off the field
by two of his Chargers teammates has been replayed countless times.
Kellen Winslow was voted to the Pro Football Hall of Fame in
1995.
However, the eventual-AFC Champion
Cincinnati Bengals, playing in their
first
AFC Championship Game,
defeated the Chargers 27-7 in what became known as the
Freezer Bowl. The temperature of nine degrees
below zero with a wind-chill factor of minus 59 made this the
coldest weather conditions for a title game in the history of the
NFL. Chargers owner
Eugene Klein tried
to get the NFL and Bengals to postpone the game but he was turned
down.
"I can't say how much it affected us, because we did make it to the
AFC championship game," said Johnson on the loss of fellow lineman
Dean. "But I could say if we had more pass rush from the corner, it
might've been different."
During the
strike shortened 1982
season, Fouts averaged what is still a record of 320 yards
passing per game. Highlights that season included back-to-back
victories against the 1981 Super Bowl teams San Francisco (41-37)
and Cincinnati (50-34) in which Fouts threw for over 400 yards in
each game to lead the Chargers to shootout victories.
The December 20th,
1982 Cincinnati
game was a rematch of the 1981 American Football
Conference Championship Game. The Chargers would
generate a total offensive yardage record of 661 (501 yards
passing, 175 yards rushing) that still stands as the most in team
history in defeating Cincinnati
. Also during the year, Chandler, set the
record of 129 yards receiving per game that is still an NFL record.
The Chargers made it back to the
playoffs, but after beating the
Steelers in the first round, they lost to the Dolphins 34-13 in a
rematch of their playoff game from the previous season. That loss
began a slide for the Chargers, who from to failed to make the
National Football
League playoffs every season.
In Klein cut salary in preparation of selling the team, sending
defensive linemen Johnson and Kelcher to San Francisco, where they
would join Dean and offensive tackle
Billy
Shields for another 49ers championship in
Super Bowl XXIV..
Alex Spanos purchased a majority interest in San
Diego from Klein on
August 1. Alex G.
Spanos still owns 97% of the team and George Pernicano owns the
other 3%, not Patricia and Frank Sandilands as stated on edit
protected line six of this article . Benirschke was named "Miller
Man of the Year" and Joiner set an NFL record with his 650th pass
reception in the fourth quarter of the game at Pittsburgh. In
guard Ed White set an NFL record by playing in
241 NFL games, most all-time among offensive linemen.
Lionel "Little Train" James, a mere 5'6" and
171 pound running back, set NFL record of 2,535 all-purpose yards
while also setting a record of 1,027 receiving yards by a running
back
Al Saunders was named the seventh
head coach in Chargers history in 1986 following the resignation of
Coryell. In 1987 Joiner retired to become receivers coach of the
Chargers. The Chargers finished with an 8—7 record, their first
winning record since 1982, despite winding up with six straight
losses. In Fouts retired after 15-year career in which he set seven
NFL records and 42 club records, and became the NFL's second most
prolific passer of all-time with 43,040 yards. Fouts's jersey
number (14) was retired at halftime of "Dan Fouts Day" game in San
Diego.
1989–1995: Super Bowl bound
In
Dan Henning, a former Chargers
quarterback,
Washington Redskins
assistant, and
Atlanta Falcons head
coach, was named the eighth head coach in Chargers history.
Marion Butts set a club record with 39
carries and a team rookie record with 176 yards in Chargers' 20-13
win in Kansas City. After a three-year stint as Director of
Football Operations,
Steve Ortmayer
was released after the season and replaced by
Bobby Beathard.
Henning's tenure with the Chargers lasted three seasons as
Bobby Ross was hired as head coach in and the
Chargers acquired quarterback Stan Humphries in a trade with
Redskins. The Chargers would lose their first four games of the
season and come back to become the first 0-4 team to make the
playoffs as they won 11 of the
last 12 games and clinched the AFC West title. Ross was named
NFL Coach of the Year
for the Chargers' dramatic turnaround by
Pro Football Weekly. In the first round
of the playoffs, the Chargers shut out the
Kansas City Chiefs 17-0, but the Dolphins
shut out the Chargers in the divisional playoffs to eliminate the
Chargers. In , the Chargers finished 8-8 (fourth in their
division).
In the 1994 season, the Chargers made their first and, so far, only
Super Bowl appearance, against the 49ers
in
Super Bowl XXIX. They got to the
Super Bowl by winning their first six regular season games, the
only NFL team to do so in 1994, and finished the season 11-5.
Quarterback
Stan Humphries and wide
receiver
Tony Martin
combined on a 99-yard touchdown completion to tie an NFL record
during a defeat of the
Seattle
Seahawks, 27-10. They would become the 1994 AFC West Division
champions behind a defense led by
linebacker Junior
Seau,
defensive tackles
Reuben Davis and
Shawn Lee,
defensive end Leslie
O'Neal and an offense keyed by running back
Natrone Means, Humphries and Martin. The
Chargers had upset victories over the Dolphins and Steelers in the
AFC
playoffs. Despite those
two close triumphs (22-21 against the Dolphins in the Divisional
Round, and 17-13 against the Steelers in the AFC Championship
Game), the Chargers lost Super Bowl XXIX to the San Francisco 49ers
by a score of 49-26, who were led by quarterback
Steve Young (
Super Bowl MVP) and wide receiver
Jerry Rice.
The NFL later determined that the 49ers had violated the salary cap
during the 1994 season. The 49ers were fined $600,000 and deprived
of a 5th round draft pick in 2001 and a 3rd round draft pick in
2002. Despite the lopsided loss in the Super Bowl, Beathard, who
traded for or drafted the bulk of the Chargers roster, and who
hired coach Ross, was named the NFL's smartest man by
Sports Illustrated, and became the only
general manager to lead three different teams to the Super Bowl
(Chargers, Dolphins, Redskins).
The Chargers follow-up year in didn't bring the same success of the
previous season, but the team still managed to get into the
playoffs with a five-game
winning streak to end the season at 9-7. However, in the first
round, the Chargers were eliminated by the
Indianapolis Colts in a 35-20
defeat.
1996–2003
In 1996,
running back Rodney Culver and his
wife, Karen, were killed in the crash of ValuJet Airlines Flight 592 in the Florida
Everglades
. Culver was the second player in team history
to die while on the active roster after David Griggs was killed in
a one-car accident in Davie, Florida
11 months earlier. 1997 would find Ross and
Beathard at odds with one another and would result in Ross and his
staff being released. The Chargers selected
Kevin Gilbride to become their new head
coach. Gilbride, whose coaching background with the
Jacksonville Jaguars and Oilers
featured a more open passing attack would mark a major change in
offensive style from the ball control ground game of Ross. Beathard
drafted quarterback
Ryan Leaf after the
Indianapolis Colts selected
Peyton Manning with the first pick in
the
1998 NFL Draft. The Chargers
ended up trading several players and draft choices to the
Arizona Cardinals in order to move up to
the second pick and select Ryan Leaf. The Chargers would see the
team struggle in pass protection resulting in Humphries suffering
several concussions and his retirement from the game. Gilbride was
replaced by interim head coach
June
Jones, who was on the Chargers' staff before the hire.
Jones
would leave the team at the end of the season to coach at the
University of Hawaii and the
Chargers would name former Oregon State University
head coach Mike Riley as
their new head coach. Leaf wound up having a disappointing
career with the Chargers after a great deal of controversy with
both the Charger management as well as the press and his teammates.
His failure to be the player the team envisioned was seen as a
black mark on the franchise and will be remembered by some as one
of the worst draft/trades in the history of pro football.
Quarterback
Jim Harbaugh, who was
acquired in trade with the
Baltimore
Ravens for a conditional draft choice in 2000, became the
Chargers starting quarterback. Beathard retired in April 2000 and
was replaced January 2001 by
John Butler, former general
manager of the Bills. From to , the Chargers had eight-straight
seasons where they were .500 or worse.
2001 saw
Norv Turner, the former head
coach of the Redskins, named offensive coordinator by Riley. Turner
would go on to install the offense that he coached with the
Dallas Cowboys under
Ernie Zampese, former offense coordinator
during the Coryell era. The Chargers signed
Heisman Trophy winner free agent quarterback
Doug Flutie, formerly with the Bills
andtraded the team's first overall selection in the
2001 NFL Draft to the
Atlanta Falcons for the first round
selection (fifth overall) and third-round selection in the same
draft. In addition the Chargers obtained wide receiver/kick
returner
Tim Dwight and the Falcons'
second-round draft selection in the
2002
NFL Draft.
The Chargers used those selections in the
2001 draft to select Texas Christian University
running back LaDainian Tomlinson and Purdue
University
quarterback Drew Brees
.
Hired as a replacement to Riley,
Marty Schottenheimer's Chargers squad
opened the 2002 season with four straight victories making him the
only coach in team history to win his first four games.Butler would
succumb to cancer after a nine-month struggle in April 2003.
Replacing Butler was
A. J. Smith, who was
named Executive Vice President-General Manager, replacing his close
friend. Smith and Butler had worked together with the Bills playing
key roles with Buffalo's Super Bowl teams. In 2003, the Chargers
traded Seau to the Dolphins for a draft pick in
2004 NFL Draft. Seau was selected to
2003 Pro Bowl, his 12th Pro Bowl selection of
his career, and in his final season with the Chargers, he was
chosen by teammates as the recipient of the
Emil Karas Award as the team’s Most Inspirational
Player. Also in 2003, Tomlinson accumalated 195 total yards from
scrimmage in a late season game against the Packers to raise his
season total to 2,011 and became the first player in team history
and the eighth player in NFL history to record consecutive
2,000-yard seasons. Tomlinson also became the first player in NFL
history to rush for 1,000 yards and catch 100 passes in the same
season .
2004–(present)

2008 San Diego Chargers
Although the Chargers were tied with three other teams for the
worst record of the 2003 NFL season, the league’s tie-breaking
system gave San Diego the number one pick in the 2004 NFL Draft.
With this
pick, the Chargers selected Quarterback Eli
Manning from the University of Mississippi
despite Manning's stated desire to play
elsewhere. New York Giants general manager
Ernie Accorsi, who had been in trade
negotiations for several weeks before the draft with the Chargers,
selected quarterback
Philip Rivers
fourth and traded him along with additional draft picks to the
Chargers. Rivers was expected to compete for the starting
quarterback job, but he held out of training camp in a contract
dispute.
Drew Brees, who received the
majority of snaps at quarterback during Rivers' hold out, would
retain the starting quarterback position. The team earned a trip
back to the post-season in by capturing the AFC West division title
with a 12-4 regular season record. The Chargers entered the first
round of the
playoffs but were
eliminated by the
New York Jets, who
won in overtime 20-17. Rookie kicker
Nate
Kaeding missed a 40-yard field goal that would have advanced
San Diego into the next round, thus opening the door for a Jets
victory. Despite an abrupt ending to their season, Head Coach
Marty Schottenheimer was named
NFL Coach of the Year for the season, and Brees was named
NFL Comeback Player of the
Year.
During the
2005 NFL Draft, the
Chargers drafted linebacker Shawne Merriman with a draft pick
acquired from the Giants in the Eli Manning trade, who would go on
to become a selection to the
2006 Pro
Bowl and the 2005 Defensive
NFL Rookie of the Year Award
recipient. The team then used their second first round selection on
defensive tackle
Luis
Castillo.The Chargers started the season without tight end
Antonio Gates as he was suspended two
games by Smith for holding out in training camp. The 2005 season
saw
LaDainian Tomlinson's
18-game touchdown scoring streak end as Kaeding had a field goal
blocked and returned for a touchdown in a 20-17 loss to the
Philadelphia Eagles on the road.
Facing the 13-0 Colts on the road, the Chargers took a 16-0 lead
into the third quarter of the game, but the Colts responded with 17
points of their own to take a 1-point lead in the fourth quarter.
The Chargers would retake the lead on a field goal by Kaeding then
scored again on an 83-yard touchdown run by
Michael Turner. However a
week later, the Chargers lost on the road to the Chiefs as an
injured Tomlinson rushed for only 47 yards. The Chargers would go
on to lose their season finale to the Broncos, with Brees suffering
a dislocated shoulder to end the Chargers' 9–7 season. Brees, whose
contract expired at the end of that season, left the team and would
sign with the
New Orleans
Saints.
The 2006 campaign would see the Chargers set the team's
single-season record for wins with 14, while Tomlinson would enjoy
the finest statistical season of his career, leading the league
with 1,815 rushing yards and setting an NFL single-season record by
scoring 31 touchdowns. However, the team would come up short in the
playoffs again, blowing a fourth quarter lead at home in a 24-21
loss to the
New England
Patriots. In the ensuing offseason, massive changes occurred to
the coaching staff, as offensive coordinator Cam Cameron left to
become the head coach of the
Miami
Dolphins, while defensive coordinator Wade Phillips would fill
the head coaching vacancy with the
Dallas
Cowboys. After a brief struggle for control over filling these
vacancies, General Manager AJ Smith fired Schottenheimer, replacing
him with
Norv Turner, who had been a
head coach with two other NFL teams and had previously served the
Chargers as offensive coordinator.
After winning their game against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers on Sunday
December 21, 2008, the Chargers stood at 7-8, one game behind the
Denver Broncos. Denver's loss to the Buffalo Bills later that same
day created a primetime showdown between Denver and San Diego in
San Diego for the AFC West Championship, as well as the fourth seed
in the playoffs. The Chargers won the 2008 AFC West championship in
convincing fashion by beating Denver in a 52–21 blowout. On January
3, 2009, the San Diego Chargers defeated the Indianapolis Colts
23–17 in overtime to advance to the AFC Divisional Playoff round.
On January 11, 2009 the Chargers were defeated by the Pittsburgh
Steelers 35–24 in the AFC Divisional Game ending their 2008
season.
Logo and uniforms

San Diego Chargers uniform:
1992-2006.
During most seasons, the Chargers' road uniforms included
white socks with navy blue stripes.

Chargers' AFL logo 1966-1969

Chargers AFL logo
Except for color changes, the Chargers have basically used the logo
of an arc-shaped lightning bolt since the team debuted in 1960.
During its period in the AFL, the club also used a shield logo that
featured a horsehead, a lightning bolt, and the word
"Chargers".
From 1960 to 1973, the colors consisted of either Electric blue
("sky" or "powder" blue, but technically called Collegiate blue) or
white jerseys, both with gold lightning bolts on the shoulders. The
helmets were white and had both the arc-shaped lightning bolt logo,
in gold, and the player's number. At first, the team wore white
pants before switching to gold in 1966.
In 1974, the sky blue was changed to dark royal blue. The helmet
was also changed to dark blue and the players' numbers were
removed. From 1978 through 1983, the Chargers wore their white
jerseys at home, coinciding with the hiring of coach Don Coryell -
when
Joe Gibbs, a Coryell assistant in
1979-80, became head coach of the
Washington Redskins in 1981, he did the
same, and white at home has become a Redskins staple ever since -
but Coryell switched the Chargers to their blue jerseys at home
starting in 1984. With the exception of the 1991 season and other
sporadic home games since, San Diego wears its blue jerseys at
home.
In 1985, the Chargers started using navy blue jerseys and returned
to wearing white pants. The team's uniform design was next revamped
in 1988. It featured an even darker shade of navy blue. The
lightning bolts on the jerseys and helmets were white, with navy
interior trim and gold outlining. In 1990, the team started to wear
navy pants with their white jerseys. From 1988-1991, the team
displayed stripes down the pants rather than lightning bolts. The
Chargers went with all-white combinations in and , only to have the
blue pants make a comeback.
On October 27, 2003, the Chargers wore their
navy pants with their navy jersey for a Monday Night
Football game versus the Miami Dolphins that was played at
Sun Devil
Stadium
, then the home of the Arizona Cardinals, due to wildfires in
southern California. This remains the only game in which the
Chargers have worn the all-dark combination.

Throwback uniforms worn in 1994 (NFL
75th anniversary) and 2009 (AFL 50th anniversary); blue throwback
also used in 2000 for Chargers' 40th anniversary and as an
alternate jersey from 2002-2006.
.
From the late 1980s to 2000, the Chargers wore white at home during
preseason games and dark for regular season games. In 2001, the
Chargers started wearing their dark uniforms for preseason games
and white uniforms in September home games due to the heat before
switching back to dark in October. From 2002-2006, the Chargers
used the early-1960s powder blue uniforms as alternate jerseys,
which many football fans (both of the Chargers and of other teams)
clamored for the team to bring back full-time.
In March 2007, the Chargers unveiled their first uniform redesign
since 1988, on the team's official website. The team formally
unveiled this new uniform set, which mixes old and new styles, in a
private team-only event. Navy blue remains the primary color on the
home jersey, but the familiar lightning bolt was reverted to gold,
and now has navy outlining and Collegiate (powder) blue interior
trim. The latter color is a nod to the 1960s uniforms. The
redesigned lightning bolt was moved to the sides of the shoulders
from the top, and includes a new numbering font and word mark in
white, with gold outlining and powder blue interior trim. The pants
also have a redesigned lightning bolt in gold, with powder blue
trim on a navy stripe. Additionally, the team pays tribute to other
uniform features from their history by wearing a metallic white
helmet, with a navy face mask, the newly revamped bolt in gold with
navy and powder blue trim, and white pants. The road white jerseys
with navy pants, as well as the alternate powder blue jerseys with
white pants, were also redesigned with the new scheme. The San
Diego Chargers wear their white jerseys for the first couple games
in the first half of the season.
Since 2007, the Chargers have worn the alternate powder blue
jerseys a total of seven times, most recently in a November 29,
2009 game vs. the
Kansas City
Chiefs.
In 2009, in honor of their 50th anniversary as one of the eight
original
AFL teams, the
Chargers wore their 1960 throwback uniforms for three games.
Players of note
Current roster
Pro Football Hall of Famers
Retired numbers
Chargers Hall of Fame
The Chargers have a team Hall of Fame with the following members:
- 56 Emil Karas, Linebacker, 1960-66,
inducted 1976
- 55 Frank Buncom, Linebacker,
1962-68, inducted 1976
- 53 Bob Laraba, Linebacker, 1960-61,
inducted 1976
- 38 Jacque MacKinnon, Running
back, 1961-69, inducted 1976
- 19 Lance Alworth, Wide receiver,
1962-70, inducted 1977
- 74 Ron Mix, Offensive tackle, 1960-69,
inducted 1978
- 23 Paul Lowe, Running back, 1960-68,
inducted 1979
- Barron Hilton, team founder-owner,
1960-66, inducted 1980
- 22 Keith Lincoln, Running back,
1961-68, inducted 1980
- 77 Ernie Ladd, Defensive tackle,
1961-65, inducted 1981
- 78 Walt Sweeney, Guard, 1966-99,
inducted 1981
- 21 John Hadl, Quarterback, 1962-09,
inducted 1983
- 50 Chuck Allen, Linebacker, 1961-69,
inducted 1984
- 27 Gary Garrison, Wide receiver,
1966-76, inducted 1985
- Sid Gillman, head coach, 1961-69
& 1971, inducted 1985
- 86 Earl Faison, Defensive end,
1961-66, inducted 1986
- 14 Dan Fouts, Quarterback, 1973-87,
inducted 1993
- 18 Charlie Joiner, Wide receiver,
1976-86, inducted 1993
- Don Coryell, head coach, 1978-86,
inducted 1994
- 45 Speedy Duncan, Cornerback,
1964-70, inducted 1995
- 70 Russ Washington, Offensive
tackle, 1968-82, inducted 1995
- 80 Kellen Winslow, Tight end,
1979-87, inducted 1995
- George Pernicano, team
executive, since 1961, inducted 1996
- 6 Rolf Benirschke, Kicker,
1978-87, inducted 1997
- 22 Gill Byrd, Cornerback 1983-92,
inducted 1998
- 79 Gary "Big Hands" Johnson, Defensive
tackle, 1975-84, inducted 1999
- 63 Doug Wilkerson, Guard,
1971-84, inducted 2000
- 89 Wes Chandler, Wide receiver,
1981-87, inducted 2001
- 12 Stan Humphries, Quarterback,
1992-97, inducted 2002
- Bobby Ross, head coach, 1992-96,
inducted 2002
- 74 Louie Kelcher, Defensive
tackle, 1975-83, inducted 2003
- 62 Don Macek, Center, 1976-89,
inducted 2004
- 67 Ed White, Guard, 1978-85,
inducted 2004
- 71 Fred Dean, Defensive end, 1975-81,
inducted 2008
Alworth, Mix, Hadl, Joiner, Coryell, Gillman, Garrison, Fouts,
White, Winslow, Faison, Benirschke, Lincoln, Washington, Humphries,
Ladd and Wilkerson are also members of the
San Diego Hall of Champions,
which is open to athletes from the San Diego area as well as those
who played for San Diego-based professional and
collegiate teams.
50 greatest Chargers
In conjuction with the 50th anniversary ofthe AFL the Chargers
named their top players in the history of the franchise. The 53
players and coaches selected as the Greatest Chargers of all time
during the team's 50th Anniversary Season, was announced in
2009.
QB --
Dan Fouts,
John
Hadl, Stan Humphries, Philip Rivers.
RB -- Keith Lincoln, Paul Lowe, Natrone Means, Chuck Muncie,
LaDainian Tomlinson.
WR --
Lance Alworth, Wes Chandler,
Gary Garrison, John Jefferson, Charlie Joiner.
TE -- Antonio Gates, Kellen Winslow.
T -- Ron Mix, Russ Washington, Ernie Wright.
G -- Kris Dielman, Walt Sweeney, Ed White, Doug Wilkerson.
C - - Nick Hardwick, Don Macek.
DE --
Fred Dean,
Earl Faison, Leslie O'Neal.
DT -- Gary Johnson, Louie Kelcher, Ernie Ladd, Jamal
Williams.
LB -- Chuck Allen, Woodrow Lowe, Shawne Merriman, Junior Seau,
Billy Ray Smith.
DB -- Willie Buchanon, Gill Byrd, Rodney Harrison, Quentin Jammer,
Charlie McNeil.
K -- Rolf Benirschke, John Carney.
KR -- Speedy Duncan, Darren Sproles.
P -- Darren Bennett, Mike Scifres.
ST -- Hank Bauer, Kassim Osgood.
COACHES -- Don Coryell, Sid Gillman, Bobby Ross.
Staff
Head coaches
Current staff
Radio and television
The
Chargers' flagship station is KIOZ
105.3FM,
commonly known as "Rock 1053." Josh
Lewin and
Hank
Bauer comprise the broadcast team. Past Chargers radio
broadcasters have included
Tom
Kelly,
Lee "Hacksaw"
Hamilton,
Dan Rowe and
Ted Leitner.
Most preseason games are televised on
KFMB
in San Diego
and KCBS
in Los
Angeles. The announcers were
Ron
Pitts and Billy Ray Smith.
Since the
Los Angeles market is within the Chargers' 75-mile radius (which
prohibits broadcasts of Charger games on national radio during the
regular season), the Chargers Radio Network has a secondary
flagship station for Los Angeles: KLAC
AM-570, in
Los Angeles and Orange County. The previous Los
Angeles flagship was KSPN AM-710 and
before that, KMPC
AM-1540 for
several years.
Dennis Packer, the public address announcer of
all USC football games at the Los Angeles
Memorial Coliseum
, serves as the P.A. announcer of all Charger home
games at Qualcomm
Stadium
.
Theme Song
The Chargers are also well-known for their famous disco theme song,
"San Diego Super Chargers." The theme song was recorded in 1978 at
the height of the team's success with Air Coryell, and has a
distinctly
disco sound. The team still proudly
plays this song at home games after touchdowns in celebration. From
time to time during highlights of
NFL
PrimeTime, ESPN's
Chris Berman and
Tom Jackson would briefly sing the first
line of the song's chorus.
Notes and references
External links