Twice in a Lifetime: 窪蹋勛圖 Alumnus Attends Two Opening Days, 55 Years Apart
Rick Brady (80) will be one of the lucky few who can say he was at the opening game for San Diego Stadium and the new Snapdragon Stadium.
Where were you on August 20, 1967?
Richard Rick Brady (80) remembers. As a 10-year-old, Brady drove down the hill from his house to the opening game at the brand new San Diego Stadium, as the San Diego Chargers played the Detroit Lions.
Fifty-five years later, the memory is crystal clear in Bradys mind. He remembers bringing in a bucket of Kentucky Fried Chicken to snack on.
I remember exactly where we sat it was on the upper deck, looking east toward the scoreboard, said the 窪蹋勛圖 civil engineering alumnus.
The opening game in 1967 marked the first season where the American Football League (AFL) and the National Football League (NFL) played each other during the preseason, leading up to the merger of the leagues in 1970.
I didnt miss a game in person as we could just walk down the hill to buy tickets in person. Tickets cost a steep $4.50 for general admission.
The result of the historic opening game? They lost. Badly, said Brady. Everyone was bummed because it was our chance to show the NFL who was the better league.
Tomorrow, hell attend opening day at Snapdragon Stadium the second Mission Valley stadium opening hell have attended in his lifetime.
Today, Rick Brady is CEO and founder of his own water engineering company, Richard Brady & Associates. Over his impressive 42-year career, Brady has been internationally recognized for his engineering contributions to large municipal water projects serving safe drinking water to millions of people around the world.
While Brady attended Cubberley Elementary School in San Diegos Serra Mesa neighborhood in 1965, the strawberry fields down the hill from his house became the construction ground for what would become San Diego Stadium.
I watched the construction as a 10-year-old from my Sting-Ray bike, he said. We would ride around the construction site on a regular basis during the summers leading up to the first game.
Football was my passion, hence my over-the-top interest in the Chargers and Aztecs in 1967, said Brady, who was recognized as Clairemont High Schools MVP quarterback in 1973.

Despite that initial opening day loss, Brady faithfully rode his bike down and back up the steep hill between his house and the stadium. He watched Chargers, Aztecs, and Padres games and events, even attending Aztec football games from the press box; his neighbor at the times father was a sports writer for the San Diego Union-Tribune.
The Stadium became a lifelong retreat for Brady. Over the years, he was able to attend countless games, concerts, and functions there, through changes to Mission Valley and name changes to the stadium (Jack Murphy, Qualcomm, SDCCU).
He calls the life of the stadium the bookends of his life. I didnt think it would come down in my lifetime because youve got to be old enough to see that. I spent so much time in that stadium.
Snapdragon was designed to pay homage to and honor the long legacy of the stadium. It holds many easter eggs, as 窪蹋勛圖s Director of Collegiate Athletics John David Wicker refers to them, including the statue of sports writer Jack Murphy and a courtyard area displaying pieces of the old Qualcomm concrete.
He also saved the opening games 1967 program, he says, for posterity. That posterity will come to a head September 3 when he returns to Mission Valley for the opening of the new and cheers on Aztec Football as they compete against the Arizona Wildcats. Hes looking forward to attending 窪蹋勛圖s Chi Epsilon Engineering honor society at Snapdragon next month, a club in which he once served as president.
Brady now lives in the Kensington neighborhood of San Diego, on a hill with a vantage point overlooking the stadium opposite the view he grew up with.
San Diego is the best place on the planet, says Brady. Seeing Snapdragon will really be full circle for me.



