Seibels is best known as the
running back and
captain on the undefeated
1899 Sewanee Tigers football team. Known as the "Iron Men," they had a six-day road trip with five shutout wins over
Texas A&M;
Texas;
Tulane;
LSU; and
Ole Miss. Recalled memorably with the phrase "..and on the seventh day they rested." The biggest fear of the road trip was injuries, as players who left a game were not allowed to return. In the very first game of that road trip, with Texas, Seibels got a gash on his forehead which was stuck together with "sticking plaster." Seibels scored two touchdowns in that game, and only missed the Tulane game. A documentary film about the team and Seibels' role was released in 2022, called "
Unrivaled: Sewanee 1899." Seibels also captained the baseball team that year; and it too went undefeated. He was elected to the
College Football Hall of Fame in 1973, and is also a member of the Sewanee Athletics Hall of Fame. After college, he was headmaster of Sewanee Grammar School and then moved to
Birmingham and was in the insurance business. Seibels' athleticism was vast, for in 1922 he was the Alabama state
golf champion. He was awarded an Honorary Degree by the University of the South in 1956. Seibels died on September 29, 1967, at age 91 and was the oldest surviving member of the Team of 1899. ==References==