Zazzle Shop

Screen printing
Showing posts with label College Football. Show all posts
Showing posts with label College Football. Show all posts

Friday, October 14, 2011

Lane Stadium + Enter Sandman = Win

259digg
lane stadium
An incredible scene unfolded at Lane Stadium on Saturday during the final seconds of Virginia Tech’s 38-35 victory over Miami, as the fans worked themselves up into a frenzy when Metallica’s “Enter Sandman” began to play on the stadium speakers during a Hurricanes timeout with five seconds remaining, and once again when the final whistle blew moments later.

Although Lane Stadium somehow didn’t make our list of the “13 Best Places to Watch College Football,” this video suddenly has me thinking that it not only should have made that list, but it could have easily been number one.

Here is a look at the wild scene inside Lane Stadium on Saturday.

Tuesday, March 1, 2011

This Guy’s Name Is Wonderful And Terrific


391diggsdigg


The University at Buffalo football team may not have been able to recruit the high school prospect with the most talent among this year’s class, but they were able to recruit the high school prospect with the best name.

Meet Wonderful Terrific Monds II. In an effort to make sure their son would never lack self-confidence, they gave him the most glorifying name they could come up with (we are simply assuming that is the explanation for such a name). Now the Bulls are hoping Monds can live up to his name.
That could be a tough task for the defensive end out of Westwood High School, but if he wasn’t up for the challenge, his parents probably would have just named him Average Mediocre.
Hat Tip – [Rivals.com]

Wednesday, February 16, 2011

Johnny Mac Trick Shot Quarterback



UConn Football player Johnny McEntee showing his skills in the offseason.

Tuesday, September 28, 2010

6'3, 203-pound University of Florida Safety vs. Guy in a Wheelchair on the Sideline: ...





After being mysteriously suspended and benched for the first two games of the season, Florida safety Will Hill finally got some playing time against Kentucky on Saturday night. The Gators destroyed the Wildcats 48-14. Unfortunately for him, Hill's highlight reel from the victory is limited to only one clip: the moment he accidentally collided with an innocent bystander in a wheelchair on the sidelines. He's clearly trying to break-up a pass intended for Kentucky wide receiver Chris Matthews.  Nonetheless, the video will leave you aghast.
Watch it after the jump.




Here's a better quality video. Hit is at the 59 second mark.
 



You probably just went through four sequential stages of reaction while watching the video. First, laughter. After all, this is sports black comedy at its finest. Second, concern for the man in the wheelchair. Third, disgust Hill didn't lend a hand to help the man up. It looks like he either asked him if he's o.k. before hustling back to formation or trashed talked him in the same way any defensive player would after making a big tackle.  Finally, guilt. You just laughed at a defenseless and immobile man in a wheelchair getting clobbered by a 6'3, 203-pound safety. Clearly the poor guy was struggling to get up, just like a turtle turned upside down on his shell. If you laughed, you're a horrible, merciless person. You should be ashamed of yourself. In the meantime, how about we watch the pwnage again, over and over again in .gif format?


Thursday, August 12, 2010

UCF alum Shanna McLaughlin gets naughty in the locker room

Posted by A. Isaac
From http://guyism.com/

UCF coach George O’ Leary is either really oblivious or just an impressive con artist. Given his uh, history, I’m thinking it’s the latter. He’s somehow convinced UCF alumni, fans and the general public that he had no idea that it was Shanna McLaughlin, a Playboy Playmate, doing a photo/video shoot in his locker room.

You’re sly Mr. O’Leary, but I’m onto you.

“I approved the magazine,” O’Leary told a Sentinel reporter after practice ended Saturday. “The guy called my office and basically wanted to know if they could do a magazine shoot. There was a UCF girl who had her MBA and all that. And the only thing I asked is, ‘Is that a magazine that is distributed on campus?’ And they said, ‘Yes.’ They’ve done I think four, since I’ve been here at least four, initial copies of football [previews] opening up the football season.”

Wait, just hold on a second here–she has her MBA? Well then, by God, she must be a clean, wholesome woman who was just going in the locker room to be filmed doing “Hail Marys” with her rosary.

Video and photos of the pure, innocent Shanna McLaughlin below.

UCF coach O’Leary: I gave permission for Playmate shoot in UCF locker room [Orlando Sentinel]

Friday, June 25, 2010

The Origin of the Word “Soccer”

From: http://www.todayifoundout.com/

jabulani soccer ballToday I found out the origin of the word “soccer”. For all you out there who love to complain when Americans, and certain others, call “Football”, “Soccer”, you should know that it was the British that invented the word and it was also one of the first names of what we now primarily know of as “Football”.

In fact, in the early days of the sport among the upper echelons of British society, the proper term for the sport was “Soccer”. Not only that, but the sport being referred to as “Soccer” preceded the first recorded instance of it being called by the singular word “Football” by about 18 years. This happening when it became more popular with the middle and lower class. When that happened, the term “Football” gradually began dominating over “Soccer” and the then official name “Association Football”.

In the 1860s, as in most of history with records as far back as 1004 B.C., there were quite a lot of “football” sports in existence being played popularly throughout the world and of course, England. Many of these sports had similar rules and eventually, on October 26th, 1863, a group of teams in England decided to get together and create a standard set of rules which would be used at all their matches. They formed the rules for “Association Football”, with the “Association” distinguishing it from the many other types of football sports in existence in England, such as “Rugby Football”.

Now British school boys of the day liked to nickname everything, which is still somewhat common. They also liked to add the ending “er” to these nicknames. Thus Rugby was, at that time, popularly called “Rugger”. Association Football was then much better known as “Assoccer”, which quickly just became “Soccer” and sometimes “Soccer Football”.

The inventor of the nickname is said to be Charles Wredford Brown, who was an Oxford student around the time of Association Football’s inception. Legend has it, in 1863 shortly after the creation of Association Football, Wredford-Brown had some friends who asked him if he’d come play a game of “Rugger”, to which he replied he preferred “Soccer”. The name caught on from there.

In the beginning, the newly standardized Rugby and Soccer were football sports for “gentlemen”, primarily being played by the upper echelons of society. However, these two forms of football gradually spread to the masses, particularly Soccer as Rugby didn’t really catch on too well with the lower classes. This resulted in the name switching from “Soccer” and “Association Football”, to just “Football”; with the first documented case of the sport being called by the singular term “Football” coming in 1881, 18 years after it was first called simply “Soccer” or officially “Association Football”.

This game then gradually spread throughout the world under the lower class name of “Football”, rather than “Soccer” as the “gentlemen” called it. The problem was though, that a lot of other countries of the world already had popular sports of their own they called “Football”, such as the United States, Canada, Ireland, Australia, New Zealand, and South Africa, to name a few. In these countries, the name “Soccer” was and, in some, still is preferred for this reason.

Bonus Factoids:

  • Just as intriguing, for those who like to lambaste American Football being called such when the ball interacts primarily with hands, most of the earliest forms of Football were named thus, not because you kicked a ball with your foot, but because they were played on foot. Peasants played most of their sports on foot; aristocrats played most of theirs on horseback. Thus, games played on foot were called “football”, whether they had anything to do with kicking a ball or not. Indeed, many of the earliest forms of football involved carrying balls in an attempt to get across goal lines passed some opposing team or individual players.
  • Soccer balls were originally painted with the now classic black and white checkered look in order to make them more visible on black and white TV during the 1970 FIFA World Cup. Naturally, people wanted to buy balls that looked like those that the professionals used on TV and thus everybody bought the black and white checkered soccer ball instead of the previous traditional solid color ball.
  • In the United States, early on the word “Football” was incorporated in the name for Soccer. The first name of the league was the “United States Soccer Football Association”. This lasted about 30 years before it was shortened to simply the “United States Soccer Federation” in 1975.
  • “Rugby” was also once known as “Football” and originally had almost the same set of rules as Soccer, though over time increasingly diverged. The name “Rugby” comes from Rugby School in England. Legend has it, during a Football match at that school, William Webb Ellis picked up the ball in his hands and ran with it over the goal line. It didn’t count as an official goal, as you weren’t supposed to use your hands; but the referee remarked, it was a “jolly good ‘try’”, which, according to legend, is where that particular Rugby scoring term comes from. The official Rugby Union was then formed in 1871 with a split in 1893 forming the Rugby League.
  • Rugby never caught on with the lower class as Soccer did. Thus, the famous British saying, “Soccer is a gentleman’s game played by ruffians and Rugby is a ruffian’s game played by gentlemen.”
  • The earliest known record of a Soccer-like sport was in 1004 B.C. in Japan. There are also many references to Soccer-like sports in 50 B.C. China, even being played between teams from China and Japan.
  • The Romans also played several types of Football games, including some that resembled Soccer. One of which was also included in the Roman Olympic Games. This particular version, in the Olympic Games, featured 27 men a side. The game was so rough that 2/3 of the players had to be hospitalized after the game.
  • The last genuine leather soccer ball used in the World Cup was the Adidas Tango Espana, used in the 1982 World Cup. Shortly thereafter, in 1986, the first fully synthetic World Cup soccer ball was used.
  • The designers of the Adidas Teamgeist, used in the 2006 World Cup, claim that ball was the roundest ever made for a sport.
  • During King Edward’s reign (1307-1327), he had laws passed against the playing of football sports. Anyone caught playing any form of football would be imprisoned, “For as much as there is a great noise in the city caused by hustling over large balls, from which many evils may arise…”
  • He wasn’t the only British monarch that hated football. Queen Elizabeth the First “had football players jailed for a week, with follow-up church penance”. King Henry IV and Henry VIII also passed laws against football sports.
  • American Football was originally known in England as “Start-Stop Rugby with Padding”… Catchy. :-)

Sources:

Friday, March 5, 2010

ESPN's 3-D TV push will begin with college football - Andy Staples - SI.com

3D cameras like the one used to shoot the 2009 USC-Ohio State game feature two lenses, each of which stands in for a human eye.
3D cameras like the one used to shoot the 2009 USC-Ohio State game feature two lenses, each of which stands in for a human eye.

Courtesy of ESPN/Jeff Mill
s
Read More here: ESPN's 3-D TV push will begin with college football - Andy Staples - SI.com

Tuesday, October 6, 2009

Georgia Bulldawg Fan Loses His Mind

Sports Videos, News, Blogs

Thursday, September 3, 2009

High Schooler Makes Life Saving Tackle