He has combined contortions of an octopus, determination of a wolverine and Jedi-level reading of the game. I guess he was the first X-men, next evolutionary step.
One funny thing in this video is, on #8 you say "Hall of fame ankle breaker"... on that play, the guy who gets his ankles broken is John Lynch - a Hall Of Fame player himself, and one of the best defenders in the game at the time. Barry made him look ridiculous. Thats how good Barry was.
ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-eCeBBof8k4w.html Liked your reaction video about AP which I believe was the best all around running back ever in the NFL. This compilation of him is proof. Enjoy.
most Finnish people settle in Minnesota, the Dakotas or Wisconsin when they come to America, the Iron Range in Particular(in Minnesota) is extremely Finnish.
No form of football is called that because the ball is kicked. Its called football because it is played on foot. The various football codes emerged when sport shifted from riding sports to sports performed solely by humans. Also of all types of football only Soccer is solely a kicking sport. Football, Rugby Union, Rugby League, Australian Rules Football and Gaelic Football, all are carrying codes.
That last game against the packers was crazy. The Vikings hoping to get Adrian over the record, Adrian looking to get the Vikings into the playoffs, and the Packers looking to keep us out and get better seeding for the playoffs. On top of all that the Vikings and Packers are fierce rival teams. Both always play their absolute best when they face off. One of them can be having a trash season while the other is doing great and it will almost always be a tight game. And the best part is after the game they interviewed him asking about his feelings about coming up 9 yards shy and his reply was, “9 yards? 9 yards from what? The record??” It wasn’t even on his mind. A true team player. He wasn’t thinking about himself or the record. He was focused on the team and winning
These cars go from a standstill to 500 kmh in under 3.5 seconds. When the engine fails like this it is like having 5 sticks of dynamite exp.ode in your face.
That was a very special time to be a Chicago Bears fan! Devin Hester was, from his very first game as a Bear, unstoppable. He took one back against the Packers in his first game, and he never stopped!
It takes about 10hrs a day 5-7 days a week of practicing and slamming into the ground over and over again until u nail it regularly. It takes unreal power, balance, body control and complete disregard for your body at times. Imagine trying to do a long combo in a game and u have to memorize a bunch of buttons to pull it off…..that’s how it is trying to get your body where it needs to be to transition from 1 move to the next…..if go big and u get it wrong you’re slamming into the ground. It’s some of the hardest training a person can put themselves through (outside of the military)
They used to kick a lot more in the earlier days. Also, during that time, "soccer" was commonly used to refer to what everyone else in the world calls football now. Soccer was actually a 19th cent. English word invented to distinguish it from rugby.
check out his college highlights . . . keep in mind he typically only played 3 quarters because they didn’t want to be accused of running up the score . . . his records would’ve never been beat in our lifetime
The guy the announcers pointed out in the clip. No. 42 who Barry left with his jock strap hanging was John Lynch. He is in the Pro Football Hall of Fame and considered one of the greatest to ever play the safety position. It's not so much Sanders raw speed, although he had that, but his acceleration. He could stop, restart and be at full speed in three steps. Look at the video how he puts in an extra gear to run right between two defenders who have an angle on him. He also had elite vision and superb balance.
As an American, don’t care for our football. Should be handball, but over here that means something else as well. I get what you’re saying. Some people get way into the sport too, I’m sure that soccer (football) is the same way in Europe
Don't know if you'll see this, but I've watched people react to this video and it is just technical enough to give you a better idea of what Drag Racing is about at the peak level. Informative and nice racing shots. What is NHRA Drag Racing? (Top Fuel and Funny Car), (7:57) ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-DJ9EoM6LpEE.html
I don’t hate these too 50 videos but this ain’t his most craziest videos. They take history into account for their consideration. He’s got more impressive plays than this (no kidding some of them for small gains). He’s the only player that could lose a yard and still make say, “WOW!” What MJ was in the air, Sanders was on the ground. Oh and personally, I love number three the most. Dude is getting spun in the air, but as soon as that left foot strikes the ground…he’s full speed. That acceleration is truly unreal, because he’s spinning as his foot is landing. That’s insane body control and leg drive!
Hello my friend, I just watched a video on Helsinki on a channel called Wolters World and realized that I hadn’t said hello in a while. Hope school is going well and are in good health, all going good with me ☮️
the 5 one refers to returns in a season for TD. He set the record for TD returns in a season, punt return TDs career, non-offensive TDs career and combined returns career. Among others. the 19 returns number was career return TDs. the super bowl return doesn't count to that total, but it is the quickest score and only return touchdown on the game's opening play in SB history.
In a significant amount of those clips, he is making some of the best Hall of Famers look like straight up idiots. You know how he's the GOAT? Because no one has ever replicated what he did. When Jordan retired, there were people who came along and did some of what he did. It wasn't flashy, it wasn't their norm, and it sure as hell wasn't as good as Jordan's, but they managed to imitate it. There has been no one, before or since, who has even come CLOSE to imitating the sheer magic Barry wrought on the gridiron. Barry made some of the most inhuman cuts, jukes, and plays look fucking ROUTINE.
"He looks like the most American man ever." Pretty much. Teams are supposed to work together, but look at defending Cup Series champion Kyle Larson's two wins this year, which were both earned after hip-checking his teammate, 2020 champion Chase Elliott. Then there's the Jeff Gordon-Jimmie Johnson feud, and many others. But, yeah, teams *usually* work together. Speaking of Mark Martin (and the fact that you're reacting to a video by S1apSh0es, a Mark Martin fan), check out S1apSh0es' Mark Martin Apologetics Tour, going through each of the five times Mark Martin finished runner-up in the Cup Series championship- only to never win it himself.
"How many G-forces...?" This was only 50G. The highest G-force crash in IndyCar history happened 13 years prior at Texas Motor Speedway, suffered by Kenny Brack. How do you walk away from landing upside down in an IndyCar? Two words: roll hoop. IIRC, Katherine Legge was interviewed after she was checked and released from the infield care center after her Road America flip, and she said that she just had some bruising that wouldn't look good in her dress for the Indy Lights banquet that night. As someone said in a comment under a video of Servia's Laguna Seca crash, you gotta avoid those Laguna Seca landmines. Current IndyCars weigh approximately 1630 lbs in road/street course spec, 1620 lbs in short oval spec, and 1590 lbs in speedway spec.
0:39 This race was postponed because of rain (that stopped before race time, but high humidity prevented the track from drying) from Saturday night to Sunday morning. Newgarden (21, the driver the onboard view is from) would break his collarbone and wrist in this crash, prompting his team, Ed Carpenter Racing, to have J. R. Hildebrand on standby in case Newgarden wasn't ready to race at Road America two weeks later. This crash would lead to 30 laps under yellow (with the cars going through pit road every time to allow room for the frontstretch SAFER barrier to be repaired), before rain came and red-flagged the race. The remainder of the race (178 of 248 laps) was rescheduled for late August (the race was originally in mid-June), because conditions wouldn't be conducive for a while, several drivers were taking part in the 24 Hours of Le Mans the following weekend, with the race at Road America the weekend after that. 2:08 This is the wreck that almost killed my favorite driver, Canadian James Hinchcliffe (aka; Hinch, the Mayor of Hinchtown). One of the suspension arms literally impaled him, and when the safety crew arrived on the scene, they pulled him off the suspension. Hinch went on the Dale Jr. Download (a podcast by former NASCAR Cup Series driver [another favorite of mine] and current team owner [JR Motorsports] and NASCAR on NBC commentator Dale Earnhardt, Jr.) during the summer of 2020, and one of the things they talked about is this crash. 2:38 Blundell missed three races (Surfer's Paradise, Long Beach, and Nazareth) with a broken foot and ankle suffered in this crash. 4:05 This crash severed both of Alex Zanardi's legs- one at and the other above the knee. He was only saved because of how quick safety workers got to his car and thought to use the safety harnesses to cut circulation to his stumps, and how quick he was able to get airlifted to the hospital. The RU-vidr by the name Albon did a video a few weeks ago called "The Man Who Escaped Death 3 Times", and the thumbnail is a still from this crash. Speaking of Zanardi, you *must* check out his race-winning final lap pass from the 1996 CART season finale at Laguna Seca, which has become so legendary it is simply known as "The Pass". There's a minute-and-a-half video of it that is just the final lap, but I recommend the longer video of it, that shows the build-up to it. (If you just search "IndyCar The Pass", it's the top result.) 6:26 This sent Dario Franchitti (the pink car) and 17 fans (iirc) to the hospital. Franchitti retired on doctors' orders, and is now a commentator on the global feed for Formula E. The last crash was at the end of the Anhembi Sambadrome in Sao Paulo, Brazil.
"...you gotta give him respect for trying." Especially since he's won Le Mans two out of the last three years (with co-drivers Sebastien Buemi and Kazuki Nakajima), and won WEC championships in 2015 and 2017. 8:07 Not gonna lie, I was expecting some Jann Mardenborough Nurburgring level carnage.
FivePoints Vids did a couple videos about the quirks of the Baltimore Orioles' home ballpark, Oriole Park at Camden Yards (namely one, and that's the warehouse in right field): "Why Can't Anyone Hit the Warehouse at Camden Yards?" and "Why Does Camden Yards Have Shatterproof Windows?" Some hit-by-pitches are on purpose, some aren't. Ah, "Sweet" Lou Piniella...one of the best the theatrics of getting ejected. The game in Japan was one of a season-opening series between the Seattle Mariners (who haven't made the playoffs since 2001, but it looks like that drought may come to an end this year...Go Mariners!) and the Oakland Athletics at the Tokyo Dome. (Interesting note, the Mariners and Athletics are division rivals, and they're playing at the Tokyo Dome. The Tokyo Dome is the home ballpark of the Yomiuri Giants of Nippon Professional Baseball, who are bitter rivals [akin to the Yankees-Red Sox rivalry] to my favorite NPB team, the Hanshin Tigers [Fure-fure-fure-fure]) Speaking of Nippon Proffesional Baseball, and specifically the Hanshin Tigers, look into the Curse of the Colonel (which is actually the whole reason I became a fan, having already been a lifelong Seattle Mariners fan [and we already have what I like to call the Curse of the Lawsuit {you might also want to check out the Dorktown series that Secret Base did on the Seattle Mariners}]). "It must feel terrible...home run." Especially when the batter follows it up with a bat flip, like "yeah, I just homered off your shit, git gud." The Western Metal Supply Co. building at San Diego's Petco Park (home of the Padres) is historic, and not only predates Petco Park (of course), but also the predecessor to Petco Park, San Diego Stadium (aka, Qualcomm Stadium, Jack Murphy Stadium, Snapdragon Stadium, SDCCU Stadium), and was renovated to include the team store, private suites, restaurants, and rooftop seating. I'll end with perhaps the greatest call not just in baseball history, but in American sports history: "...the 0-1 pitch on the way to Edgar Martinez; swung on and lined down the left field line for a base hit! Here comes Joey. Here is Junior to third base, they're going to wave him in! The throw to the plate will be...LATE! The Mariners are going to play for the American League championship! I don't believe it! It just continues! My oh my! Edgar Martinez with a double ripped down the left field line and they are going crazy at the Kingdome!"
Great to see a Finn on the reaction videos. I grew up with Barry Sanders. I am Finnish-American from Michigan. I live in California now. Sanders retired in his prime.
2012 Adrian was the greatest running back ever. 1: he won mvp the only non qb from 2010 till now to do so. 2. He had a horrible passing offense which caused defense to play 8-9 boxes to stop him. 3. It's against modern defenses. Against 340 pound men that run faster than you and I can. 4. Obviously it's less than a year from his injury
Are you out of school while working, can be tough to do both. What type of work are you doing? I’m doing fine, same old shit different day. Just trying to take care of my health better as I was an irresponsible diabetic before, but I have no complaints. If works for you hope you can go back to reactions at some point. ☮️
Oh school starts at the end of August so right now I have more time. Couldn't get any other job so I'm driving a taxi. It should work with studying too because I can decide my own work times