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🇬🇧BRIT Reacts To NFL HOSPITAL PASSES! 

Kabir Considers
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🇬🇧BRIT Reacts To NFL HOSPITAL PASSES!
If You Would Like To Support The Channel: www.paypal.me/kabsayofe
• NFL Hospital Passes
/ kabirconsiders
Hi everyone, I’m Kabir and welcome to another episode of Kabir Considers! In this video I’m Going to React To NFL HOSPITAL PASSES!
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15 окт 2024

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Комментарии : 134   
@dustinwagner1776
@dustinwagner1776 2 года назад
Colts fan here. Austin Collie was awesome.
@mariejustme
@mariejustme 2 года назад
Is the other team angry? It’s Philly. They’re always angry. 😂
@jartstopsign
@jartstopsign 2 года назад
Worst fans in the NFL hands down, a bunch of drugged out drunken idiots just itching to start a fight with anyone at any second.
@sikksotoo
@sikksotoo 2 года назад
As a PA native, I fully agree. Kabir, remember Bill Burr's Philly rant? 🤣
@ashleymeggan
@ashleymeggan 2 года назад
Philly sucks.
@BogMez77
@BogMez77 2 года назад
Im from philly and have never agreed more
@projectarma
@projectarma Год назад
As an Eagles fan, I agree. Not as mad as Cowgirls fans though.
@goodeatz_at2268
@goodeatz_at2268 2 года назад
Kabir showing off the shoulder gains 😂💪🏽
@gregvanmatre5068
@gregvanmatre5068 2 года назад
On brain injuries in the NFL, they are trying to prevent that from happening, If you ever watch south park. They have an episode that shows nfl players having brain injuries. It is called sarcastic ball is the episode I am thinking of and hope it is something you like to watch.
@titleloanman
@titleloanman 2 года назад
There was an era of football where these hits weren’t just legal, they were encouraged. It was considered a great trait (and to some extent still is today) to be an “enforcer,” basically that people were scared to catch a pass anywhere near you because a hit like this was coming.
@facepalmedgodzilla7999
@facepalmedgodzilla7999 2 года назад
I as an American very much respect rugby and soccer (football in most places obviously) players and its fans for the most part. But when they talk smack about NFL players wearing pads, I just roll my eyes because if not for the pads, many plays would cause players to be paralyzed or dead
@brandonhinrichs4393
@brandonhinrichs4393 2 года назад
Tacklers are told to go to the mid section but the problem is ball carriers also try to go low as well so a tackler isn't going for the head but the ball carrier drops his head into the strike zone then tackler gets penalized for things they can't control
@alex77colts
@alex77colts 2 года назад
Austin Collie of the Colts, who is featured twice in this video, had to end his career early, largely due to concussions he received from hits like this. Shame too, he was a pretty good player and one of my favorites at the time.
@soccerdude865
@soccerdude865 2 года назад
Lots of NFL and college football players get CTE, which happens from getting mini concessions over and over again, some study’s say 87% of American football players get CTE, also up until recently CTE was only could be diagnosed after death
@topherwhite370
@topherwhite370 2 года назад
The problem is that, while they’ve changed the rules, the players have been taught how to hit since pee wee ball. They’re having to re-teach 15 years of training.
@sikksotoo
@sikksotoo 2 года назад
Yep, as a defensive back, timing is everything. Additionally, trying to hold up at the last possible moment can cause or leave you rather vulnerable to an injury of your own.
@binxbolling
@binxbolling 7 месяцев назад
Not so much nowadays. Players have grown up with these rules.
@MBS1995
@MBS1995 2 года назад
Hey Kabir..as far as your question goes about players having permanent injuries from these hits the answer is YES although no one knows to what extent that is...until a player dies... there has been CTE found in 99 percent of players who have died. Many while they were alive developed all sorts of mental disorders like depression, anxiety, psychotic breakdowns, and aggressive behavior, some have even committed suicide. And there is no known cure or way to tell if you have CTE while you're alive.
@TheCosmicGenius
@TheCosmicGenius 2 года назад
One thing about American football fans - when someone is down on the field, & not moving, everyone - no matter which team they're rooting for, cheers when that player shows life & they realise he's not dead. They might have broken limbs, or wrenched out of socket joints, or concussions, but as long as they're still alive & able to move, everyone's happy.
@rocker-uy5wg
@rocker-uy5wg 2 года назад
Thing is they did a sports science episode about the forces of the hits NFL players give and the numbers were insane
@mod850
@mod850 2 года назад
Pro-tips from a former Arizonan for dealing with the heat: Cover your windows to keep the sun out. Drink water CONSTANTLY. Cool or lukewarm shower, then sit in front of a fan. Spray bottle of water. Go somewhere air conditioned like a mall or movie theatre, and stay there as long as they let you. Stay cool, friend!
@justinatest9456
@justinatest9456 2 года назад
What a great compilation. I enjoy taking the time to look at the hit and the replays like this, rather than the rapid edit style where it's a hit every 3 seconds.
@bradb3248
@bradb3248 2 года назад
In a 1978 preseason game Oakland Raider linebacker Jack Tatum hit Darryl Stingley leaving him a quadriplegic, one of the worst injuries in the NFL.
@jhawkk2004
@jhawkk2004 2 года назад
The hit that took place right when you asked about serious injury was Anquan Boldin. He suffered several broken bones in his face, had metal plates placed in his skull to assist with healing, and somehow was back to playing in a few months. He is widely regarded as one of the toughest receivers to ever play the position.
@ramsoncole4605
@ramsoncole4605 2 года назад
These guys are getting KTFO wearing one of the finest helmets the best minds can come up with...so you know those hits are brutal. and these aren't ordinary guys, each one is an alpha to the nth degree.
@siltstridersftw
@siltstridersftw 2 года назад
That Indianapolis Colts player was a wide receiver in the 2010s and I think he had like 4 of these. 2 are in the video, most of the time the hits are inevitable because you're moving so fast that you don't have to time to react and slow down. I've been clotheslined before and boy you definitely feel like a feather then a anchor about 30 seconds after impact.
@Timmycoo
@Timmycoo 2 года назад
Yeah I felt so bad for Collie because he played a lot of crossing/in routes. Peyton just saw space.
@mocrg
@mocrg 2 года назад
Often? Once a week . 8 games a week pros, you see the cart at least once a week. The hard hits are absolutely because the pads let’s you hit harder. The helmet prevents your skull from breaking but does nothing for your neck. And the total force still travels through to your brain. Most penalties are just 15 yards. It’s only if you deliberately break the rules are you fined or suspended- late hit, deliberate unsportsmanlike. A hard hit in itself is almost never a fine or suspension. Yes three years avg pro career for a running back.
@viktorhelgason8641
@viktorhelgason8641 2 года назад
Head to head tackles are very illegal. In college especially, they go to review to see if the player uses the top of the head (the crown) to make a tackle. This is called targeting. If deemed targeting, it’s a 15 yard penalty and the player is ejected
@Jessica_Roth
@Jessica_Roth 2 года назад
And, if the foul happens in the second half of the game, the player is suspended for the first half of the next game, as well.
@electreauxholmes5205
@electreauxholmes5205 2 года назад
You've watched this before lol still gonna support tho :)
@jartstopsign
@jartstopsign 2 года назад
I think the reason Manning had a few of these is because he was such an expert passer fitting the ball into a tiny window that other QB's couldn't pull off. He had so much trust in his receivers and vice versa that even when his guy wasn't open he could somehow find a way to get him the ball, and then boom.
@cherylbrown3366
@cherylbrown3366 2 года назад
He worked so much with his receivers on routes and pass patterns is what made the Colts and Manning so successful
@JuanPablo-xp2rz
@JuanPablo-xp2rz 2 года назад
Manning’s first in this video was an absolute dot
@jartstopsign
@jartstopsign 2 года назад
@@cherylbrown3366 Manning was so insanely good that he could lead his receivers on a double move route when they were going the opposite direction at the time he released the ball. The throw to Stokely comes to mind on that, absolute legend.
@cherylbrown3366
@cherylbrown3366 2 года назад
@@jartstopsign Dallas Clark was another good example
@deadstickgaming3665
@deadstickgaming3665 2 года назад
Definitely! The weird thing is they're almost all on the same player. I'm no pro or coach but feel like it had something to do with how Collie caught the ball and transitioned to running after the catch. Peyton never threw many hospital passes, so the way they basically all came with one player makes me feel like it almost has to be something Austin was doing that put himself in unfortunate positions. That, and/or he was always the one on new/weird routes that make it a little harder to predict those hits coming. Along with that, the defenses knew they're going against *Peyton Manning* so they were probably trying some new sneaky looks to trick Peyton too.
@gerrbaby90
@gerrbaby90 2 года назад
I like the videos that add a note about how they were hurt and if they were ok after.
@deadstickgaming3665
@deadstickgaming3665 2 года назад
That #17 for the Colts is wide receiver Austin Collie(0:51, 6:13), his story really is a shame. He was an incredible young talent and one of Peyton Manning's, one of the goats, favorite targets at the time. Manning was one of the best in the game, arguably the best at that time, he wasn't throwing those on purpose and Austin basically just got unlucky. He took quite a few of those hits, a 2 of which are in this video. Peyton wasn't known for those passes at all. Some of his closest teammates are on record saying how incredible he was at ball, but after taking a few blows to the head, one even while he was recovering from a concussion as a result of a previous hit, he was never the same player. Ultimately the Colts released him as his performance deteriorated and I believe he bounced around between a few teams before essentially being forced into retirement. I'm sure Austin isn't the first this has happened to, and won't be the last either.
@ravex24
@ravex24 2 года назад
6:46 It's called the "Fencing Response"
@metfan1987
@metfan1987 2 года назад
Tony Siragusa the guy talking at 5:02 recently passed away.
@ThurgoodJenkins1
@ThurgoodJenkins1 2 года назад
@kabirconsiders when the arms get stuck like that we call it "getting starched"
@ulisesurbina7184
@ulisesurbina7184 2 года назад
The collision of DeSean Jackson, it was actually a clean hit. The defender NEVER hit Jackson on the head, just in the high chest area; I remember that game, it was the "Game of the Week", but you are right Kabir; it's like 2 cars going full speed at each other! But to answer your question Kabir, it happens to a player EVERY game; now they might be able to get up from it and play but you know he is rattled. You have said you like Football (soccer), I don't know if you ever played it, but I did; I have been playing soccer (in those leagues where play get together on a weekend a play), since I was 5 years old and now I'm 42 and still "kick the ball around", but I remember getting knocked out cold, not remembering what I did the reminder of that day or the following day; but they would get us up take us outside of the play of field (of course your injuries), but then they send us back still concussed, running after the ball like an idiot, until you get your senses back; hell they would send you back after a head collision, they put a "MAXI-PAD" on your head put an ACE bandage on and send your ass back before a cornerkick... or did it only happen to ME!!🤔🤔🤔
@CasuallyCold
@CasuallyCold 2 года назад
I hope these people are okay! 😬
@Juiceman50001
@Juiceman50001 2 года назад
0:51 6:13 is the same dude Austin Collie
@ntycecarruthers5601
@ntycecarruthers5601 2 года назад
If I’m not mistaken usually once a player has experienced 3 major concussions throughout their career , they usually won’t be able to play again due to health reasons
@kentgrady9226
@kentgrady9226 2 года назад
The stiffening and twitching of limbs and extremities is called a "fencing reflex". It is a guaranteed sign of a very, very bad concussion. No professional evaluation necessary. That means scrambled brains. I'm told that it's the body's way of protecting itself whilst the brain is temporarily (hopefully) on holiday.
@GordotheGamer
@GordotheGamer 2 года назад
Some of the injuries are terrible but the worst one I've seen was in college basketball: Kevin Ware. The video of it is gruesome enough that a reaction to that could be demonetized.
@robertahrendt67
@robertahrendt67 2 года назад
In the 1980s, I went from one of the most sought after high school tight ends, to someone who can't remember his own phone number. The defender in front went head to head, knocking me out, severe concussion. LB put his helmet in my lower back, fracturing my L4 vertebrae (luckily didn't tear spinal cord, so I could still walk). But in one play lost all scholarship offers. The worst part is the brain damage, woke up this morning and found last night's dinner in microwave. (That sucks when you can't remember to eat.)
@rodneysisco6364
@rodneysisco6364 2 года назад
The medical term for those involuntary movements when knocked out is posturing
@KingAsa5
@KingAsa5 2 года назад
Imagine if you weren’t in Physical shape like these players and end up taking a hit like this
@VorchaKali
@VorchaKali 2 года назад
If I'm not mistaken you have done a reaction video to this same video a year ago. The first time you reacted to it you filmed it in your car.
@andymacpherson2272
@andymacpherson2272 2 года назад
Detroit loins player got hit so hard with two players on the other team. And he got paralyzed for life after that hit. And it was in the 1980's. That was a dirty hit .
@andymacpherson2272
@andymacpherson2272 2 года назад
It was 1991
@chrishemry7
@chrishemry7 2 года назад
I just remember when Johnny Knox on the Chicago Bears got a career ending broken back.
@ronluk76
@ronluk76 2 года назад
Kabir, please react to: Nonstop Sports- "Biggest One Year Wonders in NBA History".
@TheBubbaClemson
@TheBubbaClemson 2 года назад
The American Football game has changed a lot in the last 20-15 years with the targeting rule. There's been a helmet to helmet contact rule for ages but now you are ejected for 2 full halves. So if it happens in the second half of a game you can't play in the first half of the next one.
@prettybullet7728
@prettybullet7728 2 года назад
The word you are probably thinking of is posturing.
@Ixionos
@Ixionos Год назад
You know the hit was savage when both teams come together to make a circle of prayer for the poor guy that got blasted🙏
@greyez7
@greyez7 2 года назад
Peyton is the most notorious hospital ball thrower
@gidget8717
@gidget8717 2 года назад
2:50 I don't think he was leading with his head, Kabir. It looked like he dipped his shoulder to hit with it at the same time the other player dropped his head to tucked the ball. And that caused their helmets to collide.
@Timmycoo
@Timmycoo 2 года назад
Yeah incidental/inadvertent contact to the helmet/facemask is allowed. Not much you can do when you lead with the shoulder and that happens.
@VorchaKali
@VorchaKali 2 года назад
08:37 7-9 years on average for RBs
@hughfuller8416
@hughfuller8416 2 года назад
I’ve caught a hospital pass before. 65 stitches in my chin. Brain matter on my skull to this day. Light sensitivity.
@a00141799
@a00141799 2 года назад
These type of injuries don't happen much in the NFL and nearly all are illegal hits. That being said, this is a violent game played by big strong aggressive men and anyone playing at this level has been trained and conditioned to compete at this level. You simply cannot regulate all of the risk out of this sports so injuries are a part of that. There are also size differences between players that make a significant difference too when it come to some injuries. A compilation video like this might make you assume that these are regular occurrences. The footage here spans a decade or more of seasons. This ain't rugby bro.
@kabirconsiders
@kabirconsiders 2 года назад
I’m glad these type of injuries don’t happen often, I feel like I could see their spinal columns compressing 😅
@a00141799
@a00141799 2 года назад
@@kabirconsiders 🏈🏈🏈🏈Here in America we all grew up playing this game and it is just accepted that some times guys will get hurt. I guess to someone whose never played it especially as a youngster might see it as unnecessarily violent and risky. 🥊🥊🥊🥊🥊Boxing was extremely popular when I was young (70's) but has seemed to have fallen out of favor with parents now reluctant to allow their kids to participate in this sport. I still have memories of getting hit in the nose over and over again. That really hurts. If you ever get into a brawl, just punch your opponent straight on in the nose and he'll quit fight you immediately.
@duanevp
@duanevp 2 года назад
Also, hard to train players NOT to lower their heads prior to impact. It is a natural human reaction. And I'm no medical expert but I think the condition he's looking for the name of is grand mal seizure, but I think that's more associated with things like epilepsy.
@fionnmaccumhaill3257
@fionnmaccumhaill3257 2 года назад
@@kabirconsiders I grew up playing football as a kid and also playing a game that back then we called "smear the queer", which consisted of non stop tackles. In my experience which I think would've been similar to most kids in this generation, you learned to tackle in a way that was unlikely to cause injury. One because the game wouldn't last long if everyone keeps getting injured and two because , while you didn't want anyone to score, you also didn't want to injury your friends. You learned how to make a tackle without injury. In these cases, the guys making the tackle made a conscious decision to forsake safety and blindside the offensive player. Or these cases it was a malicious abandonment of precaution and should be fined and ejected. If everyone did this the sorry would be forced to end. You can't let it be the case that the person who throw safety to the wind gets rewarded. It's unsportsmanlike conduct to an extreme.
@Timmycoo
@Timmycoo 2 года назад
The defenseless receiver ones (outside of the helmet to helmet) ones are the worst. Every time I think of the Anquan Boldin hit where he broke his jaw.
@theblackbear211
@theblackbear211 2 года назад
I hope you are staying as cool as you can. The weather you're having is dangerous when nobody is acclimatized, and you're not set up to mitigate the effects of the heat.
@hifijohn
@hifijohn 2 года назад
I have no sympathy for these numbnuts, just go out by an A/C unit, you can get them online for a few hundred, if your windows arent designed for a window unit you can buy floor-standing ones,you dont even have to turn it up high just enough to get the humidity down instead thousands die every year in europe because the heat.
@phunkjnky
@phunkjnky 2 года назад
Austin Collie was concussion prone. That doesn't justify any of this. Just that each one makes the next one easier.
@garyharp7099
@garyharp7099 2 года назад
Damage is cumulative...as they take big hits for years.... I had my bell rung quite a fewimes when I played...lol
@brandonhinrichs4393
@brandonhinrichs4393 2 года назад
Hard not to lead with the head when its on top of your shoulders lol
@jaredcole5818
@jaredcole5818 2 года назад
at least like 95% of hospital passes are the QBs fault, you could argue on some throws they didn't see the guy that made the big hit but it's usually a poor decision by the QB to throw it to that receiver Luckily with modern rules you barely see these. We obviously still have the hit on a defenseless receiver penalty that you heard a few times in this video, but we also have targeting penalties which can lead to fines in the NFL and in college football will suspend you for a full game. So if a college player gets a targeting penalty in the 4th quarter they're ejected from the game and can't play the first 3 quarters of their next game
@ZachC280
@ZachC280 2 года назад
The Peyton throws were to the same receiver as well and that’s dude has had like 3-4 of this hospital pass hits
@elginbuyard1835
@elginbuyard1835 2 года назад
The Boldin hit broke his jaw and he had to get it wired shut
@Timmycoo
@Timmycoo 2 года назад
lol JUST commented that.
@ESUSAMEX
@ESUSAMEX 2 года назад
Quarterbacks do not choose to throw hospital passes. The great quarterbacks like Peyton have the skill to place the ball anywhere they want. And that still leads to more big hit opportunities.
@karenward267
@karenward267 2 года назад
I'm recovering from a minor concussion - nothing like these guys experience, and it's been quite an experience and not in a good way. I cannot imagine recovering from this type of hit
@ThatShyGuyMatt
@ThatShyGuyMatt 2 года назад
I wonder if the second guy suffered a brain injury. His hands and arms went up above him a bit, usually a sign of brain trauma.
@laurataylor8717
@laurataylor8717 2 года назад
I wonder if two players have ever collided causing both involved to be knocked out cold.
@ElvisRose_
@ElvisRose_ 2 года назад
I don't think he's angry but the crowd will always be incensed when a player hit another like that so they were booing the Eagle for the brutal hit. In football: tackling a QB after he's released the ball, helmet to helmet hits, and hitting a defenseless which means they're catching in the when they get it. I'm not sure or trip any player on the other team. In fact. it was done by sideline player that stuck his on the field to stop the running back.
@warrendavis9262
@warrendavis9262 2 года назад
It's why the money is so big. It evaporates when the medical bills arrive...
@brianrigsby7900
@brianrigsby7900 2 года назад
Have u seen protecting teammates and taunting? They’re really cool!
@billvegas8146
@billvegas8146 2 года назад
As damaging as these hits are it is the everyday blocking and tackling that causes the CTE that is so widespread in the NFL. Knowing that nearly all players will suffer from CTE leaving many with early onset dementia makes watching the NFL immoral.
@forreal2398
@forreal2398 2 года назад
No ur not allowed to as u say lead with ur head. But the guy with the ball bought his head down into the other guys helmet so personally I say that should be offensive targeting
@lizardkingof1968
@lizardkingof1968 2 года назад
Ya...no, it was Peton's fault...he made a living off of throwing passes that got his receivers destroyed...
@dstamour625
@dstamour625 2 года назад
The word I think your looking for is Rigamortus or how ever it’s spelled. Granted it’s horrible what had happened with that hit I don’t think it should have been a defenseless receiver penalty. He took 3 steps steps that constitutes a catch and football play.
@kristinebrauer2292
@kristinebrauer2292 2 года назад
The clip where you were puzzled as to why the fans were angry, that's Philly, the are a "different " kind of fan base. That's just them.
@d420guy9
@d420guy9 2 года назад
Got the Guns out today lol Great videos!
@martinezzz2469
@martinezzz2469 2 года назад
A good part of this video was Austin Collie
@lauracahill5735
@lauracahill5735 2 года назад
Over here helmet to helmet hits are illegal. We call it targeting and getting caught targeting a player, especially against ones considered defenseless or blindsided is an automatic fifteen yard penalty against the offending team, and/or an immediate ejection from the game for the offending player. I know of at least three times when a player was seriously hurt on the field, two broken necks that left them in a wheelchair for life, and a third broken neck, with the player still walking but with the use of crutches, and concussion symptoms are carefully monitored by the team medical staff
@binxbolling
@binxbolling 7 месяцев назад
Austin Collie, featured in TWO of these plays retired with life-altering after effects.
@Kenneth_James
@Kenneth_James 2 года назад
They were angry because that play wasn't unnecessary roughness despite the guy gettin hurt.
@msdarby515
@msdarby515 2 года назад
The word you were looking for is posturing. That's one sign we look for in any type of potential brain injury.
@michaelwright3830
@michaelwright3830 2 года назад
This guy has 2 spots on this list. Same guy, Collie, same QB, PEYTON MANNING.
@frederickknapp5340
@frederickknapp5340 2 года назад
sad part is, is that to make rules to change this would basically make this into flag football
@spaceshiplewis
@spaceshiplewis 2 года назад
All the quarterback is looking for is 2 seconds for any opening. He's got a wall of massive men charging him determined to sack him and make him lose about 5-10 yards minimum. You aren't really given any chance to be choosy. It isn't like picking ice cream flavors.
@drewjsnyder3
@drewjsnyder3 2 года назад
You're also only seeing some bad NFL hits, top level hits here, and they are brutal. Now Imagine how many hits you take over a career that spans Youth, High School, College and Pro football competitions, and that's just games. Now include all the practices. Receiving thousands of hard hits from the ages of 7-35 years old is not terribly uncommon for the guys that make the league.
@daleowen2606
@daleowen2606 2 года назад
I feel bad for the QB's as well. They have to deal with the guilt from their pass. They have split seconds to make a decision
@binxbolling
@binxbolling 7 месяцев назад
Dude, if someone catches a ball, most likely he's a receiver, not a running back. Key word: "receiver."
@maxpeck7382
@maxpeck7382 2 года назад
LOL Sorry I shouldn't be laughing but when the broadcast guy is like "he's down again" that is pretty funny. It's like ( call in the recovery team he's down again) as if it's so common. Poor Guy though, that is a crazy hit and it certainly doesn't improve your future health prospects.
@scotto5426
@scotto5426 2 года назад
Wide receiver has to make "business decisions " when catching in traffic.
@SHeltFC
@SHeltFC 2 года назад
Do the 2022 MLB Home Run Derby aka Julio Rodriguez coming of age ceremony
@justinatest9456
@justinatest9456 2 года назад
Fencing response
@ramsoncole4605
@ramsoncole4605 2 года назад
Mark Sanchez when he was with the Eagles was the absolute worst quarterback for hanging his receivers out to dry.
@bahice
@bahice 2 года назад
Yeah, you were talking so clearly you missed the fact that the two passes from Manning were in fact to the same receiver. Not sure why you would assume a guy receiving a pass downfield would be a running back. They don't usually catch passes that far. Not that they don't, but it's not too often.
@ashleymeggan
@ashleymeggan 2 года назад
Suns out, guns out, huh? LOL.. Wondering when we get to see AB get CTE from that Burfict hit on here.
@JustinHawthorne
@JustinHawthorne 2 года назад
Good one bud! NHL next?
@Gabriel-cj9ih
@Gabriel-cj9ih 2 года назад
That final hit was committed by Steve Atwater, a legendary safety for the Denver Broncos. He's in contention to be the hardest hitter in NFL history. On that play, Atwater's hit was so brutal, it took out himself, the opponent receiver, and his own teammate all at once. Making it even crazier, that hit occurred near the end of the 4th quarter in Super Bowl 32. If you like big hits, react to some Steve Atwater highlights. Cheers Kabir, and go Broncos!
@kdmcollegebd2012
@kdmcollegebd2012 2 года назад
Kabir, the term you were looking for is called Posturing. That straight rigid muscle spasms they have is called Decerebrate Posturing.
@CavHDeu
@CavHDeu 2 года назад
Please react to the AFL - Biggest hits. Aussies are crazy
@Mayax13
@Mayax13 2 года назад
W
@smylebutta7250
@smylebutta7250 2 года назад
Of course the other team was upset. That was a terrible call. He wasn't defenseless. You're allowed to lay dudes out. That was just a good old snot bubble hit.
@frederickknapp5340
@frederickknapp5340 2 года назад
Kabir, if you really want to see rough games, look back about 40 years.
@tazman4849
@tazman4849 2 года назад
A lot of the players years later have died due to years of abuse
@sallymay24
@sallymay24 2 года назад
Do you follow league or union?
@Slayr.
@Slayr. 2 года назад
That last one was the worst.
@Shadowcub69
@Shadowcub69 2 года назад
Kabir get yourself one of those air conditioners that lets you cool one room at least....you look hot as heck.
@KAP814
@KAP814 2 года назад
Manning destroyed Collie multiple times…sad
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