You posted a Bible verse with your channel name. How about this one regarding your "1 in a trillion" claim. Proverbs 12:22 - “The Lord detests lying lips, but he delights in people who are trustworthy”
I remember that play. While the Ump originally said "no catch" as Rizzo stepped on the tarp, the Umps eventually did overturn the call. Rizzo made the catch while on the wall which is perfectly allowed.
No, it’s fucking hilarious! The ball flying in the air with the announcer hyping the situation like “IT’S GOING! IT’S GOING” then suddenly the footage captures a catcher crashing through the wall out of nowhere with the instant “OOHHH MY GOD” from the announcer is easily one of the funniest things I’ve ever seen from sports. Period.
I still have a Screenshot of the gamecast saying something like "Marcus Mariota passes to Marcus Mariota 4 yards for a Touchdown" and thought it was a typo until I saw the play 😂
@@trevorwright4852 sure was buddy! look at where the line of scrimmage was 👀 all that matters is where the play began and which players on the field had possession in the stat books my friend. So in this case yes it was 4 yards in deed
Dave Winfield of the New York Yankees accidentally hit and killed a seagull with a baseball in Toronto vs the Blue Jays, August 1983. He was charged with cruelty to animals and an autopsy was even done on the seagull. It created a lot of controversy here in Toronto.
7:43 That would have literally killed that dude if not for that mask. A perfect demonstration of why catchers wear them. Mask or not, that one had to ring his bell!
Not bad. I always enjoy seeing the Canseco off-the-head home run. I was 13 years old and actually at the game where it happened. My Dad and I had seats on the 3rd base side (mid outfield) and during the play we thought the ball hit Canseco's glove and went over. About 20 seconds later, the guy sitting a few rows back with a small radio started laughing. We turned around and he said, while still laughing, that the commentators on the radio said the ball bounced off of his head. After the game, we raced home so that we could catch the sports highlights on the local news. We got home in time and laughed our asses off. This is a memory that my Dad and I won't ever forget.
Very entertaining, one thing amazing about sports are the things that happen that are unexpected. I remember my wife was given a free ticket to a Diamondbacks game, which went zero/zero so she finally left and when she came home she said "I got bored with the game". The Diamondbacks went on to score seven runs in the last inning after she left, winning the game. I teased her endlessly after that, suggesting she should not attend more D-backs games, and they went on to win the world series that year, my wife not in attendance but glued to their last game with the Yankees and Luis Gonzalez base hit that won the game. I met Joe Montana, and that football season he went on to win his last superbowl, and I saw the ending in French, in Montreal, in '90. During my flight from SFO to Toronto and the connecting flight to Montreal, our Air Canada pilot gave us updates on a one-sided blowout. I also will never forget the Stanford/Cal game in 82 and "The Play" when Cal beat Stanford, and the band became part of the game. Some still argue over two of the lateral passes, but the win for Cal was as it was, and I still say, that is among the craziest moments in sports history. My own crazy moment was when I was called in to play center for our grammar school flag football team, even though I was the smallest player on ours and the opposing team, the school we played had no players above the sixth grade, so I agreed. We won the game, though I had only played center in school practice and never in a competitive game. Adrenalin had me psyched, and our QB said I threw perfect spirals. I would intimidate the bigger players since they feared I'd plow under them and stop them from getting to the QB, and they never did, he was not sacked. Our team went on to win the Norcal championship, undefeated, in our twelve team league, my brother playing as wide receiver, though I no longer had to play since the school had seventh and eighth graders. I never went on to play in high school, feeling I was too small to be as good as I was in my grammar school game, where I also played on the defense, and I stuck to distance cycling and golf, both of which I enjoyed and also had many "crazy" moments, and I was decent at the 440 as it was then, now the 400 meters. Even in my early 60's now, and despite a leg I broke badly in a freak accident a couple of years ago, I still enjoy cycling as well as hiking and also laser tag and go kart racing. On my channel here @Cactus521 I even have a video of me jumping off the Vegas Stratosphere tower when I was 52, though the wind was so fierce my eyes watered, I felt peace, and not fear, on the way down, choosing that vs. skydiving as my free fall bucket list item, since there is no reason to jump out of a perfectly good airplane. 😂
Years ago there was a MLB player on the SF Giants by the name of Kevin Mitchell and he was in left field chasing down a deep fly and turned around and caught it barehanded. It was amazing.
@@rycs16 I've hit 2 with golf balls in my 43 years. Not that I was aiming but I doubt Randy was either. Rare, but 1 in a Trillion sounds a bit excessive.
I threw a stone once just messing about but followed through twisting my hip to the right as i released the stone ,the stone went on the knock a sparrow out cold off my friends fence post,his mum had a havery and loved birds,still does! The sparrow woke up in her hand about 4 mins later! True story!
6:26 the guy fart in the audio room and everybody in the arena heard him and he proudly admitted it was him with no problem, he must do it alot at home🤣🤣 😂
In 1974, Michael Jack Schmidt hit a "long single" in the Astrodome. The ball was hit so high and far, it hit the speakers over the outfield and dropped to the field. Rules said it was a live ball, in play. It is estimated it would have gone well over 500 feet had it not been impeded. Soon after, the speakers were raise to ensure it would never happen again. I've never seen the footage and have no idea if any exists.
athellletse dieiingg on fiield due to taking the experrrrrimentalz drug shotttttie. no take ittt or get hearttt problems and lose of health. wake up. Cover up. being deleted. Save others. Side effects are now affecting ovver 2 million.
The thunder at 1:58 reminded me of a storm my wife and I got caught in camping at base camp on Mt. Whitney. The thunder was so load that it shook rocks lose around us. Lightening made each other look like X-ray pics. It lasted most of the night and snowed 2 inch’s by morning in the summer. We couldn’t run.
Love the one with Pedro. The catcher and the Ump duck out of the way. Pedro doesn't even flinch. Even later in his career that dude was always locked in. One of the GOATS
You must have a really, really bleak outlook on his life. Jesus. He returned a kick to the redzone. He didn't score. He didn't do much of anything besides make a good play. He didn't get married or have his first child or win the Super Bowl. He returned a kick and didn't finish it off, at least not on that play.
@@pureserenity524 Wide-open field + Lightning + metal bat/helmet = human barbecue. Lightning directly above the field can very likely strike someone holding a bad or wearing a helmet or even just standing there. Lightning looks for the path of least resistance to the ground and objects like trees, poles, bats, golf clubs, and even people are a faster route than through the air, so it will quite literally seek them out. Similar reason why you don't go golfing if there's a storm. With nothing more tangible around them for lightning to prefer to travel through, they become prime targets for getting struck.
The Jags v Texans one always kills me. The DB did EXACTLY what you’re taught to do. Don’t go for the INT, just knock it down. Much more effective than trying to go up with an NFL-level receiver. Just so unlucky lmao
@@xjomssx1445 The player caught the ball and broke through the wall with his momentum. It timed perfectly with the commentator: "It's going... going... Gone!"
The part where he "caught" the ball with his head had to be painful. I've had a similar thing happen when I was younger, but with the back of my head. Fly balls and homeruns always seemed to find me off the field and go for the back of my head like it was a magnet. Each time knocked me out cold.
I had a kid on my team back in primary school during inter-school sports. Caught the ball right after the batter hit it. Unfortunately for him, he caught it with the underside of his chin and his neck. Was rather ouchy.
Once when I was a child, I was playing a little league game and was pitcher. There was a storm brewing and in the 4th or 5th inning as soon as I released a pitch, a tree about a block away exploded because it got hit by lightning. I didn't even wait for the catcher to throw the ball back because we all bailed so fast.
5:20 For those wondering about that one, the Guards are basically just glorified battering rams meant to use their mass to punch through the offensive line. They are not even intended to tackle the quarterback REALLY. The quarterback can outrun them easily. They are intended to open a hole and tie up a offensive lineman for a more nimble guy to rush in and tackle the QB. They are never intended to get a touchdown, ever, especially as Defensemen. The fact that a man with that much mass got that far is pretty impressive.
@@Nando6413 Zeus is actually the Most High, reigning on Olympus. The God of Abrahamic religions is a fraud. Only primitive minds of some bronze age tribesmen of the Middle East believed in such a fairy tale.
A rare shot I saw at the old Tiger stadium in Detroit, Kirk Gibson hit a line drive to center field and there was a door in the middle of the wall, the ball hit exactly the corner of the door frame and bounced back out the same way it went in. Gibson ended up with an in - the - park homerun.
0:00 Oh, that explain the fight scene in Mutant League Hockey 1:19 LOL! He dashed thought a barrier! That's dedication. 4:08 Ball got stuck 4:56 Hole in one with assist 6:01 "Like a drop kick but with a bat" 6:25 Angry bike 6:54 Sprinklers turn on. 8:18 One steel man 8:37 Dedication 9:42 This is for you!
the edelman catch - best I've ever seen... maybe the one on the helmet by a Giant too... many of these things - the players are so used to all the movements and skills that it becomes subconscious and muscle memory takes over to large degree... so cool :)
@@griffingeissler9334 Disagree, Tyree's helmet catch was better because of the situation. If he doesn't catch that the Giants lose the game. Also it is better because it led to the Patriot Tom Baby losing the Super Bowl.
Oh, God, 1:19...I dont know if it's the commentary, the sound of the guy going through the wall, the mere sight of it, or all of the above, but that got me WAY harder than I expected. 🤣
5:09 there's a sense of nostalgia that settles over your spirit when you see one of the big guys make a run like this, it just doesn't happen often enough😆😆😆😄
I saw Steve Young catch his own TD pass back in the early 90's. At the time I think only 1 other guy did it. Now this guy in this video caught *his* own as well. That's incredible.