Has This Ever Happened?
Re: Has This Ever Happened?
Canadian College Football Receiver Crashes Hard into Goal Post
http://bleacherreport.com/articles/2200 ... -goal-post
Here's one in the CFL:
https://youtu.be/Pd8l6ItUPRA
http://bleacherreport.com/articles/2200 ... -goal-post
Here's one in the CFL:
https://youtu.be/Pd8l6ItUPRA
Last edited by luckyshow on Mon Nov 02, 2015 1:17 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Re: Has This Ever Happened?
Clemson neck fracture:
http://www.msn.com/en-us/travel/article ... vp-AAe1R6i
http://www.msn.com/en-us/travel/article ... vp-AAe1R6i
Re: Has This Ever Happened?
<Don Hutson modernized all sorts of common receiving routes — he was the first to run a slant in a straight line while others did it in rounded fashion — but perhaps his most famous was inventing the post route. At that time, the field goal posts were within the field of play in the end zone, and instead of one bar in the center, there were two wooden posts on each side, just below the uprights, supporting the crossbar. Hutson ran right at the post, grabbed it and slung himself to the other side, where he told the quarterback to throw the ball. All three Cleveland Rams defenders ran past him and he caught it for a touchdown, inventing the “post route.”>
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Re: Has This Ever Happened?
I heard that many times growing up in Green Bay and always wondered if it was true or a legend, since nobody ever cited a specific game in which it happened.luckyshow wrote:<Don Hutson modernized all sorts of common receiving routes — he was the first to run a slant in a straight line while others did it in rounded fashion — but perhaps his most famous was inventing the post route. At that time, the field goal posts were within the field of play in the end zone, and instead of one bar in the center, there were two wooden posts on each side, just below the uprights, supporting the crossbar. Hutson ran right at the post, grabbed it and slung himself to the other side, where he told the quarterback to throw the ball. All three Cleveland Rams defenders ran past him and he caught it for a touchdown, inventing the “post route.”>
Incidentally, the receiver who runs into the goalpost in the video is wearing Hutson's number 14

Re: Has This Ever Happened?
Injured during celebration should require lots of extra laps in practice.Teo wrote:In 1979 Drew Pearson got injured after celebrating a TD against the Giants. I bet Tom Landry wasn't very pleased, even that it was Pearson's third TD catch of the game. He missed his first career game the following week.
http://www.nfl.com/photoessays/09000d5d82b5d564
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Re: Has This Ever Happened?
luckyshow wrote:Canadian College Football Receiver Crashes Hard into Goal Post
http://bleacherreport.com/articles/2200 ... -goal-post
Here's one in the CFL:
https://youtu.be/Pd8l6ItUPRA
I wonder why they haven't moved the goal post back as in the NFL?
Re: Has This Ever Happened?
For the Packers-Rams game on 11/8/1942, the Cleveland Plain Dealer reported:rhickok1109 wrote:I heard that many times growing up in Green Bay and always wondered if it was true or a legend, since nobody ever cited a specific game in which it happened.luckyshow wrote:<Don Hutson modernized all sorts of common receiving routes — he was the first to run a slant in a straight line while others did it in rounded fashion — but perhaps his most famous was inventing the post route. At that time, the field goal posts were within the field of play in the end zone, and instead of one bar in the center, there were two wooden posts on each side, just below the uprights, supporting the crossbar. Hutson ran right at the post, grabbed it and slung himself to the other side, where he told the quarterback to throw the ball. All three Cleveland Rams defenders ran past him and he caught it for a touchdown, inventing the “post route.”>
Incidentally, the receiver who runs into the goalpost in the video is wearing Hutson's number 14
Hutson raced toward one of the goal posts, grabbed the upright and whirled around it, and as his defender hurtled by, was open to catch Canadeo's straight throw just over the goal line.
Re: Has This Ever Happened?
On the 1994 video "100 Greatest Follies," there was one where two unidentified Pittsburgh pass defenders crashed into a goal post.
In one of my favorite books, Pro Football Chronicle, there's a picture at the end of the 1940's section. A defender is running head first into the goal post while apparently trying to tackle a runner who is diving in the end zone. I can't remember who the players were.
In one of my favorite books, Pro Football Chronicle, there's a picture at the end of the 1940's section. A defender is running head first into the goal post while apparently trying to tackle a runner who is diving in the end zone. I can't remember who the players were.
Re: Has This Ever Happened?
I vaguely remember reading somewhere where Sid Luckman had to cover Hutson as a safety and he ran him into the goal post.
One reason the CFL and other Canadian football doesn't move the goal posts back to the back might have various reasons. The end zone is 25 yards long, front to back. Also, if ball goes out of end zone on a kick that isn't a score, a successful field goal, it is a point for the other team (a single, a rouge). So this would happen more often if goal posts were at the back.
One reason the CFL and other Canadian football doesn't move the goal posts back to the back might have various reasons. The end zone is 25 yards long, front to back. Also, if ball goes out of end zone on a kick that isn't a score, a successful field goal, it is a point for the other team (a single, a rouge). So this would happen more often if goal posts were at the back.
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Re: Has This Ever Happened?
Here's an odd photo from the AAFC, circa 1946
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