🚨 Flyers Just Got Swept… But What the Philly Crowd Did Next Left Everyone Speechless
Ohio State Buckeyes football head coach Ryan Day is getting praise after his son committed to play quarterback for Northwestern ...
Hello everyone here's the video of the 7th inning stretch and the 8th inning song from the Blue Jays Game I Attended on Friday Night Against the Los Angeles Angels Hope you guys enjoy this video Like subscribe and ring the bell for notifications #mlb #baseball #torontobluejays #sports #baseballgame #angelsmlb
The A’s came home from a brutal Philly-Baltimore road trip sitting two-and-a-half games up in the AL West, and Hobbs is officially sounding the alarm for the rest of baseball. This episode of Habit Hunter breaks down a gritty series win over the Orioles that showed something the A’s haven’t consistently had in years: real pitching stability. Hobbs dives deep into the numbers behind the rotation turnaround, the reduction in walks, and the biggest trend changing the season — starters finally keeping the team alive instead of detonating games by the third inning. Jacob Lopez continues flashing both promise and warning signs, Luis Severino battles through another frustrating outing, and Mitch Spence… well, “Mr. Foot Traffic” still exists in spirit through Mark Leiter Jr. chaos. At the plate, the stars are beginning to separate themselves from the pack. Shea Langeliers is turning into a full-blown superstar before everyone’s eyes, Nick Kurtz keeps stacking quality at-bats like a veteran ten years older, and Brent Rooker is slowly dragging himself out of the Mendoza Line graveyard one loud RBI at a time. Hobbs also unloads on the team’s horrifying strikeout totals, questionable bullpen usage, and the obsession with trying to squeeze “one more out” from exhausted pitchers. Add in ABS drama, Jacob Wilson’s scary injury, reverse-jinx wizardry from Booney, and a roll call that paints the picture of a first-place club learning how to win ugly, and this episode feels like the moment the A’s stopped being a cute story and started looking dangerous. Follow Us on "X": @lasvegasaspod Podbean: https://lasvegasathleticspodcast.podbean.com/
Hey everyone and welcome back to the End to End Hockey channel, today I have a short for you guys as we do a quick game recap short here as we look at a quick recap of day 22 of playoff action on Saturday as the Canes would blow a lead in the 3rd but recovered in OT as they beat the Flyers 3-2 in OT to sweep the Flyers like they did the Sen’s, they start the postseason 8-0 and are heading back to the ECF while the Wild opened up a 2 goal lead early on and pulled away to destroy the Avalanche 5-1 as they are back in the series and only trail the Avalanche 2-1 and more, and I would love to hear your thoughts on all this and what your opinion is down in the comments section below. All video clips credit to Sportsnet Photo Credit All photos credit to NHL Twitter Thumbnail made with Canva Video intro made with royalty free music by Ruzer on Canva End To End Hockey Buy me a Coffee page link: https://buymeacoffee.com/endtoendhockey?status=1 End to End Hockey Blog Trade Bait List link: https://endtoendhockeyblog.blogspot.com/2026/03/end-to-end-hockey-40-player-trade-bait.html?m=1 End to End Hockey Blog Link: https://endtoendhockeyblog.blogspot.com/?m=1
Shaq is totally right about Steph Curry but it's debatable! When Shaquille O’Neal calls Stephen Curry the greatest of all time, it sounds crazy—until you realize he’s not using the same definition of greatness as everyone else. This video breaks down why Steph Curry might have the strongest GOAT case in NBA history… and why players like Michael Jordan and LeBron James might not dominate that conversation the way we think. We’re not just comparing stats, rings, or accolades. We’re diving into what “greatness” actually means—impact, influence, and how a player changes the game itself. If you’ve ever debated MJ vs LeBron vs Curry, this perspective might completely flip how you see basketball history. In this video: - Why Shaq believes Steph Curry is the GOAT - The traditional GOAT criteria (rings, MVPs, defense) - Why Curry doesn’t fit the usual mold - How Steph changed the NBA forever - The real definition of greatness in basketball Be sure to like, share, hype, comment and SUBSCRIBE! Thanks for watching HoopersLn.! Click here for membership perks! Get early access to videos and discounted merch! https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCiXonsxIlhY-gI-s2qzj-gw/join Subscribe here for more Hoopers Ln. www.youtube.com/@hoopersln?sub_confirmation=1 Watch More Hoopers Ln. Here: Michael Jordan Was TOTALLY Right About Steph Curry, But No One Listened https://youtu.be/tFepwYSrSEs Steph Curry FORCED Every Point Guard To Shoot Threes https://youtu.be/tra7Janhk4g Steph Curry's Legacy Just Got RUINED By The Warriors https://youtu.be/Ai8pIMEXAhQ NBA Players EXPLAIN Why Steph Curry Is SO Hard To Guard https://youtu.be/jNU2nc9MWGo NBA Players DESCRIBE What It's Like Being Teammates With Steph Curry https://youtu.be/XMhPsgB6RBg #nba #stephcurry #stephencurry #stephcurryinterview #dubnation Music from #InAudio: https://inaudio.org/ & Epidemic Sound Infraction- Urban Harmony Music from #InAudio: https://inaudio.org/ & Epidemic Sound Infraction- Temperature
Brains over brawn! This move caught everyone off guard. @MLB #MLB #BaseballIQ #Sports #Shorts
1981 mein Australia ne ek underarm ball se puri cricket duniya ko shock kar diya — aur cricket ka rule book hamesha ke liye badal gaya. The story of the most controversial moment in cricket history: the Greg Chappell underarm bowling scandal, Australia vs New Zealand, World Series Cup final. On 1 February 1981, at the Melbourne Cricket Ground, Australia faced New Zealand in the final of the World Series Cup. With one ball remaining and New Zealand needing six runs to tie, Australian captain Greg Chappell made a decision no one saw coming. He instructed his younger brother, Trevor Chappell, to bowl the final delivery underarm — rolling it along the ground, making a six physically impossible for batsman Brian McKechnie. McKechnie could only watch, drop his bat, and walk off in disgust. Australia had won. But the cricket world erupted. Commentary legend Richie Benaud called it the most disgraceful act he had ever witnessed on a cricket ground. Ian Chappell — Greg's own brother, commentating live that day — shouted "No Greg, no!" on air. Both the Australian and New Zealand Prime Ministers publicly condemned the decision. The International Cricket Council responded by banning underarm bowling permanently. One delivery. One captain's decision. An entire rule of cricket changed. Forty-five years later, this moment remains the defining example of how winning at all costs can betray the spirit of the game — and force cricket to rewrite its own laws. 🏏 Cricket Ka Itihaas, Har Roz — @TheWicketArchive 📺 Subscribe: youtube.com/@TheWicketArchive 📱 Instagram: @thewicketarchive