Jump to content
  • Welcome!

    Register and log in easily with Twitter or Google accounts!

    Or simply create a new Huddle account. 

    Members receive fewer ads , access our dark theme, and the ability to join the discussion!

     

Your most embarrassing sports or life moment


pawsandclaws

Recommended Posts

Mine was in high school. We were playing Hickory HS and a playoff spot was on the line. Probably 6 thousand people in attendance. Hickory had a crappy field then and when we ran out on the field they had a sprinkler head that was sticking up about 3 inches out of the ground. I was like the 3rd or forth guy leading the team out and I tripped on it and took out about 1/4 of our team.

I thank God there were no camera phones then or youtube....

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Not a specific moment per se, but I remember getting one-hit flatbacked multiple times, and on film they just looked like I was master of incompetence. One time specifically, a guy hit me so hard that I *literally* was in the air for about four or five feet. Very disconcerting feeling. However, that one was near the end of the play so I blame him from being dirty rather than me not keeping my head on a swivel lol.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Not a specific moment per se, but I remember getting one-hit flatbacked multiple times, and on film they just looked like I was master of incompetence. One time specifically, a guy hit me so hard that I *literally* was in the air for about four or five feet. Very disconcerting feeling. However, that one was near the end of the play so I blame him from being dirty rather than me not keeping my head on a swivel lol.

Yeah film days were tough when that kind of stuff happened. The whole team busts out laughing too....been there...

Link to comment
Share on other sites

when I made my college debut, coach sent me in to essentially do whatever I could to get the other team's big man to foul out. So I played him real hard and within seconds of entering the game, he fouled me hard.

Playing highschool ball at a real small school...getting up to the line to shoot free throws at the college level was a little different...I air balled the first shot like a 7 year old girl!!! I was rather embarrased for sure. Missed the 2nd shot too, but it hit the board/rim

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Back when I was 12 I had a severe crush on this one girl. I had crush on her since I was 8. One day she invited me to hangout with her group of friends, I was so excited! It was snowing really hard that day and that girl and I decied to wrestle in the snow. It was very romantic and being 12 I tho there was this moment when I will ask her out. Then I felt something wet in my head, not snow wet but like warm wet. The girl of my dreams stop wrestling with me and said "you got poop all over your head". Apparently dog took a poo in this snow earlier and heavy snow covered it up. Everyone in her group was laughting their asses off at me. I had to walk 6 miles back home covered in poo. Good times.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

when I made my college debut, coach sent me in to essentially do whatever I could to get the other team's big man to foul out. So I played him real hard and within seconds of entering the game, he fouled me hard.

Playing highschool ball at a real small school...getting up to the line to shoot free throws at the college level was a little different...I air balled the first shot like a 7 year old girl!!! I was rather embarrased for sure. Missed the 2nd shot too, but it hit the board/rim

Yeah thats pretty bad....and in basketball there is no helmet to hide in either!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Was playing strong safety during a HS game and had a flat-to-force zone during a pass play. The QB was flushed to my side and started scrambling, and I flowed with him and moved forward to be ready to close if he ran. A receiver ran behind me, so I turned my head to check him, and when I turned my head back around the ball smacked me right in the facemask... QB had thrown an awful pass that would have been the easiest pick-6 ever. The stadium was packed and I remember hearing laughter, and even the in-game announcer said, "That pass was, ummm, defended by #46..." All in all it was pretty funny.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I'll do a worst sports moment too.

Last year at boxing I was sparring, and our gym is in the ghetto so I box with a bunch of huge black guys. Anyways, I was sparring a 14 year old kid who was in like 8th grade. Granted, this kid was a giant for his age, but he beat the sh*t out of me. Knocked the wind out of me like 3 times, beat my face in. Two minutes in, I had NO energy left at all and I was just pawing at him aimlessly while getting destroyed.

Pretty damn embarrassing.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

JV Baseball my freshmen year, down 1, bases loaded and I come up to bat. 2 outs of course. I crushed the ball about 5 feet, slow dribbler and fell coming out of the box. I'm slow anyway, but by the time I collect myself to get up the pitcher has already gotten in front of me and tags me out. Looooooong bus ride home.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

My Sr. year in HS I played left field on our Varsity Baseball team... batted .300 for the season and was MVP of the Spring tournament... we won our conference and got to the state playoffs... first playoff game, first inning, first batter hits a fly ball directly at me and I immediately misjudged it and took about 4 steps forward before I realized my mistake. I start going back and trip and flail at catching the ball and miss it. The guy ends up on third... and we lost the game like 10-1. It was a horrible day and that was my last ever high school baseballI game. :(

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Archived

This topic is now archived and is closed to further replies.


  • PMH4OWPW7JD2TDGWZKTOYL2T3E.jpg

  • Topics

  • Posts

    • Exactly what I was going to say. Brady seems to be taking a page out of Olsen's playbook, which is probably a good thing. They'll probably get around to giving Brady an Emmy one day, and he should thank Olsen for giving him the blueprint for success.
    • In before: "XL sucks, there is no hope." "As long as we have Bryce, none of this matters." My response: "It's X, not XL...we're not discussing apparel sizes, or we'd have to consider XS."  
    • Alain Pierre provides some food for thought on Last Word On Sports regarding Xavier Legette, and his article, though specifically on X, kind of puts me in the mind of QBs being overdrafted and put into situations that they're not prepared for, some ultimately failing due to drafting missteps by front offices who don't necessarily view prospective players within the contextual importance that situations demand.  At this point, Legette looks like a failure in reference to expectations, of not only what a consistently productive NFL receiver looks like, but a first round pick (which he obviously should never have been). But the story on X isn't necessarily completely over. Damn. I seem to be experiencing deja vu...It wasn't X's fault that he was overdrafted, that was a choice by an FO that obviously downplayed actual realized skill vs outstanding measurables and upside. Sure, the FO was impressed by X's one-year feats during his senior season at South Carolina, but it was the NFL god, RAS (a.k.a. Raw Athletic Score), that had Dave Canales's and Dan Morgan's jaws dropping in amazement at the sight of X running around in underwear at the Combine...   "At 6-foot-3 and over 220 pounds, Legette brought rare athletic upside to the position. His breakout season at South Carolina showed flashes of dominance that NFL teams dream of. Projecting forward, many scouts compared his physical profile to D.K. Metcalf, and the Panthers clearly believed they could develop him into a true wide receiver 1 over time. The issue was never his talent. The issue was the timeline. Just a few picks later, the Chargers selected Ladd McConkey, a receiver who may have lacked Xavier Legette’s physical ceiling but entered the league far more technically refined. McConkey immediately showed advanced route discipline, leverage awareness, good pacing, and separation ability.  Bryce Young’s game has always depended on timing and anticipation. His best football at Alabama came with receivers capable of winning through precision rather than pure athleticism. Jameson Williams and John Metchie III were excellent route runners and were able to get drafted in 2022. McConkey naturally fit that style of play. Legette, meanwhile, needed significant development in the exact areas where Bryce Young needed help. The Panthers drafted traits when Bryce Young needed reliability."   Yes, the FO was guilty. The good thing is that the execs appear to be improving. Some of that may be attributed to the hiring of Eric Eager (who was hired right after the Xavier Legette draft). Eager seems to have helped the Panthers FO fine-tune their analytical progress, and, at least on paper, they acquired players with a lot of value during the last draft in regards to actually (what I'll refer to as) "underdrafting" talent relative to their position with value already built in.  Look at Chris Brazzell: He may be more of the quintessential project receiver who was arguably more or less just as raw as Legette was when he was drafted, and with a relatively high RAS as well. The notable difference is value, as Brazzell was a round three pick and Legette was a first rounder.    "Unlike the Xavier Legette situation, Carolina’s environment for Brazzell is completely different. "The Panthers are not asking a raw receiver prospect to stabilize this offense for Bryce Young. "Brazzell enters a much healthier developmental situation with far less pressure. With Tetairoa McMillan established as the primary target and Jalen Coker continuing to settle as the number 2 option...Xavier Legette, Metchie III, and Jimmy Horn Jr. are also still in this rotation, fighting for reps. "It gives Carolina something they failed to give Legette when they drafted him: A developmental runway. "Xavier Legette entered the league with expectations attached to a first-round pick and an offense desperate for answers. Brazzell enters a room where he can spend a year working on his route running, learning the playbook, and earning snaps gradually rather than being asked to become part of Bryce Young’s solution immediately. "And truthfully, Brazzell needs that time coming out of college. Despite his elite physical tools, many evaluators have several concerns about his overall polish as a receiver. "His route tree at Tennessee was viewed as fairly limited due to the type of offense that they run. The receivers are expected to run a lot of choice routes, which are dictated by the placement of the defenders. It doesn’t require technical route-running and an understanding of the playbook needed at the NFL level...   "Context changes significantly when expectations change. "The Panthers are not depending on Brazzell to save the offense. They can allow him to develop slowly, expand his route tree, improve his technical refinement, and learn behind a much more stable receiver room... "Traits become much easier to bet on when patience is built into the plan."   It's all about understanding your situation. I don't agree that it's an inherently difficult choice like the author is suggesting in the following excerpt. At the very least, I think that it should be easier as long as all parties involved stay levelheaded and true to their process.    "That is what makes these draft decisions so difficult. "Every front office believes it can find the next Metcalf, Owens, or Marshall. Sometimes they do. More often, they are betting on a development path that may take years to complete. "The challenge is understanding what your offense needs right now. "If a team has patience, stability, and a quarterback capable of carrying the offense while a receiver develops, betting on traits can make sense. But if a young quarterback needs immediate help, there is a strong argument for prioritizing the receiver who already knows how to separate, create throwing , and earn trust from day one. "That’s why the Xavier Legette-Ladd McConkey debate remains so fascinating. "It was never really a discussion about talent. It was a discussion about timing."   For me, Ladd McConkey was talented enough in his own right, that the gap--the upside--was never as big as people are suggesting between not only McConkey and Legette, but McConkey and other receivers drafted in the first round during that draft. The technique divide between Ladd and X was pretty stark though, as was the roughly 35 pounds, but the speed was identical, the maybe 1½ height difference isn't huge (6' and 6'1"), and it may surprise some that Ladd's RAS (9.34) was also enough to put him in the top 10 percent of receivers since 1987. There is an argument that he would've been a better pick for Bryce and the Panthers, regardless of timeline and talent. But, I still appreciate the thesis (if you will) of the article, as it still provides some hope--perhaps a glimmer at this point, that X's RAS may finally translate to the NFL given more time, but, perhaps more importantly, it explains how Dan Morgan and company are showing improvement, even if it appears somewhat understated. My hope is that continued improvement is palpable by this time next year. https://lastwordonsports.com/nfl/2026/05/30/xavier-legette-draft-lessons/#google_vignette        
×
×
  • Create New...