Ngl i wish i could be in the room with people like you to give the context in the moment behind these plays because these are some of the greatest plays in NFL history.
4:42 The defender actually did the right thing, knocking it down is exactly what they're taught to do in that situation because it's considered the "safe" play to just punch it to the ground and not risk anything goofy happening. It was just extremely unlucky that it happened to land in another player's arms.
Yep, plus I think it hit off the tip of his finger. Normally you knock it straight down to the ground. I think he whiffed a bit and accidentally hit it out instead of down.
OMG I don't know that much about football but tears are running down my face at your commentary! The comments here for you are excellent, you'll be an expert in no time.
There’s different forms of scoring, Field goals (kicking the football through the uprights) worth 3 points, there’s the safety (when you get tackled or sacked in your own end zone) worth 2 points to the team that sacked or tackled you, there is a 1 point safety but It’s so rare and pretty complicated so I’m not going to talk about it here, there’s a touchdown worth 6 points but the team that scored can either go for a pat (short field goal worth 1 point 33 yards) or go for 2 ( try to get in the opponent’s end zone you get one play at the 2 yard line) hope this helps you out a bit.
08:12 needs a bit of context. This is Overtime in Super Bowl 51, the first NFL championship game to go to OT since "The Greatest Game Ever Played" (1958 NFL Championship Game, Colts over Giants). The Patriots (White) had just overcome the biggest deficit in Super Bowl history to get to OT (down 28-3 to the Atlanta Falcons halfway through the third). Up to this point, the biggest deficit ever overcome in a Super Bowl was 10 points. This was the winning score, which also gave Tom Brady an unprecedented fifth SB ring as Patriots QB. (He'd get a sixth a few years later with Tampa Bay). And to clarify Overtime rules: Originally it was sudden death - first team to score wins. They changed that in 2010 so that you couldn't win on a field goal, unless both teams have had at least one possession (a TD still won it instantly). They changed it again in 2020, so that both teams are guaranteed at least one possession, but only for playoff games.
They used two of the greatest plays in NFL history. At 9:16 The "Immaculate Reception" where Franco Harris, of The Pittsburgh Steelers, picks a batted ball in the air and runs it in for a touchdown. That happened on 23 December 1972. The other one was "The Catch" at 15:36. QB Joe Montana of the San Francisco 49s to Dwight Clark, in the back of the end zone, to beat the Dallas Cowboys and win a trip to the Superbowl. That was 10 January 1983
13:05 he wasn’t slapping him. He was trying to punch the ball out of his hands. I remember watching that game. Garrison Hearst broke for 90+ on ‘em for my team the San Francisco 49ers
6:00 The player in white thought the ball had hit the ground. If the ball had it the ground, it would've been an 'Incomplete pass" (the play would be dead) but the ball didn't hit the ground and the player in Green knew this and the player in white didn't so secured the ball and ran for the TD.
@16:15 is the superbowl ending of the NY Giants Beating then the Undefeated 16-0 New England patriots .. this was New England's only loss and it was the game the matters the most... SUPERBOWL CHAMPIONSHIP
At 5:52 , greenbay (green yellow) vs vikings (purple white) .... so the vikings were about to intercept the ball, but the ball slipped thru his hands, the ball never touched the ground and the other guy (yellow green) caught it and his knees were not touching the ground, there fore the ball is still in play and of before the packer player got up, if the viking out both his hands on him, the play would ended in a catch at that spot, but since he did not, the green and yellow had a chance to score and did
15:35 January 10, 1982. It was the National Football Conference championship game where the winner would advance to meet the American Football Conference champion in the Superbowl (the National Football League championship).
In overtime, the first team to get the ball wins if they score a touchdown. If they get score a field goal, the other team gets a chance to score a touchdown or field goal as well. After both teams have had a chance then any points scored wins the game. If no one scores the game ends in a tie unless it's the playoffs or Superbowl. No ties in the playoffs or Superbowl, they play til 1 team scores.
I don't watch football but I know when the guy wearing that outfit was shown, that was "The Catch", 1981. Those were the days. My brother named his son Joe after Joe Montana.
4:13 This is like a fanny pack thing. Mostly quarterbacks and wide receivers use it but is usually has hand warmers inside of it to keep their hands warm.
15:02 the defender was saying y that Pearson threw the safety to the ground, which if the referred called it, would have been Offensive Pass Interference.
7 for a touchdown, 3 for a field goal - you can get 2 if you can tackle em in their own end zone. yea overtime is sudden death - first to score anything - that can possibly go on for awhile
A lot of these plays happened in the playoffs and at least 4 of them were game winners in the Super Bowl. Incredible plays on their own, but adds an even more insane dynamic when you think that people lost the Super Bowl on some of these
The other guy missed, fumbled, as long as thr ball doesn't touch the ground thr ball is still in motion, he caught it and ran it in...TOUCHDOWN!!!!! the crowd goes wild!!!! And all that.
The reason you see guys throwing punches toward a ball carriers midsection is a defender trying to knock the ball out of their hands while they are tackling them!
Yeah, for a complete catch you need 2 points of your body down before anything touches out of bound. 2 feet, a foot and a knee, a knee and an elbow. Any 2 points down before any part of your body touches out of bounds.
The catch at the end was the only game that the Patriots lost that year. It was the super bowl and the Patriots were trying to have the perfect year. They were trying to beat every team without the other team scoring. A lot of people accused them of cheating and nothing was actually ever proven but pretty much everyone knows they were.
6:02 the reason the defemder in the white gave up on the play was because he thought he knocked the pass tp the grpund which would've made it incomplete and the play would be dead. He didnt't realuze the ball landed on thr receivers back and never hit the ground.
I know this is late, but look into the Jacksonville Jaguars (the team at 4:00) as a team to support. They aren't necessarily England based, but play 2 or 3 'home' games there every year as part of expanding the NFL to Europeans so they could become your team
The Chicago Bears are the charter team of the NFL: a rich history, many great players, many great coaches, not widely loved, worthy of being loved, from one of the best cities.
For a touchdown you must have control over the ball and it needs to cross the line. If you catch it when its going out you need to have bothe feet in and have control over the ball for it to count
There are videos explaining the rules of the game for newbies, and explaining the plays as you watch. Check some out. Games are more interesting if you understand what's going on.
It used to be Sudden Dead Overtime, meaning the first team to score wins. I think the rule changed in 2010. Now in postseason (playoff's and the Super Bowl) there are as many 15 minute periods until one team is the winner, and in regular season game play there is a 10 minute period but both teams get a procession, even if the fist team scores. I hate the rule change, but it was changed because the winner of the coin toss for overtime won the game 60% of the time.
@@shchorss I guess I'm a product of my environment. I played organized tackle football from Pop Warner in the 70's through College in the 80's. Sudden Death was the rule during that era and that's how I liked it.
Touchdowns are 6 whether scored by the offense or off a turnover by the defense, Extra Points after Touchdowns are 1, Field goal kicks through the uprights are 3, tackling the ball carrier in their own endzone is 2, 2 point conversion after a touchdown (running/passing it into the endzone again from the 3 yard line after a touchdown) is ......2 points.
Lewis.....it will take some time. But, you gotta reaize....No matter who is down flat or what's going on on the field...literally NOBODY is paying attention to anything other the play until the play is over and the ball is "dead"!
It would be better to watch game-winning drives one of those hail Marys they try all the time and they work like one out of 100 that eventually they do and it's not as good as a complete game-winning drive
Hi handsome ♥️ the Vikings are a Minnesota team, second video Touchdown is 6 points and then they kick the ball through goal post for extra point, but they can try for another touchdown for 2 points .i am no expert on football,, don't like watching the game. They wear a ton of padding to protect them when they are tackled, watch NFL roughest tackles, you will see why they need it
Many of these are about the significance of the actual games and a little less about the plays themselves. Hard to completely understand some of these without the context, unfortunately.
Ngl i wish i could be in the room with people like you to give the context in the moment behind these plays because these are some of the greatest plays in NFL history.
I was thinking the same. He would be really impressed if someone was their to explain the nuances of these plays.
6:44 when you said "that's a team"...
That's my favourite team... Tennessee Titans. The PLAY is referred to as The Miracle at Music City
4:42 The defender actually did the right thing, knocking it down is exactly what they're taught to do in that situation because it's considered the "safe" play to just punch it to the ground and not risk anything goofy happening. It was just extremely unlucky that it happened to land in another player's arms.
Yep, plus I think it hit off the tip of his finger. Normally you knock it straight down to the ground. I think he whiffed a bit and accidentally hit it out instead of down.
Defenders are taught from Pop Warner to plant at the goal line and small any pass into the turf. Bad luck for that guy.
Bro some of those where not just game winners, but Superbowl winners!
12:50 when he hits him that's him trying to punch the ball out of the runners hands to force a fumble, happens a lot
OMG I don't know that much about football but tears are running down my face at your commentary! The comments here for you are excellent, you'll be an expert in no time.
There’s different forms of scoring, Field goals (kicking the football through the uprights) worth 3 points, there’s the safety (when you get tackled or sacked in your own end zone) worth 2 points to the team that sacked or tackled you, there is a 1 point safety but It’s so rare and pretty complicated so I’m not going to talk about it here, there’s a touchdown worth 6 points but the team that scored can either go for a pat (short field goal worth 1 point 33 yards) or go for 2 ( try to get in the opponent’s end zone you get one play at the 2 yard line) hope this helps you out a bit.
PAT is an acronym for "point after touchdown", not to take away from your excellent description of NFL scoring, just clarifying.
08:12 needs a bit of context. This is Overtime in Super Bowl 51, the first NFL championship game to go to OT since "The Greatest Game Ever Played" (1958 NFL Championship Game, Colts over Giants). The Patriots (White) had just overcome the biggest deficit in Super Bowl history to get to OT (down 28-3 to the Atlanta Falcons halfway through the third). Up to this point, the biggest deficit ever overcome in a Super Bowl was 10 points. This was the winning score, which also gave Tom Brady an unprecedented fifth SB ring as Patriots QB. (He'd get a sixth a few years later with Tampa Bay).
And to clarify Overtime rules: Originally it was sudden death - first team to score wins. They changed that in 2010 so that you couldn't win on a field goal, unless both teams have had at least one possession (a TD still won it instantly). They changed it again in 2020, so that both teams are guaranteed at least one possession, but only for playoff games.
They used two of the greatest plays in NFL history. At 9:16 The "Immaculate Reception" where Franco Harris, of The Pittsburgh Steelers, picks a batted ball in the air and runs it in for a touchdown. That happened on 23 December 1972. The other one was "The Catch" at 15:36. QB Joe Montana of the San Francisco 49s to Dwight Clark, in the back of the end zone, to beat the Dallas Cowboys and win a trip to the Superbowl. That was 10 January 1983
13:05 he wasn’t slapping him. He was trying to punch the ball out of his hands. I remember watching that game. Garrison Hearst broke for 90+ on ‘em for my team the San Francisco 49ers
6:00 The player in white thought the ball had hit the ground. If the ball had it the ground, it would've been an 'Incomplete pass" (the play would be dead) but the ball didn't hit the ground and the player in Green knew this and the player in white didn't so secured the ball and ran for the TD.
@16:15 is the superbowl ending of the NY Giants Beating then the Undefeated 16-0 New England patriots .. this was New England's only loss and it was the game the matters the most... SUPERBOWL CHAMPIONSHIP
At 5:52 , greenbay (green yellow) vs vikings (purple white) .... so the vikings were about to intercept the ball, but the ball slipped thru his hands, the ball never touched the ground and the other guy (yellow green) caught it and his knees were not touching the ground, there fore the ball is still in play and of before the packer player got up, if the viking out both his hands on him, the play would ended in a catch at that spot, but since he did not, the green and yellow had a chance to score and did
When the clock goes to zero, and a play is in progress that that moment, the play is allowed to continue until it ends.
They aren’t taking the piss when running parallel to the endzone, they’re wasting more time to run out the clock
The second clip is one of my all time favorites. It's called the Minneapolis Miracle.
15:35 January 10, 1982. It was the National Football Conference championship game where the winner would advance to meet the American Football Conference champion in the Superbowl (the National Football League championship).
The Immaculate Reception
In overtime, the first team to get the ball wins if they score a touchdown. If they get score a field goal, the other team gets a chance to score a touchdown or field goal as well. After both teams have had a chance then any points scored wins the game. If no one scores the game ends in a tie unless it's the playoffs or Superbowl. No ties in the playoffs or Superbowl, they play til 1 team scores.
Franco Harris was an amazing player. Loved watching him in his heyday.
I don't watch football but I know when the guy wearing that outfit was shown, that was "The Catch", 1981. Those were the days. My brother named his son Joe after Joe Montana.
12:53 we call that the peanut punch. The defender is trying to punch the ball out of the arm of the ball carrier to force a fumble
4:13 This is like a fanny pack thing. Mostly quarterbacks and wide receivers use it but is usually has hand warmers inside of it to keep their hands warm.
6:12 ok. That’s pretty wild. I’ve never seen this happen ever.
15:02 the defender was saying y that Pearson threw the safety to the ground, which if the referred called it, would have been Offensive Pass Interference.
7 for a touchdown, 3 for a field goal - you can get 2 if you can tackle em in their own end zone. yea overtime is sudden death - first to score anything - that can possibly go on for awhile
A lot of these plays happened in the playoffs and at least 4 of them were game winners in the Super Bowl. Incredible plays on their own, but adds an even more insane dynamic when you think that people lost the Super Bowl on some of these
The other guy missed, fumbled, as long as thr ball doesn't touch the ground thr ball is still in motion, he caught it and ran it in...TOUCHDOWN!!!!! the crowd goes wild!!!! And all that.
In a catch at the sideline, high school and college players only have to touch inbounds with one foot; the pros have to have both feet in.
Love the context my guy 😉😊
The reason you see guys throwing punches toward a ball carriers midsection is a defender trying to knock the ball out of their hands while they are tackling them!
'Overtime' in the NFL is really sudden death. Only college football truly has overtime when a full 15 minutes is played
Yeah, for a complete catch you need 2 points of your body down before anything touches out of bound. 2 feet, a foot and a knee, a knee and an elbow. Any 2 points down before any part of your body touches out of bounds.
On a pass if the ball hasn’t hit the ground its still live and can be advanced if you haven’t been touched by an opposing player
The catch at the end was the only game that the Patriots lost that year. It was the super bowl and the Patriots were trying to have the perfect year. They were trying to beat every team without the other team scoring. A lot of people accused them of cheating and nothing was actually ever proven but pretty much everyone knows they were.
6:02 the reason the defemder in the white gave up on the play was because he thought he knocked the pass tp the grpund which would've made it incomplete and the play would be dead. He didnt't realuze the ball landed on thr receivers back and never hit the ground.
I know this is late, but look into the Jacksonville Jaguars (the team at 4:00) as a team to support. They aren't necessarily England based, but play 2 or 3 'home' games there every year as part of expanding the NFL to Europeans so they could become your team
The Chicago Bears are the charter team of the NFL: a rich history, many great players, many great coaches, not widely loved, worthy of being loved, from one of the best cities.
15:40 49ers vs Cowboys, 49ers win 1982 and it the begging of a decades long dynasty.
For a touchdown you must have control over the ball and it needs to cross the line. If you catch it when its going out you need to have bothe feet in and have control over the ball for it to count
06:00 As long as the ball never hits the turf and the receiver can get up and go before a defender touches him, it's a fair play.
There are videos explaining the rules of the game for newbies, and explaining the plays as you watch.
Check some out. Games are more interesting if you understand what's going on.
Bradshaw played in the 70's and early 80's when qb's chose the play on the field
You should react to baseballs greatest 9th inning greatest game winning scores of all time. I love your videos bro! Keep up the grind bud!!
You should react to the NFL game highlights for the upcoming season.
It used to be Sudden Dead Overtime, meaning the first team to score wins. I think the rule changed in 2010. Now in postseason (playoff's and the Super Bowl) there are as many 15 minute periods until one team is the winner, and in regular season game play there is a 10 minute period but both teams get a procession, even if the fist team scores. I hate the rule change, but it was changed because the winner of the coin toss for overtime won the game 60% of the time.
Why the hell would you hate the rule change? Letting both teams have the ball in OT is so much better than previous OT lmao
@@shchorss I guess I'm a product of my environment. I played organized tackle football from Pop Warner in the 70's through College in the 80's. Sudden Death was the rule during that era and that's how I liked it.
I think it changed after Hasselbeck's infamous "We'll take the ball and we are going to score" boat.
Touchdowns are 6 whether scored by the offense or off a turnover by the defense, Extra Points after Touchdowns are 1, Field goal kicks through the uprights are 3, tackling the ball carrier in their own endzone is 2, 2 point conversion after a touchdown (running/passing it into the endzone again from the 3 yard line after a touchdown) is ......2 points.
They serve more than hot dogs....there's a food court mixed with bars around every level of the stadium .....
Touch down is six points and a kick after through the uprights is called an extra point is one point
the vikings/saints was also a playoff game
It's interesting I found this video exactly 1 year today from the date of your video
Farve was a magical qb
9:10 my parents were crying cause of this play😬
A desperation heave is known as a "Hail Mary" pass, based on the Catholic prayer.
Lewis.....it will take some time. But, you gotta reaize....No matter who is down flat or what's going on on the field...literally NOBODY is paying attention to anything other the play until the play is over and the ball is "dead"!
That first catch was a Michael Jordan catch
You Need Las Vegas Raider Gear
Touch dow is 6 points and then they get a convesion which can be 1 or 2 points depending on what they choose.
3:39 man. Idk how to feel about how he did at the end. Had he not gotten the touchdown for being “extra” - that would have sucked.
The word "sack" has a particular meaning in football, which is different from how you're using it.
Over time is for tie breakers
James white vs falcons is the best
15:57 what year? Think Joe Montanas last yaar was 1992? Best QB in history.
Yo gut. U think some players are punching the ball carrier. They are actually trying to get thr ball out of their possession
Richest sports league in the world.
It would be better to watch game-winning drives one of those hail Marys they try all the time and they work like one out of 100 that eventually they do and it's not as good as a complete game-winning drive
Hi handsome ♥️ the Vikings are a Minnesota team, second video Touchdown is 6 points and then they kick the ball through goal post for extra point, but they can try for another touchdown for 2 points
.i am no expert on football,, don't like watching the game. They wear a ton of padding to protect them when they are tackled, watch NFL roughest tackles, you will see why they need it
Many of these are about the significance of the actual games and a little less about the plays themselves. Hard to completely understand some of these without the context, unfortunately.
That's a tackle and it's legal, again reason for the padding. Thst one that you asked about,its the 70's Joe. Montana was a famous football player
Yes a touchdown is six points not after the kick it 7