Every football player in the history of footbal has been hurt. As all my coaches used to ask, "Are you hurt, or are you injured?". That would determine the mentality of your commitment to rhe team and the game. Im 40 now, and I'm paying for all the lies i told my coaches that i was only hurt lol.
@@KevinPerry-wi5dw We played before concussions, hydration and all that else was understood. I sleep on the floor some nights because it's better for my back lol
I played football starting at 6 years old all the way through college (22 years old). As far as pain goes, adrenaline gets you through the game without really feeling your bumps and bruises. The next morning is another story. It feels like you survived a huge car wreck. You play once a week. Game Saturday... sore till Tuesday then start to feel a little better. By the time the next game, you feel pretty good. This is an example if you did not sustain a substantial injury. Pretty much you have to deal with a series of nagging injuries all season. Twisted ankles, sore shoulders, bruises, etc. But so much fun!
A couple hundred college players are drafted each year to the nfl. However the avg career span in the nfl is like 3 years so alot of them get filtered out
My son was a defensive lineman in college. He played in Division III, Ithaca. Div III players hardly ever go on to the pros. But trust me, even though he was the one doing the tackling, they are very sore the next day. But they workout hard and have protective gear. He broke his finger, dislocated his shoulder, and suffered a lot of injuries over the years…but they hate being sidelined…even injured, they want to play
Every NFL draft has at least 224. Sometimes teams can be awarded extra picks when certain criteria are met. The 2024 NFL draft had 257 picks. Those 257 picks were chosen from 81,000 players who played college football in 2023.
For reference, Clowney was a defensive player notorious in his career for shedding blocks and wrecking havoc on his opponents plays. On this play he burst through the Offensive line in a blink and met the ball carrier (Michigan?) so far behind the line it was insane. I swear you can see the dude’s soul leave his body when Clowney lays him out at full speed.
Michigan fan here, first down call was bs. Clowney made it right. I can only imagine what that guys career would have been like if he played every down with that much enthusiasm. That being said, Vincent Smith stood right up after that hit and walked off fine. The biggest hit was during a 1998 game with Penn State and U of M. Ended both player careers. Daydrion Taylor's hit against Bob Stephenson. Insane.
I've never seen a virtual fire with a "Roaring Out of Control" setting, that's surprising! Yes, I'm in Austin and I'm sure many here are proud of the handful of UT Longhorns that got picked up by the NFL.
Played 4 Years of Division 2 college football here! Best way to describe the feeling is the adrenaline keeps you going during the game, the next 2 days are a different story! You’re sore, hurting, can barely walk… then you start feeling better about 3 days after the game but what sucks is you start practicing again just when you start to feel better! Then it’s rinse and repeat for 11-16 weeks in the season depending on how far you go!
My favorite thing is that you’ve been watching enough of this that in the 3rd clip you could see it coming once the the corner read the play and took off lol
I played football in both high school and college back in the early 1970's and I dislocated my shoulder twice, fractured 2 of my ribs, and tore my MCL in college. I would do it all again in a heartbeat because I LOVE football. 🏈💪✌️
Getting full body tackled when you're running at top speed by another man who is also running at full speed feels sort of like running into a brick wall. You can get up because of the adrenaline. Once that wears off, however, is when you really start to feel it. It doesn't tickle. Also, a pass that leads to you getting drilled is known as a hospital pass, for obvious reason. Sometimes it's the best play, but you're certain to get some looks from your receivers if you keep doing it.
There’s a variety of pain tbh. There’s pain where it’s like yeah I gotta sit out a couple plays and get checked up on. And theres pain that just comes with the game. I Badly tore and fractured my whole ankle/foot but it was the last game of the season big rivalry game for the district and with a win we could get picked to go on to CIF which is state playoffs. I literally couldn’t take a full step on my right foot without experiencing the worse pain that I had ever felt. But with my coach screaming at me that “it’s the last game this is for everything” “you gotta fight through the pain” I went back on after only 2-3 plays out and finished out the last quarter pretty much just throwing my body in front of defenders trying my hardest to keep going. So now like 3 years later I still get pain in the ankle especially when im squatting which is led to me wearing a ankle brace anytime I workout and I regularly get hamstring pain after running from a torn hammy that I didn’t let heal long enough and instead wrapped up tight whenever I was playing.
1:26 in the nfl, players are required to cover their legs, but in any other level of football there’s really no restrictions like that so players will tend to go bare legged
1:52 there are 1 million high school players, 8% of those go to play college each year. There are 81k college football players, .4% (259 drafted, 672 get invited to training camp) of them go to the NFL each year. There are 2k NFL players.
Hey Adam. Enjoy your video. Watching these football hit videos is a mixed bag. I played football for 6 years as lineman so it was my job to block and when you see someone get blown up it’s usually a blocking or team failure. Not to mention the poor guy we have to peel off of the field.
It's great on a solid sound system TV as they have directional parabolic mics on field so you can hear the players calling plays and such. If it happens to be pointed at a good hit you get to experience the sound of padding and plastic crashing into each other as 2 280 lb men sprint straight at each other. A lot of energy transfer happens. A lot and you hear it all crunch and impact. It's great.
Just from highschool football and junior football I have had knee surgery, a torn Achilles, dislocated shoulder which still gives me back problems/ spasms, and concussions but it was fun 😆
I wish I could sit down with you and explain how it works! I'm American, grew up with my dad watching but didn't really fully learn until someone explained things as they happened during a few games. College has a few different rules compared to the NFL but the basics are the same. The same person was an ex soccer player and taught me all about the Beautiful Game too! I still love both ⚽️🏈
3% of highschool football players make it to a Division 1 Football program and only 1.6% of Division 1 college football players get drafted to an NFL team.
the ONLY thing that would make it Better would be to have the 60s Batman "Word Box's",,Bam!,,,Socko!,,,Wham!,,,Pow! etc. imposed on the screen on gameDays😂🎉
A million or so high school football players, roughly a hundred thousand college football players, 350ish draftees and udfa’s (undrafted free agent) a yr and only around 1,700 active nfl players during the regular szn
First view first to comment LOL! Every year 224 players enter the NFL this is done through the NFL draft with each one of the NFL teams getting one pick per round. According to a quick search each year there are around 16,000 college players eligible for the NFL draft. The highest ranked players coming out of college will be picked in the first round though sometimes this may be slightly altered due to individual NFL team needs. For example say KC Chiefs needed a offensive lineman really bad but the best player at the time of their pick was a QB. They might skip the QB as they already have a franchise QB and take the offensive lineman or they might draft the QB and trade with another team for a veteran offensive lineman. They might trade away that pick to a team that wants a QB for several extra picks in that draft or in a later draft say the next year. Lots of various back room deals being worked between picks by NFL teams. The picking order is decided by how they finished. If you finish dead last in the NFL last season you get the first pick while the team that finishes first gets the last pick of the round. You might check out the movie Draft Day starring Kevin Costner. Hope I just didn't confuse you and that all made sense.
I could barely get out of bed the next morning with how sore I would be from games, not every position takes as much as a beating as playing running back and Middle linebacker
Let’s go!!! My family immigrated from Belfast. I’m the first man in my family to graduate from university. Went to UCF. Since I’m in Orlando my family comes and stays and goes to Disney. They’re from the Newtownards and Conlig. My cousin said his favorite memory was me taking him to a college football game. UCF vs Oklahoma State last year. Remember these names KJ Jefferson and RJ Harvey. Big UCF games next year, at TCU on Fox national tv, at Florida on ESPN and at home to Utah on Fox national tv
Most players don't go onto the NFL, but the 2 or 3% that do, you will know who they are if you've seen their games. Big names to keep an eye out in CFB right now are Travis Hunter (Colorado), Ollie Gordon III (Oklahoma State), and Quinn Ewers (Texas).
I played from fifth grade all through high school. All the soreness and cramps usually were taken care of during training camp. That way come game day you and your body is used to the contact. Also the times have changed so much since I played that these "big Hits" were mostly just good strong hard tackles when I played. Or big Hits would be ejections today. I only got hurt/injured one time. I was in seventh grade and had a running back step on my finger. Broke my finger and lost my nail.
were you a receiver or a kicker? I played offensive tackle and the way more involved than breaking a nail. Pain didn't end until Wednesday on a good week
FYI - Under the tight pants they have padding on their thighs. How much padding depends on position and personal preference. Also, they have mouth guards that are attached to dangle from their helmets they can take out to talk and slip in their mouths during a play.
Typically every year around 250 college players will be drafted into the NFL, and another 100+ will sign as UDFAs. However, of those guys probably only 150-200 of them will actually get on NFL rosters, while the rest will be cut or put on the practice squad. And out of those guys, only a few dozen will be good enough to start in year 1.
the thing about hits in football is the ones yuu don’t see coming tend not to hurt but the ones yuu see tend to hurt more bc yuu try to brace yourself for the hit and that’s what gets yuu hurt
I think that even though they don’t all go to the NFL many did major in something in college. They end up gainfully employed and many end up doing something involving sports such as coaching,training athletes,sports medicine so they do ok even if they don’t go on to play football in the NFL.
There is a NFL draft every single Year, 30 Teams, 7 Rounds. 257 Players were drafted this year, the NFL is “jokingly” known for standing for “Not For Long” becuz the avg length of NFL player is 2-3 Yrs so USUALLY in the draft the first 4 Rounds of draft picks “usually” make the team. The guys picked in rounds 5-7 are usually backend roster players or practice team.
3:17 Jacobee Bryant. He likes to be called "Cobee Bryant" like late great Kobe Bryant. He is one of the best corner backs in college football and is coming back to play in college this coming season. He very well could be playing in the NFL after next season. The player he hit did get up and walk off the field under his own power but I'm pretty sure that he wasn't allowed to come back in because he was knocked a little loopy. Even though it was a completely clean hit as their shoulders only made contact.
Most of the SEC, South Eastern Conference, will go to the NFL after graduation. My team is the Georgia Bull Dawgs and everyone wants to be drafted by this team. Every player that graduated was drafted by the NFL. Other school in that Conference are also drafted. Some of the Western States have bitched enough to be allowed into this Conference, so i don't know if the quality of players will continue to be as good! Go Dawgs!!❤❤
My collar bone broke in two places on the left side from getting slammed into the ground by Daniel Ross, a man that went on to become a Dallas Cowboy. I played 7 more years after that break and never had surgery. I’ve also smacked the shit outta some people in my day as well. Targeting wasn’t a penalty til the last year I played. Targeting is when a defender lowers the crown of his helmet and missiles themselves into the offensive players helmet. Or just a hit to the offensive players head in general.
You should react to some games. College football miracles, college football comebacks, Top 100 plays from the 2023 season... things like that. There are a few channels that have college football highlights
A lot of players go to the nfl but not all play on Sundays. Some are just practice squad. Or the go to xfl or afl or Canadian league. I think Europe has a football league too.
There are only about 1800 active NFL players at any one time. About 16,400 college players were eligible for the NFL draft in 2023 and Only 1.6% of college football players make it to the NFL in general. Making it to the NFL is an extraordinary feat of strength, speed, and agility. These athletes are incredibly gifted with raw power and speed. With modern nutrition and training programs, the players are hit harder than at any other time in history, and why the injuries are so destructive. The equipment is better and rule changes have softened the game to try and protect the players but the average NFL career is only 3 years. There used to be a physics example that goes like this: if a 240lb Linebacker that runs the hundred in 11 sec hits a 200lb running back who runs the hundred in 10 secs the impact creates enough force to move a 30 ton object 1 inch. The other analogy is everytime a running back gets hit head on it is the equivalent of a 35 MPH car crash.
I worked with a guy who was invited to try out for the Pittsburgh Steelers. He was the fastest guy in his school. When he got there, he said there were guys almost twice his size that were much faster than he was. He said it was a real eye opener as to what it takes to be an NFL player. No, he didn't make it. Not even close.
If the guy in that first clip was a soccer player , they would have held a funeral service for him right there on the " pitch ". When you get slammed by one of those blind side hits , everything goes black for a couple of seconds . You open your eyes and start taking inventory to see if anything is broken , snot is smeared all over your face , and everything looks strange until you realize that you are looking out of the ear hole in your helmet. The sound when you get hit in the helmet is like a firecracker going off in your ear .
The biggest his I’ve ever seen is Pat Surtain Sr at Southern Miss vs Houston in the late 90s. I seriously don’t know how the kid from Houston survived it
32 NFL teams. The draft will go 32 choices for 7 rounds. There are ~133 D1 teams and 777 total colleges with a football team. There can be 85 scholarship players andmany other partial or nonscholarship players. NFL teams have 53. If not drafted, players can get signed in free agency or walk-on. Most drafted to the NFL come from top 10 teams.
There's about 880 college football teams, with 50 - 100 players on each; figure 25% of them Seniors and "draft eligible," so around 16,500 players each year. The NFL drafts 257 players each year. Of those, over 15% won't even make the team and only 20% will go on to be considered "good" or "great" players.
The guys you are watching, 95% of them, have been playing some version of football since they were 5 years old. They have hit and been hit a 1,000 times, it’s an expected part of the game. Here’s a crazy thing that happens, we get addicted to the hitting, ask any of them they will tell you the hitting is what they miss when they stop playing
Every year, they have a draft where the NFL picks players from college to join their team. Hundreds of players a year. Most don't play past College though.
Every year the NFL holds a draft where 255 players from College are drafted to the pros. Within 4 years most will have retired as they wont be good enough.
They draft A little over 220 players every year from college 7 rounds 32 teams so 224 picks but not all make the team and every team picks up undrafted free agents from college for summer camp which is tryouts for the 53 man roster so 224 picks and around 90-150 undrafted free agents and they all have to fight to make the 53 man roster
According to Google, under 2% of college players go on to play in the NFL. It's a select few. There are only 32 teams in the NFL, and at least 224 players are drafted each year. About 80,000 athletes play college football.
Some hits aren't legal, like helmet-to-helmet tackles, pulling on the facemask or horse collar, hitting a defenseless player. Those are mainly for safety. But they train for this stuff, so yes, they get hurt sometimes, but not as much as you might think. (This is not counting CTE in the future for these players!)
See these were the nicer of the hard hits. And when we watch these games live we cheer when our team lands a hard hit. Now we (majority of us) don’t hope the players are injured (unless they were shitty/cheered when they injured one of our or something of the sort) and we clap when a person that was slow or unable to get off the field does as we are glad they are alive and for the most part okay or at least hope so. Kind of a clap for giving so much to the game.
The numbers I've always heard (not sure how accurate, but close) are, 1% of High School players play College Football and 1% of College players play Pro.
About 1% will make it to the NFL, or at least get drafted. When I played in college we always understood that football is not a contact sport but a collision sport. There is also a big difference in playing with pain in most sports and in football you are often playing with injury.
1 of every 100 high school football players makes it to college football, and 1 of every 100 college football players makes it to the pro football level.
Every football player in the history of footbal has been hurt. As all my coaches used to ask, "Are you hurt, or are you injured?". That would determine the mentality of your commitment to rhe team and the game. Im 40 now, and I'm paying for all the lies i told my coaches that i was only hurt lol.
I'm 42 and I'm in the same position
@@KevinPerry-wi5dw We played before concussions, hydration and all that else was understood. I sleep on the floor some nights because it's better for my back lol
@@Cubs-Fan.10 I played with Broken Ribs and a dislocated knee cap
@@KevinPerry-wi5dw Same boat. We played for the passion of the game. Looking back, we were idiots.
@@Cubs-Fan.10 I had a coach call me pussy if I complained
I played football starting at 6 years old all the way through college (22 years old). As far as pain goes, adrenaline gets you through the game without really feeling your bumps and bruises. The next morning is another story. It feels like you survived a huge car wreck. You play once a week. Game Saturday... sore till Tuesday then start to feel a little better. By the time the next game, you feel pretty good. This is an example if you did not sustain a substantial injury. Pretty much you have to deal with a series of nagging injuries all season. Twisted ankles, sore shoulders, bruises, etc.
But so much fun!
Like a car crash you do NOT feel hurt until days after.
Then dealing with the injuries for a long time after that last game
@@mememachine2681 Yes!
In High School I hated jumping right into basketball after the football season. Always wanted a couple of weeks off.
Colorado State vs Colorado 2023 highlights would give this man a heart attack
I was there and it gave me one
I was in my dorm a mile away and the noise from the stadium nearly made me deaf
less than 2% go to the NFL. the draft was just a few months ago.
A couple hundred college players are drafted each year to the nfl. However the avg career span in the nfl is like 3 years so alot of them get filtered out
My son was a defensive lineman in college. He played in Division III, Ithaca. Div III players hardly ever go on to the pros. But trust me, even though he was the one doing the tackling, they are very sore the next day. But they workout hard and have protective gear. He broke his finger, dislocated his shoulder, and suffered a lot of injuries over the years…but they hate being sidelined…even injured, they want to play
there are like 80,000 college players and 250ish get drafted
But only like 100 players out of the 250 make the active roster. Maybe even less idk the exact number
@@SIR-C4RR0T-T0P very important
There’s like 9.500 D1 college players. And there’s 53 players on an active NFL roster
@@c_friii D1 is D1. sure they’re the only ones with a legit shot anyway. but you know.
@@JoeyVatavuk true. Every so often 1 or 2 guys from the lower ranks make it thought but yeah crazy numbers difference
Every NFL draft has at least 224. Sometimes teams can be awarded extra picks when certain criteria are met. The 2024 NFL draft had 257 picks. Those 257 picks were chosen from 81,000 players who played college football in 2023.
The best hit ever is called "The Hit" by Jadeveon Clowney.
THIS. That one is just “The Hit” because it’s still the most insane thing I’d ever seen.
ruclips.net/video/2JYx-_eXQa4/видео.htmlsi=yq4ae3kCmmSQMAsr
For reference, Clowney was a defensive player notorious in his career for shedding blocks and wrecking havoc on his opponents plays. On this play he burst through the Offensive line in a blink and met the ball carrier (Michigan?) so far behind the line it was insane. I swear you can see the dude’s soul leave his body when Clowney lays him out at full speed.
Michigan fan here, first down call was bs. Clowney made it right. I can only imagine what that guys career would have been like if he played every down with that much enthusiasm. That being said, Vincent Smith stood right up after that hit and walked off fine. The biggest hit was during a 1998 game with Penn State and U of M. Ended both player careers. Daydrion Taylor's hit against Bob Stephenson. Insane.
I've never seen a virtual fire with a "Roaring Out of Control" setting, that's surprising!
Yes, I'm in Austin and I'm sure many here are proud of the handful of UT Longhorns that got picked up by the NFL.
Played 4 Years of Division 2 college football here! Best way to describe the feeling is the adrenaline keeps you going during the game, the next 2 days are a different story! You’re sore, hurting, can barely walk… then you start feeling better about 3 days after the game but what sucks is you start practicing again just when you start to feel better! Then it’s rinse and repeat for 11-16 weeks in the season depending on how far you go!
My favorite thing is that you’ve been watching enough of this that in the 3rd clip you could see it coming once the the corner read the play and took off lol
I played football in both high school and college back in the early 1970's and I dislocated my shoulder twice, fractured 2 of my ribs, and tore my MCL in college. I would do it all again in a heartbeat because I LOVE football. 🏈💪✌️
Getting full body tackled when you're running at top speed by another man who is also running at full speed feels sort of like running into a brick wall. You can get up because of the adrenaline. Once that wears off, however, is when you really start to feel it. It doesn't tickle.
Also, a pass that leads to you getting drilled is known as a hospital pass, for obvious reason. Sometimes it's the best play, but you're certain to get some looks from your receivers if you keep doing it.
There’s a variety of pain tbh. There’s pain where it’s like yeah I gotta sit out a couple plays and get checked up on. And theres pain that just comes with the game. I Badly tore and fractured my whole ankle/foot but it was the last game of the season big rivalry game for the district and with a win we could get picked to go on to CIF which is state playoffs. I literally couldn’t take a full step on my right foot without experiencing the worse pain that I had ever felt. But with my coach screaming at me that “it’s the last game this is for everything” “you gotta fight through the pain” I went back on after only 2-3 plays out and finished out the last quarter pretty much just throwing my body in front of defenders trying my hardest to keep going. So now like 3 years later I still get pain in the ankle especially when im squatting which is led to me wearing a ankle brace anytime I workout and I regularly get hamstring pain after running from a torn hammy that I didn’t let heal long enough and instead wrapped up tight whenever I was playing.
1:26 in the nfl, players are required to cover their legs, but in any other level of football there’s really no restrictions like that so players will tend to go bare legged
Just LISTEN to those pads pop, then the CROWD ... ohhhhhhh love it!
‘The Hit-Jadeveon Clowney 🤙🏻🐓’
Every year they have the "NFL Draft Day" where each team, according to their standings, pick players from college to go to their team in the NFL.
1:52 there are 1 million high school players, 8% of those go to play college each year. There are 81k college football players, .4% (259 drafted, 672 get invited to training camp) of them go to the NFL each year. There are 2k NFL players.
Hey Adam. Enjoy your video. Watching these football hit videos is a mixed bag. I played football for 6 years as lineman so it was my job to block and when you see someone get blown up it’s usually a blocking or team failure. Not to mention the poor guy we have to peel off of the field.
It's great on a solid sound system TV as they have directional parabolic mics on field so you can hear the players calling plays and such. If it happens to be pointed at a good hit you get to experience the sound of padding and plastic crashing into each other as 2 280 lb men sprint straight at each other. A lot of energy transfer happens. A lot and you hear it all crunch and impact. It's great.
Just from highschool football and junior football I have had knee surgery, a torn Achilles, dislocated shoulder which still gives me back problems/ spasms, and concussions but it was fun 😆
I wish I could sit down with you and explain how it works! I'm American, grew up with my dad watching but didn't really fully learn until someone explained things as they happened during a few games. College has a few different rules compared to the NFL but the basics are the same. The same person was an ex soccer player and taught me all about the Beautiful Game too! I still love both ⚽️🏈
Jadeveon Clowney. THE HIT HEARD AROUND THE WORLD
3% of highschool football players make it to a Division 1 Football program and only 1.6% of Division 1 college football players get drafted to an NFL team.
the ONLY thing that would make it Better would be to have the 60s Batman "Word Box's",,Bam!,,,Socko!,,,Wham!,,,Pow! etc. imposed on the screen on gameDays😂🎉
Adam you should react to “The Scariest Day in NFL history” by Nonstop. It’s a moment in NFL history I’ll never forget.
Some of these QBs are throwing invites to heaven😂😭
A million or so high school football players, roughly a hundred thousand college football players, 350ish draftees and udfa’s (undrafted free agent) a yr and only around 1,700 active nfl players during the regular szn
First view first to comment LOL! Every year 224 players enter the NFL this is done through the NFL draft with each one of the NFL teams getting one pick per round. According to a quick search each year there are around 16,000 college players eligible for the NFL draft. The highest ranked players coming out of college will be picked in the first round though sometimes this may be slightly altered due to individual NFL team needs. For example say KC Chiefs needed a offensive lineman really bad but the best player at the time of their pick was a QB. They might skip the QB as they already have a franchise QB and take the offensive lineman or they might draft the QB and trade with another team for a veteran offensive lineman. They might trade away that pick to a team that wants a QB for several extra picks in that draft or in a later draft say the next year. Lots of various back room deals being worked between picks by NFL teams. The picking order is decided by how they finished. If you finish dead last in the NFL last season you get the first pick while the team that finishes first gets the last pick of the round. You might check out the movie Draft Day starring Kevin Costner. Hope I just didn't confuse you and that all made sense.
I could barely get out of bed the next morning with how sore I would be from games, not every position takes as much as a beating as playing running back and Middle linebacker
Gonna need some college football fight reactions 😂
Theres an NFL draft every April Adam. Basically each nfl team selects 7 players from college for their team (to make it simple)
We need more football videos
Let’s go!!! My family immigrated from Belfast. I’m the first man in my family to graduate from university. Went to UCF. Since I’m in Orlando my family comes and stays and goes to Disney. They’re from the Newtownards and Conlig. My cousin said his favorite memory was me taking him to a college football game. UCF vs Oklahoma State last year. Remember these names KJ Jefferson and RJ Harvey. Big UCF games next year, at TCU on Fox national tv, at Florida on ESPN and at home to Utah on Fox national tv
The NFL Draft is around April every year. So college players go get drafted every year and play in the NFL for whatever team picks them that year.
Getting hurt is an expected part of the game. I broke my sternum. It's like learning to ride a bike. Eventually you're gonna crash.
Most players don't go onto the NFL, but the 2 or 3% that do, you will know who they are if you've seen their games. Big names to keep an eye out in CFB right now are Travis Hunter (Colorado), Ollie Gordon III (Oklahoma State), and Quinn Ewers (Texas).
Rumor is that it hurts worse tackling someone rather than getting tackled
6:00 buddy got his ribs turned to dust!!
Need to watch the one we’ve all seen that has the “Here Comes the Boom” song playing
I played from fifth grade all through high school. All the soreness and cramps usually were taken care of during training camp. That way come game day you and your body is used to the contact. Also the times have changed so much since I played that these "big Hits" were mostly just good strong hard tackles when I played. Or big Hits would be ejections today. I only got hurt/injured one time. I was in seventh grade and had a running back step on my finger. Broke my finger and lost my nail.
were you a receiver or a kicker?
I played offensive tackle and the way more involved than breaking a nail. Pain didn't end until Wednesday on a good week
Those guys are crazy 😮😮😮😮
FYI - Under the tight pants they have padding on their thighs. How much padding depends on position and personal preference. Also, they have mouth guards that are attached to dangle from their helmets they can take out to talk and slip in their mouths during a play.
you should see Ronnel Lewis 3 hits vs Stanford! 3 big pops in one game! "The most violent hitter I have ever seen" - his Coach at the time
I’ve played a full half of a game with a cracked knee it was adrenaline the next day is when a lot of players feel it lol
Typically every year around 250 college players will be drafted into the NFL, and another 100+ will sign as UDFAs. However, of those guys probably only 150-200 of them will actually get on NFL rosters, while the rest will be cut or put on the practice squad. And out of those guys, only a few dozen will be good enough to start in year 1.
Those hits do hurt, but you have to get up, so you don't look weak. haha
Blind side football hits. They are nasty but damn do they feel good in inflict that damage
Please react to airborne moments
the thing about hits in football is the ones yuu don’t see coming tend not to hurt but the ones yuu see tend to hurt more bc yuu try to brace yourself for the hit and that’s what gets yuu hurt
I think that even though they don’t all go to the NFL many did major in something in college. They end up gainfully employed and many end up doing something involving sports such as coaching,training athletes,sports medicine so they do ok even if they don’t go on to play football in the NFL.
There is a NFL draft every single Year, 30 Teams, 7 Rounds. 257 Players were drafted this year, the NFL is “jokingly” known for standing for “Not For Long” becuz the avg length of NFL player is 2-3 Yrs so USUALLY in the draft the first 4 Rounds of draft picks “usually” make the team. The guys picked in rounds 5-7 are usually backend roster players or practice team.
32 teams in the nfl.
3:17 Jacobee Bryant. He likes to be called "Cobee Bryant" like late great Kobe Bryant. He is one of the best corner backs in college football and is coming back to play in college this coming season. He very well could be playing in the NFL after next season. The player he hit did get up and walk off the field under his own power but I'm pretty sure that he wasn't allowed to come back in because he was knocked a little loopy. Even though it was a completely clean hit as their shoulders only made contact.
They have the college football draft and it's televised. Check ESPN for replay
Most of the SEC, South Eastern Conference, will go to the NFL after graduation. My team is the Georgia Bull Dawgs and everyone wants to be drafted by this team. Every player that graduated was drafted by the NFL. Other school in that Conference are also drafted. Some of the Western States have bitched enough to be allowed into this Conference, so i don't know if the quality of players will continue to be as good! Go Dawgs!!❤❤
My collar bone broke in two places on the left side from getting slammed into the ground by Daniel Ross, a man that went on to become a Dallas Cowboy. I played 7 more years after that break and never had surgery. I’ve also smacked the shit outta some people in my day as well. Targeting wasn’t a penalty til the last year I played. Targeting is when a defender lowers the crown of his helmet and missiles themselves into the offensive players helmet. Or just a hit to the offensive players head in general.
You should react to some games. College football miracles, college football comebacks, Top 100 plays from the 2023 season... things like that. There are a few channels that have college football highlights
Every year a significant number of the very best college players go into the NFL.
A lot of players go to the nfl but not all play on Sundays. Some are just practice squad. Or the go to xfl or afl or Canadian league. I think Europe has a football league too.
There are only about 1800 active NFL players at any one time. About 16,400 college players were eligible for the NFL draft in 2023 and Only 1.6% of college football players make it to the NFL in general. Making it to the NFL is an extraordinary feat of strength, speed, and agility. These athletes are incredibly gifted with raw power and speed. With modern nutrition and training programs, the players are hit harder than at any other time in history, and why the injuries are so destructive. The equipment is better and rule changes have softened the game to try and protect the players but the average NFL career is only 3 years. There used to be a physics example that goes like this: if a 240lb Linebacker that runs the hundred in 11 sec hits a 200lb running back who runs the hundred in 10 secs the impact creates enough force to move a 30 ton object 1 inch. The other analogy is everytime a running back gets hit head on it is the equivalent of a 35 MPH car crash.
I worked with a guy who was invited to try out for the Pittsburgh Steelers. He was the fastest guy in his school. When he got there, he said there were guys almost twice his size that were much faster than he was. He said it was a real eye opener as to what it takes to be an NFL player. No, he didn't make it. Not even close.
Only the best of the best of the best make it to the NFL 🏈🏈🏈
If the guy in that first clip was a soccer player , they would have held a funeral service for him right there on the " pitch ". When you get slammed by one of those blind side hits , everything goes black for a couple of seconds . You open your eyes and start taking inventory to see if anything is broken , snot is smeared all over your face , and everything looks strange until you realize that you are looking out of the ear hole in your helmet. The sound when you get hit in the helmet is like a firecracker going off in your ear .
There were some good pops on here, but I’ve seen some hits where I’m pretty sure I saw the person’s soul briefly start to leave their body.
The biggest his I’ve ever seen is Pat Surtain Sr at Southern Miss vs Houston in the late 90s. I seriously don’t know how the kid from Houston survived it
32 NFL teams. The draft will go 32 choices for 7 rounds. There are ~133 D1 teams and 777 total colleges with a football team. There can be 85 scholarship players andmany other partial or nonscholarship players. NFL teams have 53. If not drafted, players can get signed in free agency or walk-on. Most drafted to the NFL come from top 10 teams.
You need to watch one of the best college rivalries!! Alabama and Auburn. the Iron Bowl History.
the physicality in football whether it be college or the nfl is the reason their seasons are MUCH shorter than other sports.
The average college football hit for a running back is a 25 mph car crash
There's about 880 college football teams, with 50 - 100 players on each; figure 25% of them Seniors and "draft eligible," so around 16,500 players each year. The NFL drafts 257 players each year. Of those, over 15% won't even make the team and only 20% will go on to be considered "good" or "great" players.
The guys you are watching, 95% of them, have been playing some version of football since they were 5 years old. They have hit and been hit a 1,000 times, it’s an expected part of the game. Here’s a crazy thing that happens, we get addicted to the hitting, ask any of them they will tell you the hitting is what they miss when they stop playing
Every year, they have a draft where the NFL picks players from college to join their team. Hundreds of players a year. Most don't play past College though.
@ADAM_COUSER You want to know about American football?
About 250ish college players go on to the NFL but only a select few end up starting or having a decent career
Every year the NFL holds a draft where 255 players from College are drafted to the pros. Within 4 years most will have retired as they wont be good enough.
1:03 is called a hospital pass
NFL draft is held every year. They pick the best of the best from college.
They draft A little over 220 players every year from college 7 rounds 32 teams so 224 picks but not all make the team and every team picks up undrafted free agents from college for summer camp which is tryouts for the 53 man roster so 224 picks and around 90-150 undrafted free agents and they all have to fight to make the 53 man roster
No matter how hard you get hit, you are told to pop back up and walk it off.
According to Google, under 2% of college players go on to play in the NFL. It's a select few. There are only 32 teams in the NFL, and at least 224 players are drafted each year. About 80,000 athletes play college football.
Some hits aren't legal, like helmet-to-helmet tackles, pulling on the facemask or horse collar, hitting a defenseless player. Those are mainly for safety. But they train for this stuff, so yes, they get hurt sometimes, but not as much as you might think. (This is not counting CTE in the future for these players!)
Adam you haven't lived till you go to a tailgate
Just remember one thing these students still have to attend classes and maintain passing grades to be eligible to play.
As football player ice baths became my best friend
See these were the nicer of the hard hits. And when we watch these games live we cheer when our team lands a hard hit. Now we (majority of us) don’t hope the players are injured (unless they were shitty/cheered when they injured one of our or something of the sort) and we clap when a person that was slow or unable to get off the field does as we are glad they are alive and for the most part okay or at least hope so. Kind of a clap for giving so much to the game.
Getting hit and hitting someone hurts every time,no matter what
You get plenty of bumps and bruises playing but the gear mostly protects you
sore? No injury? a mere mosquito bite man.!
The numbers I've always heard (not sure how accurate, but close) are, 1% of High School players play College Football and 1% of College players play Pro.
Look up the hit from Zach Dumas of OSU vs Auburn
About 1% will make it to the NFL, or at least get drafted. When I played in college we always understood that football is not a contact sport but a collision sport. There is also a big difference in playing with pain in most sports and in football you are often playing with injury.
If you through the ball just to get rid of it, you risk losing the ball to the other team via an interception.
They tickle for a second
There’s a NFL draft every year with over 250+ players going to the nfl
You should react to the Penn state whiteout game entrance
1 of every 100 high school football players makes it to college football, and 1 of every 100 college football players makes it to the pro football level.
weirdly enough, the hits you didn't see coming are the ones that hurt the least.
We know this, We see this. We Give No Fuck
You should react to greatest lacrosse hits
0:46 1:49 3:38 7:19 sko buffs!!!