You would be surprised at the pride of Buffalo fans, making it to four Super Bowls in a row is itself a record.
Buffalo and Miami play twice a year and Buffalo was 0 for the 1970’s against Miami. (Then in the mid 80’s to 90’s it pretty much swung the other way. Not a clean run but enough to ease the pain and watch Don Schula retire.)
During my college days our proud Purdue Boilermaker football team lost to Minnesota 59-56. It was the most points scored in a game by the losing team. I think the record was broken a year or two later.
Don’t be too sure of that. Three years ago, we Royals fans thought we’d have a run at the record. We had a fluke winning season, costing us the record, and then resumed the “streak.”
I guess anything is possible, but if there’s one thing in this wide world that I have faith in, it’s this: the only thing that’s capable of stopping the Pirates’ losing ways is global warming… well, or maybe a really big comet.
I actually opened the thread to post this one. I remember poor George well. A better pitcher than you might think if all you knew about him was this one factoid, but it will undoubtedly end up being what he is most famous for.
The new record for Division I-A college football for most points by the losing team is 63 by Rice last year against San Jose State. They lost 70-63. In regulation no less.
63 is also the most any losing team has scored in an overtime game. That was Kentucky against Arkansas in 2003. That took 7 overtimes. Arkansas won 71-63.
A record which is perhaps not dubious, but at least curious is that the Tampa Bay Buccaneers have never successfully returned a kickoff for a touchdown ( 454 games ).
Not even close if you count NCAA records. Northwestern lost 34 straight games between 1979-82 in D I-A, Prairie View lost 80 straight spanning nearly a decade between 1989-98 in D I-AA. More recently my Illini lost 18 straight between Oct 12th, 1996 and Sept 12th, 1998, 23 months where Tampa’s lasted about 14 months.
And, of course, the Georgia Tech coach would one day lend his name to a trophy handed out each year to the best offensive skill position player from a big-name university.
Of course. You’re an American. Who cares what funny sports they play in other countries. Go USA! :rolleyes:
The explanation above is broadly correct: six successive “pitches” all hit over the fence. It’s extremely unusual because in cricket you can, and commonly do, score runs with a ball hit along the ground, which is obviously safer as it can’t be caught. A ball so hit to the boundary scores “only” four runs, though you normally figure you’re scoring quickly enough if you’re regularly hitting fours.
Six sixes in a row is one of those “perfect” feats seldom actually seen; not, AFAIK, as uncommon as a 17-dart 1001 but rarer than a 147 break in snooker.
Ravi Shastri is the only other batsman to have hit all six balls of a six-ball over for 6 (off Tilak Raj, Bombay vs Baroda, 1984-5).
And there was some Kiwi nonsense where 75 were scored from an over from a bloke called Vance lasting 22 balls, but the bowling was deliberately shite (see Cricinfo).
I cannot find any statistic for 8-ball overs but obviously the maximum possible would have been 48.
Many of the examples cited above seem to come from “minor” American baseball and football games. Nobody, in the UK at least, gives a monkey’s what happens in anything other than First Class in cricket and whatever the soccer equivalent is.
Almost true. There are a few oddities worth a nod of the head, at least. The record cricket score by a single batsman (in a school match in the 1800s) was 628, comfortably beating Brian Lara’s first-class record of 501, but instances of “rabbit” sides being bowled out for 0 are common enough that the Guinness Book of Records doesn’t bother to cite any.
Hampshire probably hold some kind of record for being bowled out for 15 (in response to Warwickshire’s 200-odd, some time in the 1920s) and going on to win the game.
Football? Meh. Ask someone who cares. But in Rugby Union, I believe I’m right in saying Japan are the only international side to have both posted three-figure scores and have three figures scored against them. They’re the lions of Pacific Rim Asian rugby, but are unfortunately just good enough to merit the occasional game with the big boys.