đŹđ§ BRITISH Rugby Fan Reaction To The HARDEST Most BRUTAL NFL Hits EVER - Whats Tougher NFL Or Rugby?
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- Äas pĆidĂĄn 22. 10. 2020
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đŹđ§ BRITISH Guy Reacts To The Hardest Most Brutal NFL Hits Ever - Is NFL Tougher Than Rugby?
Hi everyone, Iâm Kabir and welcome to Kabir Considers! In this video I'm going to react to the hardest NFL hits ever. As a lifelong rugby fan, whenever people argue that American football is tougher than rugby, I resist. Am I right or wrong?
#AmericanFootballHits #RugbyVsNFL #AmericanFootballOrRugby
You can watch the original video here:
âą Biggest Football Hits ...
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What should I react to next?
You like fighting?
@@dylanlawrence4858 Yep, big boxing and MMA fan
@@vincentahsoon637 Cheers bro, I'll check it out
@@kabirconsiders you should do some knock out reactions. Some guys you haven't seen before maybe
@@dylanlawrence4858 cheers for the idea, i'll do one tommorow!
Watching British people react to NFL hits for the first time is the best. Every one Iâve seen, they all think Rugby is gonna be more brutal, and then the first NFL hit comes, and it all changesđ
Its because the nfl guys tackle like torpedos! no wrapping arms whatsoever lol
They do mostly arm tackle. Just with a lot of those torpedoes mixed in haha.
@@ndepas1 the NFL damn sure isn't mostly arm tackles...the physics of the sport alone wouldn't allow that to be successful if that's what it mostly was
@@kabirconsiders these are just the extra big hits. Proper form tackle is identical to a rugby tackle
That first hit of the video, when Kam Chancellor runs over that fool, is epic as Hell. He was one of the hardest hitting Safties in the game. He'd cause nightmares just lining up. I'd imagine getting hit by a 6'4", 245 pound human ballistic missile would cause an out-of-body experience.
Here is the difference between rugby and football:
Rugby is a contact sport.
Football is an IMPACT sport.
Yep, a lot of people have shared a similar opinion
It's actually a collision sport
LOL I just watched this video for the first time and I just commented the same thing. I think everybody has seen somebody else comment it.
The pads are literally so they don't die
to be honest judging by some of the hits in this video you might have a point lol
@@kabirconsiders no back in the day they didn't have pads and have die
@@kabirconsiders I think there was a game in the 1910s where 3 players have died in a single game and they had to mandate padding after that.
@@sachik7607 Good God.. thats awful!
I remember when I used to play in middle/highschool they used to hype us up till we were crazy enough to go after someone with malicious intent. I once cracked a guys collarbone in half and I was so proud of myself at the time.
The official reason for adding padding was to, AND I QUOTE,
"Reduce on-field fatalities"
Crazy that people actually died playing football
Not eliminate them altogether but to reduce, just enough for flavor
They were going to ban the sport in the 1920's, because they were losing too many healthy young men to serious injury and death..So they made a deal with the Government..instead of banning it, they would wear pads and helmets..
meanwhile AFL and Rugby have 0 padding jumping on backs is encouraged also.
@@resiefan3258 It not even comparable, but nice try !
The NFL is bigger, faster,quicker,stronger, and MUCH more complex..
[This video had 6 million views, but the quality was bad..they just put up a improved one ] There isn't hits like this in Rugby..Rugby is a very simple sport..it's the same thing over and over.. AFL is tougher than Rugby, but nothing compares to the NFL..
czcams.com/video/2TgS1zKAClQ/video.html
Him *cringing*
Americans âhit him harderâ
lmao
TRUE
lol, this is definitely true. We were watching the college game live (it was in here, around 4:40) where Jadeveon Clowney smashed the Georgia quarterback and then just picked the ball up like "This is my ball now". We were all screaming our heads off b/c it was magnificent. It was all over the sports channels for the rest of the season.
@@ladyshar42 Those of us that Love Football come to the understanding, that part of what excites us about it, is the fundamental human need for "Struggle & Battle" when we watch these games, the Women get excited, the Men's Testosterone level's are thru the roof & "BOOM"!!! There's nothing like "GLADIATORS ON GRASS"!!
đŻ
To be honest, this video is not just NFL there's little league, high school, college, and pro.
Yeah, I'll confess I didn't recognise the difference before now lol
No worries. Great reaction.
@@Duane_Grabert Cheers mate!
@Leslie Gravier lol in that case I'll add Gronkowski to the list!
The point was about the video was to show You FOOTBALL is more physical
They say that rugby is a âhooligansâ game played by gentlemenâ. I would describe American football as a âsoldiersâ game played by beserkersâ.
lol well put
No lies detected #boom
The most accurate description I've heard is a violent game of chess.
Ive played both, honestly the hardest ive ever been hit was playing football. I caught the pass took one step then there was a white flash. I woke up with people asking if i was ok. I rocked.
The worst hits are definitely the ones that receivers donât see coming and when theyâre off balance. Catch a pass and stumble one step then get hit at full speed by some monster, thatâs the really punishing ones that put people out and make them see stars.
Being on the other end is painful too. I laid a hit on a punt return. Next thing I know is opening my eyes and seeing sky and clouds with the wind knocked out of me. Laying on the ground I asked "did I get him", and my teammate's reaction was "DID YOU GET HIM?!!" We both went flying on impact. We were shaken up but ok. Good times.
hahahahha I know you're not lying because you mentioned the "white flash"! Somebody needs to tell us why when you get hit super hard in football you just see a white flash then everything goes black for a little while. Crazy
Before watching: Rugby is tougher because NFL wears pads.
During video: is that even legal?!?
Yeah, you got your answer.
lmao, fair point!
If you hit someone like that in any other setting you would do jail time.
But to be fair you saw the hardest of the hardest hits collected over many seasons but even normal hits can still cause lasting damage. It's not uncommon for retired players to have opioid issues. Everything hurts all the time.
People who havenât watched football are always amazed at how brutal the sport can be. For those of us who grew up watching football itâs just another hit.
And something to think about..the vast majority of those in the video RECEIVING the hits got right back up after.
"I'd be surprised if there haven't been any internal bleeding injuries"
Enter: Andrew Luck
After doing some Googling, there have been quite a few cases of internal bleeding. Brutal!
"During the second game of the 2001 season, Bledsoe was hit by New York Jets linebacker Mo Lewis and suffered a sheared blood vessel in his chest, which almost resulted in his death."
@@averagejoe845 oh man thats horrible :(
@@averagejoe845 and the legend of Tom Brady begins
Kabir Considers a high school qb in new jersey lacerated his spleen in the middle of a game and died in a helicopter on the way to the hospital after collapsing on the sideline
Rugby is tough but there's nothing like the impact of the NFL.
At least not since real jousting and wartime cavalry charges ended.
When it comes to people versus people, I agree 100%. But when you add bull riding to the list, yeah, there is one other thing like the impact of the NFL.
@@MrVvulf Yeah the military realized that combined artillery fire and modern sniper rifles and ya know MACHINE GUNS really made that ineffective during World War One.
With pads and helmet đ€Łđ€Łđ€Łđ€Ł do men wear tampons too in the USA đ€Łđ€Łđ€Łđ€Ł
@@resiefan3258 Rugby is boring and simple...The same thing over and over and over and over..America took Rugby and made it fun,exciting, and much rougher... Euro men are famous for being feminine and dainty.
Something else to consider - In the NFL, players often have play in extreme weather. Incredibly hot and humid conditions earlier in the year, extreme cold and snow later in the year.
The sport was very nearly banned by a US president about 100 years ago due to many fatalities on the field (pre the pro game) this is when pads and helmets first came in.
I cant imagine how violent the game must have been back then!
"I've recently started following the Giants", Im so sorry.
lmao hoping they turn it around this century
As a lifelong Giants fan, I feel this.. lol! The fact that we could have made this year was ridiculous
As long as the New England Buccaneers keep winning
Jalen Hall; đđ Got that right!! Smh lol
Just remember one thing.....Cowboys are NOT America's Team.
Fun fact: the pads and helmets were introduced to help reduce fatalities on the field.
As an American rugby player, I always had the preconception that football was safer due to the pads but the wrapping rule in rugby makes it so much immensely safer. You get more scrapes and bruises but in football you get straight brain damage. Love the reaction! Cheers mate!
Yep, that was the opinion I had before I started watching so much NFL footage. I think the helmet and pads gives the players license to really try and fuck up the opposing player. This makes for great entertainment for the viewer, but for the players... yikes lol
@@kabirconsiders when you out pads on you turn yourself into a weapon. There was a sportscience episode that said a typical NFL linebackers hits with the force of a car going 30-35 mph.i don't know about anyone else but I think it's gonna hurt. I was a lineman. Hitting every play. We loved to hit.
@@raveneff Huge hits are a big part of the game for sure, I think its one of the things fans love the most!
A recent study determined that playing a full game of pro football subjects each player to the equivalent of 68 car crashes.
Thats unbelievable!
@@kabirconsiders Yeah, I don't believe it either.
Good reaction clip. I grew up playing American football all my life, up through college. I especially enjoy these reaction clips, where rugby players react to the NFL, because I lived in Europe for a year, and Iâd get ripped by rugby players because american football was perceived as soft because of the pads. I remember watching the 2007 Rugby World Cup with my friends in Europe, and though it was certainly entertaining to watch, and I definitely gained a newfound respect for Rugby, I maintained that American football is more violent than Rugby. Itâs difficult to explain to someone who hasnât watched/played football, but the padding and the stoppages, donât serve necessarily as protection for the players. But instead, they ensure the players have the ability to attack one another at top speeds, without any reservations whatsoever.
Yeah, I think after these few weeks of watching American football content, the hits can be far worse than in rugby.
There's absolutely nothing soft about American football, it's hilarious how little so many people outside of the US understand.
The guys in the NFL are freaking huge. If they didn't wear pads they would die. Lol
lol apparently deaths used to happen way more often
The NFL is very much a contact sport, but what I love most is that itâs a chess match between the two teams
Yes thereâs time in-between plays, but the coaches use that time to call plays. The coaches are like chess players, and the players are very violent pieces of that chess match
Thats a great analogy. I think I'll try and start watching entire games as opposed to just highlights. Its just difficult due to the time difference!
@@kabirconsiders You can watch full games on CZcams. It is indeed like chess. Itâs also like battle. You are trying to advance your line forward into enemy territory. That time is used to assess the other team and draw up a plan based on who youâre playing. Itâs extremely tactical and strategic.
@@BP-or2iu Yeah, it seems that American football is more strategic and cerebral than I initially thought
@@kabirconsiders ,
Yes, gridironâs depth comes from the fact that team positions / groups are highly specialized and structured (and then, in-game, being constantly tweaked and altered play-by-play by multiple coaches and coordinators). The players are not out there âdoing their own thing.â That would be disastrous. They must execute their individual assignment accurately and in conjunction with others doing the same, even though specific plays are constantly changing from the coordinators trying to outwit each other.
More than any other sport that I can think of, players must be extremely coachable and studious and can not rely on raw talent, but all must âbe where theyâre *_suppose to be,â_* winning their individual battle, while ten other guys are doing the same.
@@kabirconsiders In normal years without a pandemic going on the NFL usually hosts a few games at Wembley.
I played American football most of my life (not professional) - we are taught to inflict pain on the adversary - it's war.
Damn.. I really need to see a live game to see what its all about
Yup, hit em in da mouf every &@$(!in' play! That's what you're taught. Make em scared to be on the field with you so they're not thinking about what it takes to win the game
@@mattd3978 Especially those receivers comin across the middle - hit em so hard they aren't concentrating on the ball the next time.
@@JeffreyMarlowTravelAgent yup, that's my house. You don't belong here, get out and don't come back
lol my highschool coach used to always ask "Are you hurt or are you injured?"
If you are hurt you can get your ass back in there and play, if you are injured go cry to your mother, and get the hell off the field.
As an American football player and rugby player, I found it difficult to always wrap up a player in rugby because I just wanted to come at them full speed with my shoulder and bury them six feet under
lmao, a lot of players feel those same emotions, that's why you see so many yellows!
Derrick Henry, Titans running back, ran for a 94 yard touchdown against the Texans in week 6 this year. He was clocked at 21.6mph.... and he is by far *not* the fastest this year alone. But he is moving at that speed while being 6'3" (1.9m) tall and 250lb/113.3kg/a touch under 18 stone.
Those are some crazy speed stats for such a big lad
That's crazy. I remember that highlight. I knew he was big but I didn't know he was that fast. I'm a Vikings fan and Adrian Peterson was brutal but Henry is 30 lbs heavier SMH...
He is 6'4" and 235.
@@punkem733 wikipedia says 6'3 238. Found another site that says he is 6'2 3/8th 247 lbs. It says his closest physical comparison is Von Miller. Adrian Peterson is 6'1 217.
@@kevinathans4191 I was going by the measurements provided by the NFL in the last game he played.
What you really need to consider is a small NFL player is a huge human being. And a world class sprinter. Hitting people at full speed.
Yes, the amount of force they can generate due to their muscle mass and speed is not for the faint hearted
@@kabirconsiders In high school I was 5'10" 190 and was the smallest person on my team lol
Yes sir. I played Dline in Highschool and i was 6'5 290
@@sirwadsontoast5928 6'4 270ish myself, at the time, loved being able to just smash people out there.
Even though the games look similar, they aren't the same game. The NFL and Collegiate football is far more violent than Rugby. No doubt Rugby players are tough as nails and great athletes. But their game is far more fluid and more a test of strength and endurance than American football. The NFL is about extreme and sudden violence and even the players who finish the game uninjured need several days of therapy and physio to recover from a game.
I've watched another guy react to this video and a comment on his section described it perfectly.
"Rugby is more of a contact sport whereas Football is more of a collision sport"
LOL I have some friends from New Zealand and Australia that I hung out with while I lived in Asia. Of course they were big rugby fans. At first they wanted to say that American football players were wimpy for wearing all of that padding until I enlightened them to the fact that a lot of that padding is made to protect the hittee as much as the hitter. Shoulder pads are made to give somewhat to lessen the impact from tackles while protecting the gent doing the tackling. I showed them some clips like this then we watched some games at a pub and it was amazing how much their attitudes changed. I also came to love rugby very much as a result of hanging around with them. Great reaction.
I was watching a college football game and the boy caught the ball in the in zone then he had broke his ankle while catch the ball. Yah American football is crazy.
I've said this before in another reaction vid, Rugby fans and players use to call us p*ssies for wearing protection.
And I keeping saying, the helmets and shoulder pads aren't for our protection. They're our weapons. Lol
lol, fair point!
It's just total naivety and cluelessness for people to make assumptions like that. Sad that people make judgments about things knowing next to NOTHING about the sport.
@@tommyrex6648 Unfortunately people make judgements about things they lack knowledge in all the time, this is a common trait of being human
@@kabirconsiders It's just a shame more people cant simply enjoy both for what they are, similar but at the same time radically different sports that are fun to watch.
@@dalehammers4425 Absolutely. I think the comparisons are inevitable just because both involve athletes that are big and strong.
In the entire modern history of the NFL (post WWII) there has only been one on-field fatality.
In the closing minutes of the 1971 Thanksgiving Day game between the Detroit Lions and the Chicago Bears, Lions wide receiver Chuck Hughes suffered a fatal heart attack while jogging back to the huddle as the result of an undiagnosed heart condition. He was 28 years old.
Thats tragic regarding Hughes, may he rest in peace
You guys across the pond are so sweet. All the British people who are recording reaction videos are all so complimentary of the us. Thank you so much for your kindness.
Thanks Carolyn âșïžâ€ïž
Personally I feel like nfl is more brutal just cause every hit is like a mini car crash and rugby most the time itâs a little less brutal
the hits in the nfl are more dangerous for sure
Yup.
They did the math. A full on NFL tackle has approximately the same kinetic energy transfer as a 25mph (40kph) car crash.
@@TheLastGarou Thats a crazy amount of impact!
"y'all are soft because y'all have pads."
10 seconds into the video: "how do they not die???"
đfair point
It should be noted that the NFL had a Europe branch and the UK had some teams for example, the broadswords from Glasgow.
Sooo who's gonna tell him every middle school team in America has hits like this in practice, this goes down in 7th grade.
Thats crazy lol, I hope none of them get life-changing injuries at that age..
@@kabirconsiders Unfortunately, I've met a man or two who have suffered blown out knees, major concussions, torn Achilles ligaments, and more in 7th grade.
@@kabirconsiders That hit at 5:40 is from a six or seven year old boy.
@@kabirconsiders I knew a guy in high school who broke a vertebra and was VERY lucky to have no spinal cord damage. But it's the concussions where the real story lies (and I'm sure another commenter has already explained).
@@gmchris3752 yeah my cousin got 5 consecutive concussions in high school and decided it wasnât worth it. Canât blame him.
A couple lost their spleens. A few paralyzed too
Jeez Louise... thats horrible
Excellent reaction,I could see your pain with those hits. I appreciate that you go into these videos with an open mind. Keep it up.
Thanks so much for the kind words mate :)
NFL is bigger, faster, stronger,tougher and much more complex..It not even comparable !
Man I love rugby and NFL a lot and itâs mad to see the difference in the way they tackle like no wrapping and just going shoulder straight inđ
NFL tackles and hits are seem to be more reckless lol, literally zero arms half the time
@@kabirconsiders the reason a lot of those hits don't involve wrapping up is because your watching a hardest hits highlight vid most tackles are your standard wrap up tackles but the hardest ones are when they are running 20+mph and blindside people with their shoulder as you saw in the vid.
@@hbsavage0387 Fair point, cheers mate
To fully grasp how HARD these dudes hit: a lot of these guys are about 6 feet tall, 220+ pounds on AVERAGE (if my conversions are remembered properly, that's about 1.86m and something like 99.8kg for my metric friends) EXTREME level athletes turning themselves into kinetic missiles aimed at people. That's why NFL fans react the way they do when Rugby fans say that Rigby is tougher lol its not that Rugby ISN'T tough, its just that the NFL is a game of Rugby where people are LITERALLY generating low speed CAR CRASH-levels of energy when hitting each other with different rules
A player at 220 is the small guy on the field. Most lineman are 300+ and can run 5 sec 40's.
This is what most people do not grasp, people compare NFL players to British Football or even Rugby player when the average size of an NFL player is nearly 250 pounds which is about 30 pounds more than the average NBA player with Linemen being an average of 312 pounds. The average Rugby player is 199 pounds according to what I found and the average English Footballer being about 170 pounds.
Rugby is more side to side with a small space to tackle, while in the NFL is more up & downhill tackles with huge space with 5 yards+ that's make more of collisions.
My Son played little league, he never did play J V in Jr. High School,but went right into Varsity. He did play High School J V for a while until he left school and got his GED. He hated all the gang activity in his school.
Gang activity in schools needs to be eliminated, its a complete waste of time
In highschool my coach told us that you have to sacrifice your body with reckless abandon. That's football for ya.
When I played in high school my coach asked if I wanted to be the nail or the hammer. I played defense from that day forward.
lol smart decision!
Well, I think NFL wins the brutality prize. I love football, Texas girl here and football is king in texas. And may I say, I love British accents but your speech is absolutely beautiful.
After considering the NFL footage I've seen I think I'll agree that the hits you see in the NFL just arent seen in other sports. The amount of force is crazy! And thank you so much for the kind words :)
One of my favorite football videos of all time!! I get why rules have changed but I love the old school football for sure!!!!
The physicality of the game is off the chain!
The starting Order for the Bush Clash at Daytona on February 9th has just happen. It is on NASCAR CZcams channel.
Watch the 2020 season dak Prescott breaking his leg. His bone came out of his leg. He was the starting cowboys quarterback for the NFL
Holy shit, just seen it. Brutal!
Anybody tell him the majority of those hits werenât by prosđ
Best comment I ever saw on one of these videos is rugby is a contact sport and American football is an impact sport.
You feel the concussions watching that.
I was a big kid compared to most other kids, my friends dad who was the middle school football coach talked me into to playing on his team. At my first football practice I was told to get into a mindset to hurt the other players to take them off the field, hit them as hard as I could and to target players not expecting it for better results. That was the last time I played football and I am glad I decided it was. Reports show even High Schoolers suffer from brain damage, id expect the same is true with middle schoolers its just not been tested as far as I am aware. If I had kept playing Id likely have played in High School also with the mindset of hurting other players running into them at full force which would not been good for me in the long run.
Sounds like football really is a dog eat dog sport!
As a nose guard the contact I received was pretty weak. But the hit I got to deliver was fun. Hit the center as soon as he moves his hands. Then chase down the quarterback. Nothing like hearing your opponent bone break right next to your ears. Still sending shivers down my spine 20 years later
Damn, sounds crazy intense!
I always preferred to try and throw the Center AT the QB, was always a pleasant look of surprise on their face when you hit them with their own lineman.
Bob Mathis played for the Indianapolis colts. His goal when tackling a person was not to knock the person out. His goal when tackling someone was to knock himself out
No better feeling than knocking a man out and standing over him.
You do know that Football players started having to wear pads DUE to the deaths that occurred in one season? And we play that hard w/o pads until we can't anymore. lol
I didn't know that. You learn something new everyday!
3 players died in ONE game in like 1909.
@@punkem733 Thats crazy, you'd think they would have stopped after the first guy!
@@kabirconsiders Back in those days, they were crazy. Boxing matches would go on sometimes for like 50 rounds, people's eyes would pop out of their sockets from getting hit so much, they would try to pop eyes back in to continue the fighting.
@@punkem733 Holy smokes, I wonder what those fighters would think of the current generation lol
Its not a break in foot ball. Consider the plays as reps like a workout.
Each play you setup in a neutral and fair way for both teams and you clash at the same time in an effort to move the ball forward. And instead of an endurance type of strength you see 10 seconds of literal explosive strength in the form of speed, power and torque based on the position.
In the usa millions of people play football competitively growing up. The sample size of tallent moving into the NFL is cut from millions dow to 50ish players on a team.
Meaning thag the only people who make it are absolut genetic freaks, hyper motivated athletes and hyper competitive personalities.
The explosiveness play by play is brutal all the time. Mics picking up sound play by play only pick up involintary groans of air being forced out of the body by contact.
The average career length is around 3 years in the NFL due to the level of performance your body needs to be able to maintain coupled with the high chance on injury you can and will be replaced.
Only freaks of nature make it long term in the NFL.
It and hocky are the only glorious sports left in the mainstream world of sports.
The most impressive aspect of what you've said is the average career length being three years. That's is truly unbelievable. I've never played American football before and can only use rugby as a reference, and a typical top player in the Premiership will last around 10 years.
I think that the cardio required to play in rugby is higher, but the explosiveness in the NFL is higher. Physical power I think is close, due to rugby forwards being extremely powerful dudes. Second rows, flankers and props are required to put in 60 mins of extreme physicality.
That said, I do think that American football players are at higher risk of injury. This video was a huge eye opener
@@kabirconsiders To be fair, the 3 year average career is more due to washing out by performance than it is injury, though there can always be a connection. Every position can be critical at times, and you NEED to have a game roster with effective backups, so the guy that isn't getting it done and isn't improving is likely not signing another contract. You're literally looking at the best of the best... and most of the 3 year guys simply aren't the best.
The exact number of NFL players is 53Ă32=1696.
@@Duane_Grabert plus another 300 or so from the practice squads.
@Carl Brittain. I was just saying active roster, but you're absolutely right. Not to mention Injured Reserve.
Was a study finding that some football hits are the equivalent of being in a car crash hitting a wall at 35 mph roughly between 45-50 kmph. The helmet and pads may protect certain pody parts but the you take a helmet to the ribs and it'll break ribs quite easily. I know from personal experience of breaking ribs and getting concussions from hits to the head. Its was fun to go out their and be able to lite people up, but knowing that it goes both ways and the same things can and will happen to you eventually.
That's human nature for you, we love to dish out the punishment but hate receiving it lol
And we celebrate after VICIOUS HIT!
He follows the New York Giants? Oh bless your soul. The division they were in had zero teams with a winning record. They are definitely not the team you wanna be following right now lol
I only played in high school and I had a shoulder injury, two broken thumbs, two broken noses, concussion, and shin splints. There are a lot of players in the nfl who are basically cyborgs they have had so many surgeries and some players play in the nfl for 20 years. In total some have played for 32 years if you include school.
Man, that's nuts. I guess the physicality is what makes the game so appealing to watch, but its almost like when you head on to the field it's like you're going to battle!
Lol you either played backer or offensive line.
I made it through high school and 2 years of college ball. Injuries are part of the game.
Dislocated shoulder, permanent nerve damage in right arm, broken ankle, dislocated finger, and 2 concussions.
@@justinchiles9393 Damn dude. Do you think there is anything that can be done to further improve player safety?
Yeah. Donât play lol
I was an outside linebacker.
I played football from age 8 to 18. (Too small to play college level ball) In that time, I got knocked out three times and had to have knee surgery at 16. I will say that I have actually thought about NOT injuring an opposing player. My senior year (grade 12) we were in our game of the year. An absolute must win. We were up 7 to 6 late in the 4th quarter. They were going for a 2 point conversion. I played cornerback and the DC had called a CB blitz. I was only 5'6" and weighed 150lbs at the time. I knew my football days ended after the season. The opposing QB already had an offer to play for a major D1 university. I came absolutely free off the end. I had a clear shot at his knees. I purposefully didn't take that shot. Back then knee injuries were possible career enders. I couldn't bring myself to do that to him. I hit him at hip level and he shook me off. He ended up scoring the conversion and they won 8 to 7. he did indeed end going on to play for a major SEC power. (at receiver) I do not regret my decision.
I think I would have handled that situation in a similar way. You're a good man Frank!
Enjoy watching your videos. Your reactions and feelings are on full display in each of your videos.
Thanks Mark :)
You should react to some of the hall of famers, Ray Lewis specifically, one of the greatest defensive players of all time
My plans is to react to one legend a week, trying not to run out of good football stuff to react to so spreading it out lol
Thereâs an AFL Here Comes The Boom compilation about there
I'll have a look
I have never played football, but know a lot of people who have. And their comments almost mat6ch mine. The safety gear that they wear, is awesome. Two People running full speed at each other, and they can both walk away with no damage to other one. BUT. They always say BUT,. loudly. 9 times out of 10, they both walk away. 1 time out of 10, 1 or both can do the exact same thing and we have 1 or more players SEVERELY injured. American Football is no joke. The rules are getting safer and safer thou. Most of the hits that you saw in this video, they never happen anymore. That was when Football was a DANGEROUS JOB to have. Nice Post.
Yea some of these are college and it's crazy how hard these college guys go and don't get paid, a lot don't go on to prof football but they just love the game.
alot of the nfl players hit with the force of a car crash and higher.
From the movie "That's My Boy": "Ya hit 'em hard, ya hit 'em low and ya hit 'em fast. And if they get up, you hit 'em again."
Yeah there's even a thing in the NFL where players "put a hit" on specific players meaning "mess him up"/"take him out"...but I think kind of rib breaking gameplay is being phased out with new safety restrictions and penalties so they play safer.
Damn that sounds brutal!
Now you know. You're trained to use the pads as weapons, not protection.
Its common for Their brains to be absolutely messed up after the nfl
Yeah, I've heard about CTE affecting quite a few players after they retire :(
@@kabirconsiders In College they're trying to do away with helmet to helmet shots and the NFL is trying to get rid of hitting the head with the helmet or shoulder.
@@kjsalomonsen9299 It's a complicated problem for the NFL and college governing bodies. I'm sure everybody wants the players to be as safe as possible, but I'm sure a lot of people wouldn't wnt to see the game becoming "soft".
@@kabirconsiders you are spot on
Just going back to the beginning of Kabirâs videos and appreciating the journey â€
Man, I LOVED playing football with my friends until I was FORTY years old. Woke up on football Sundays hyped and thinking âwho am I gonna destroy today?â Injury NEVER even crossed my mind. Until I woke up one day & I thought âwhat if I get hurt today?â Permanently put away my cleats that instant. If thereâs fear, ya donât belong on the field. But, man, I had FUN.
So Iâll tell you, rugby is an aggressive and physical sport. I played football for 8 years, and from my first game when I was 12 I was taught to play with âreckless abandonâ. Basically I donât care about my own well being out here so how do you think I feel about knocking you out.
Played strong safety, job description. Separate man from ball
Interesting. It does seem that a few positions within American football are almost entirely based around being destructive.. there are roles within rugby that include that, but its quite a small part of their overall responsibilities on the pitch. American football does seem a bit more brutal for sure!
And thats why they wear pads.
Half of those hits are penalties now.
Actually alot of them are still legal you just have execute it perfectly
Well..the head butts and mask grabs are, at least...as for the rest...meh...
American football is a contact sport. Rugby is listed differently. We live for this stuff. They are our heroes today, since gladiators, go home now, as rockstar's. Rugby has more lateral motion. And tackles are grappling because of proximity of players. Open field full burst running isn't managed or defended the same. Different concepts completely, the two sports.
Tbh all our life we are told to wrap up and tackle and most of the time we do that but when u see and chance to de-cleat someone u have to take the Risk is if they have balance and can bounce off your hit your ass is in trouble with coach but itâs worth the risk cuz a huge hit can change momentum
Tom Brady got his start because the quarterback before him (Drew Bledsoe) got blood vessels in his chest detached on a hit, he bled into his chest cavity and almost died.
Good God, that sounds terrifying. I hope he made a full recovery?
@@kabirconsiders He came back and played a few years but was never the same. The guy who replaced him is considered the greatest player in the history of the league though
@@timd4780 I doubt the Patriots were too devastated lol
@@timd4780 Greatest Quarterback.
@@timd4780 No he's not. Jerry rice/and or Lawrence taylor still are considered the best ever. One on Offense, the other on D. Like Lawrence Taylor changed how football offenses worked. Brady never did that.
Also thereâs not really any âbreaksâ in football other than a timeout or flag
What about the time between plays?
@@kabirconsiders thereâs 40 seconds from when the ball carrier is down, seems like a lot but itâs really not that much time, by the time a team gets the next personnel in for the next play, huddles and gets the play from the coach, gets to the line of scrimmage and gets set. Not to mention the quarterback a lot of times will send a player in motion across the formation to read the defensive coverage and point out the Mike linebacker. After that you are down to 5-15 seconds on the clock. There are delay of game penalties if you donât snap the ball before the play clock runs out.
@@brando2642 Thanks for the information mate. As someone who isn't that familiar with American football, it seems that the players are allowed "breaks" after literally every play, I wasn't aware that they are still expected to perform certain tasks during the time between plays
Uhhhh, its called halftime.
@@kabirconsiders you have to understand more strategy and planning goes into every single play of NFL than an entire season of rugby. Every play every playee surveys the field analyzes his opponents formation and communicates and adjust with his team. All based on the fact that one guy lined up 2 yards differently from some play 3 weeks ago against another team. Look up the "do your job" videos about the Patriots coaching strategies. Read about the invention of the West Coast offense, learn about how elite quarterbacks like Brady and Manning make adjustments at the line. It's the smartest sport in the world
At 5:38 look up Darrell Reid hit on Chris Henry. I remember watching it live on TV, in all of my years of watching football that was one of the hardest hits I've ever seen. It sounded loud as hell on television (like a car crash), I could imagine how it sounded in the stadium. A guy that big and running that fast just crashing into Henry like the Juggernaut, I was shocked how he was able to hold on to the ball and pop back up.
I just watched it, hoooooly smokes its like the unstoppable force met the immovable object lol
In American football at an early age they literally teach us to take heads off and take your opponents out of the game
Think about this.
The NFL players get breaks BUT they are carrying an extra 6 kgs of weight with them in pads.
The players are gigantic even by US standards.
The average lineman is 6-foot-5, 312 pounds or 195.58 cm and 142 kgs plus equipment. They lift weights at what would be considered a pro weightlifter levels.
I worked at a hotel the NFL teams used when they came to Green Bay to play.
Only 4 linemen and a trainer could ride on an elevator/lift at a time. Any more and it was past the weight limit.
If you have the constitution for it watch NFL Career Ending Injuries (Warning)
czcams.com/video/kgeRocaJb0I/video.html
None of the hits that took these guys out of the game were anywhere near as hard as the hits in this video.
Holy cow, the padding and protective gear weighs 6kg's?? I would have guessed 3kg's tops.
Linemen sound pretty similar to second rows/props in rugby. From what I've seen, NFL players are probably more explosive in short bursts, where as rugby players are required to be able to play a sustained 40+ mins at near sprint pace.. The two sports are so tough to compare..
I will say, I have never seen the level of physicality seen in this video on a rugby field. The offending player would probably be banned for life!
@@kabirconsiders At the combine this year, an Arizona State (college) prospect by the name of Michael Turk set a record, doing 25 reps of 225lb bench press. The kicker? He's the punter. *HE* is a kicker, not offense/defense, but special teams. All he does is kick. Well, and throw weights around, apparently.
Byron Jones at the 2015 combine did a broad jump that "accidentally" set the world record at 12 feet, 3 inches (3.83 meters).
These men really are the most elite of a staggering pool of talent the collegiate football system provides.
@@mfree80286 Yep the numbers I saw watching the 2020 combine were mind-boggling tbh
I know very little to almost nothing about Rugby. As an American, I love watching these hits reactions; its comedy to me. What I don't often see in them, though, is the realization that some American children (5 and 6 year-olds) play this game, including girls.
Do the kids play the game full contact?
American football is a game strategy, coordination, and execution like a game of chess. Thatâs why itâs a play by play game and another reason why itâs so popular in America aside from the hard hitting brutality. The stops between plays is the allotted time to plan the next attack, which in turn saves energy for the next annihilation. This takes a kind of generalship within coaching to create or call a play within a game. Watching football is fun to watch, but one must understand the game to really appreciate the game for what it is. American football is truly a battle of wits above all other aspects of the game.
Yep, many people have likened the sport to a human chess game of sorts
There was a player named Tony Romo who suffered a broken rib and punctured lung during a game against San Francisco in 2012. He stayed in the game till the end
That highlight reel was edited perfectly.
When I was younger, we played like this, but with no helmet or pads. Sometimes you got busted up and would be out of the game, other times you'd be able to get up and play again. Sometimes you went to the hospital for something that got broken or knocked out of place. Also, when the NFL just started, they only wore leather helmets.
anyone who thinks the pads make the hits hurt less has never been hit by a 250 lbs man who runs a 4.5 forty yard dash and can hit you at full speed because hes wearing pads..
a quarterback had a ruptured appendix for a entire game after 5 minutes into the first quarter
they changed the rules the last few years.Like targeting,and helmet to helmet due to the realization of how damaging concussions are over the years for a player.
I'm not surprised to be honest, I imagine the amount of players retiring with CTE and other brain issues was starting to cause a lot of concern
Dude u need too show that too ur family, that's y I love the NFL
Even at the high school level, the hits get brutal. Its a 60 minute car crash.
Ouch!
In American football, the thought process isn't, "Am I going to hurt this man", the thought is always, "I'm going to hurt this man".
lol its a dog eat dog world
@@kabirconsiders When I played American football in highschool, we called the kickoff team The Headhunters. Fun times.
The most dangerous plays in the NFL are either kickoff and punt returns...
Contrary to what you might think getting hit like that feels surprisingly good. Itâs crazy what adrenaline can do to people lol.
Dude congrats! Your channel has blown up! I remember 850 subs but now you've grown so much!
Thanks so much bro :) onwards and upwards hopefully!
Had to come back and revisit the car football reactions. Much love to you and yours!!