The Funniest Football Moments Ranked

The Funniest Football Moments Ranked

Fans were jumping on flaming tables and ripping jerseys like Hulk Hogan, while players were messing up in the most spectacular of ways. Robbie Savage wins his own slot for being at the centre of so many funny moments throughout his career. The quarterfinal matchup at Virginia was for the right to go to the NIT Final Four at Madison Square Garden. It wasn’t a pretty game, but Jalen Adaway and Dom Welch drilled big shots down the stretch. Jaren Holmes and Kyle Lofton hit some key free throws, and Osun Osunniyi capped things off with a massive block at the buzzer. The Bonnies won and booked their tickets to MSG.
Naturally, his clothes proceeded to catch fire, too. This is why goalkeepers should stick to shot-stopping. All at once this goalkeeper tragically panics, as he seems to suddenly realise thousands of people are watching. Perhaps it worked—perhaps the Brazilian players did have trouble keeping their composure during the following few minutes.



However, before all that came his unforgettable reaction to receiving a red card. If his radical response is not enough, factor in the referee's comic tumble and Nigel Winterburn's  infamous flinch. Sadly for Khalid Askri, his side eventually lost the shootout by a single goal.
As impossible as that sounds, the answer is probably yes. We really shouldn’t get in the habit of reanimating dead people for our amusement. And to those 8,000 people in Iowa that night, Harry Caray sounded even better than Tupac’s ghost at Coachella. His career-high 52 points and his 73.3 percent shooting from the field are, somehow,  afterthoughts. What matters more is the indelible stamp Morant put on the most jaw-dropping night of his life—one of the most entertaining individual performances any NBA player has ever had. This all started when Carlsen lost to Niemann at the Sinquefield Cup in September.
We wanna give them the biggest plonker of the year. This is the incredible power that Eden Hazard hides in his ample arse cheeks. A quick shake and opposition players fly off like a plastic bag in the wind.

Here are the 100 funniest moments in Premier League history, ranked...in some kind of order. Moan about modern football all you want, but the vast array of cameras capturing every moment of our game has made some moments immortal. And one can hardly miss this crazy viral video where a Saudi Arabia fan took his own front door off its hinges to celebrate the winning goal against Argentina in the Group C clash. Another shows a Saudi Arabia fan switching to Poland after their captain Robert Lewandowski scored a goal. And one just cannot miss out on Antonio Rudiger’s hilarious run during their match with Japan.
OK, so the haircuts were awful, the shorts were short, and the pitches were….well, farmer’s fields. Those early World Cup finals https://www.youtube.com/shorts/Ne85PrB2c-Y really were a bit special weren’t they? What with girders and politics and the entire competition being hosted within one city.

In the next tweet, they shared a video of Cristian Romero comically walking up and congratulating Emiliano Martínez with a kick instead of a hug or a pat on his back for his late save against Australia. The Japan national football team took my challenge personally. “How dare this nitwit underestimate us?? ” That had to be what Ritsu Doan was thinking when he tied things up 1-1. Ao Tanaka’s follow-up goal was one I’ll remember forever. This wasn’t just an unlikely comeback against a top-tier opponent; it was a devastating reminder to never air out hypothetical bets on the internet.
When the Pelicans went to shoot two free throws, up three, with less than two seconds remaining in their November 2 matchup with Los Angeles, the Lakers were staring down the prospect of a 1-6 start. With Boston trailing by one point and 17 seconds remaining on the clock, Tatum took the defensive assignment against Kevin Durant. He contested KD’s 3-point attempt at the shot clock buzzer and bothered the future Hall of Famer enough to produce a miss.
Except Redknapp, who never fully recovered from the humiliation of seeing someone do that to one of his “shots”. It is 1995, and an international friendly at Wembley between England & Colombia. The game is a pretty drab affair; the commentators are in danger of dozing off as Terry Venables’ side attempts to mould into their new fangled “Christmas Tree” formation. Alan Shearer is going through a dry spell in front of goal, Paul Ince is shaking his fist but not really getting much done, and David Seaman is contemplating growing a ponytail at the other end. Producing a razor blade he had stashed in his gloves pre-match, Rojas cut himself on the  forehead, and fell to the floor with blood streaming from the wound.