The funniest would be watching any of us try and return a serve from a professional tennis player.
Yeah. even though I played college ball, when I was 58 I took swings in the Pirates batting cage and whiffed a ton even knowing what was coming and at only 70mph. Did foul off a few, but was way late.I'm 57 years old. I would not come anywhere close to any of these and any of you in my age bracket who says you would? You're a liar.
Keep in mind, I don't play tennis at all, but last year, I tried return a serve from our top sixth grader and I. Got. Smoked.The funniest would be watching any of us try and return a serve from a professional tennis player.
I tried to list them from "easiest" to most difficult:
- Make a legal tackle on an nfl running back - Basically, let him plow you into a month long intensive care stay.
- Score more than 3 points in a D1 bball game - Get lucky with a 3 and maybe hit a FT? Or cherry pick at half court and sneak a layup 2 + a couple FT's??
- Shoot +10 or less in a major golf tourney - What % of golfer are single digit handicaps? They have a shot. The 95% of the rest of us do not.
- Score a goal in pro hockey - This assumes you have at least above average skating ability.
- Score a goal in pro soccer - Considering pro games are 0-0, 1-0, 1-1 with the best in the world? Not likely at all.
- Get a non-bunt hit in the majors - Unless you played at a minor league level, the rest of us may not foul a ball off in 1,000 tries.
- Return a serve in Tennis - 140-145 mph? Not a chance. This is definitely the hardest of the lot.
I've been trying to play that for 30 years and it still doesn't sound quite right.I'm confident I could lay down a bunt, play the intro to "Heart of the Sunrise," and wear a large pumpkin on my head for far longer than is necessary.
Good summary. Especially the golf thing. That's spot on. They'd triple bogey the first hole and then fall apart.That's a pretty good run at the list.
The golf numbers are way off, 95% of scratch golfers couldn't shoot +10. Just watch the three majors where "average joe" amateurs have a chance- PGA, Open Championship and US Open. Hardly any of them can go +10 and that's after winning qualifying tournaments just to enter. No way a scratch golfer walks on to the first tee and does that.
The tennis one intrigues me because you just have to return it in play. Stand 25" beyond the end line and take a whack at it? Even just a quarter swing might be enough to get one over. Question to me is how many chances to do you get? Is this a full on 3 set men's match where the opponent has to serve 3-4 times a set and get four serves in each game? Chances go up. I say all this because my immediate thought was tennis sounds like the sucker bet an amateur thinks they could do, when in reality they have no shot.
The bottom three choices are like asking what's the highest value of infinity.
Are we talking a 1-on-1 open field tackle against and NFL RB? I’m not sure anyone on this board would even graze Jersey in that scenario. MAYBE if you were a weakside defender and cleaned it up after he was stopped at the line.I tried to list them from "easiest" to most difficult:
- Make a legal tackle on an nfl running back - Basically, let him plow you into a month long intensive care stay.
Even if three guys stood him up for me to take my shot, I'd still break my clavicle.Are we talking a 1-on-1 open field tackle against and NFL RB? I’m not sure anyone on this board would even graze Jersey in that scenario. MAYBE if you were a weakside defender and cleaned it up after he was stopped at the line.
I was thinking this as well. First, I would need the guy to basically run into me trying to elude other players and second, if that did happen, it would not end well for me regardless of whether or not I got the tackle.Especially tackling an NFL RB. Even if I could catch and touch the guy, I'd end up in the hospital
Back in the day, my wife was a decent tennis player and whenever she wanted to score a point, she would just hit right to me essentially jamming me up. Now, the easy thing to do would be for me to take a step back, but she knew that if a ball was coming towards me quickly, my mind was wired too stay in the box and try to foul it off.That's a pretty good run at the list.
The golf numbers are way off, 95% of scratch golfers couldn't shoot +10. Just watch the three majors where "average joe" amateurs have a chance- PGA, Open Championship and US Open. Hardly any of them can go +10 and that's after winning qualifying tournaments just to enter. No way a scratch golfer walks on to the first tee and does that.
The tennis one intrigues me because you just have to return it in play. Stand 25" beyond the end line and take a whack at it? Even just a quarter swing might be enough to get one over. Question to me is how many chances to do you get? Is this a full on 3 set men's match where the opponent has to serve 3-4 times a set and get four serves in each game? Chances go up. I say all this because my immediate thought was tennis sounds like the sucker bet an amateur thinks they could do, when in reality they have no shot.
The bottom three choices are like asking what's the highest value of infinity.
Are we talking a 1-on-1 open field tackle against and NFL RB? I’m not sure anyone on this board would even graze Jersey in that scenario. MAYBE if you were a weakside defender and cleaned it up after he was stopped at the line.
Even if three guys stood him up for me to take my shot, I'd still break my clavicle.
I was thinking this as well. First, I would need the guy to basically run into me trying to elude other players and second, if that did happen, it would not end well for me regardless of whether or not I got the tackle.
Are we talking a 1-on-1 open field tackle against and NFL RB? I’m not sure anyone on this board would even graze Jersey in that scenario. MAYBE if you were a weakside defender and cleaned it up after he was stopped at the line.
Footwork and anticipation is everything in tennis. I played a ton in my 20s and while I had a piss poor volley game, I could spin a 95mph serve in the box quite often (at least that's what the speed tracker machine at the US Open said), giving me a chance to score points against much better players. But the end of my interest in tennis was in my mid-30s when I played this chunky girl I worked with. I thought I was doing her a favor agreeing to play as there was nothing the least bit athletic looking about her. But I could not get a shot past her. It was like she knew where every ball was going before I hit it. And it was extremely humiliating. Lost in straight sets, even dropping one set 6-0. Basically quit after that.Back in the day, my wife was a decent tennis player and whenever she wanted to score a point, she would just hit right to me essentially jamming me up. Now, the easy thing to do would be for me to take a step back, but she knew that if a ball was coming towards me quickly, my mind was wired too stay in the box and try to foul it off.
The funniest would be watching any of us try and return a serve from a professional tennis player.