Touchdown celebration

Touchdown celebration

Touchdown celebrations are unusual and often humorous acts that American football players may do after scoring a touchdown.

NFL football

Taunting and extreme celebration are both offenses in the NFL; as a result, gaudy displays are often frowned upon. If the league views the act as highly offensive, large fines and even suspensions can be issued. In 2006 the NFL, in an effort to cut down on celebrations, amended its rules to include an automatic 15 yard penalty against any player who leaves his feet or uses a prop. [wayback|http://www.nfl.com/news/story/9345607] . An exception is made for players doing a Lambeau Leap

NCAA football

College football, governed by the NCAA also penalizes excessive celebrations with a 15 yard penalty. NCAA Football Rule 9-2, Article 1(a)(1)(d) prohibits "Any delayed, excessive, prolonged or choreographed act bywhich a player (or players) attempts to focus attention upon himself (or themselves)"; in addition, Rule 9-2, Article 1(a)(2) asserts that "After a score or any other play, the player in possession immediately must return the ball to an official or leave it near the dead-ball spot." [http://www.ncaapublications.com/Uploads/PDF/Football_Rulesadc982b5-03fb-4e27-828c-c2d26b95e6c1.pdf 2008 NCAA® FOOTBALL RULES AND INTERPRETATIONS] , National Collegiate Athletic Association, Page 112, Accessed August 4, 2008.] Additionally, if a player's actions is considered "unsportsmanlike conduct" the result is dead-ball foul; a "flagrant unsportsmanlike conduct" foul requires player ejection. If a player’s nonfootball-related act (e.g. taunting or cursing) causes an opponent to physically retaliate, it is considered fighting and both players are ejected. [http://www1.ncaa.org/eprise/main/playingrules/football/2005/NCAANewsletter2007.pdf Unsportsmanlike vs. Personal Fouls] , 2007 NCAA Football Guide, Page 3, Accessed August 4, 2008.]

Arena Football

The rules for celebrations in the AFL are the same as the NFL; no props are allowed. However, choreographed or group dances are often seen after a score.

CFL football

The CFL is much more lenient than the NFL when it comes to touchdown dances. It often has very small, if any, penalties handed out to players who excessively celebrate.

CFL end zone celebrations often include more than one player, often a whole wide receiving corps of 4-6 players. The dances may not include much dancing at all, but instead a quick comical sketch. Recent dances include five Calgary Stampeders receivers celebrating a touchdown against the rival Saskatchewan Roughriders by holding out their hands and each pretending the football was a champagne bottle, popping the cork, pouring drinks for all and then stumbling around as if drunk. Their latestwhen end-zone routine was a simulated bobsleigh run: receiver Jeremaine Copeland sat down and wrapped his legs around the goal-line pylon, the rest of the receiving corps tucked in behind him, and the players swayed together in a pretend trip down a bobsleigh track. A very creative sketch by the same team was the four person stationary bicycle, which all players played a role for the bicycle.huh

Edmonton Eskimos punt returner Henry "Gizmo" Williams had many punt return touchdowns over his CFL career. He celebrated each one by doing a backflip in the end zone.

The Winnipeg Blue Bombers have a celebration whereby players form a circle, toss a football in the air in the middle of the circle and then fall directly backwards in unison when the ball lands on the ground as if a hand grenade has exploded.

ome memorable celebrations

* The "touchdown spike": New York Giants wide receiver Homer Jones is credited as the first player to throw the ball into the field at his feet after scoring a touchdown. He first did this move in 1965, calling it a "spike", and it is said to be the origin of post-touchdown celebrations. [cite news
authorlink =
author = Bill Pennington
coauthors =
title = Giants' Wide Receivers May End Long Drought
url = http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9403E6DA143DF933A0575AC0A9679C8B63
work = The New York Times
publisher =
pages =
page =
date = September 30, 2001
accessdate = 2008-02-03
quote =
]

*The 1980s Washington Redskins "The Fun Bunch": For years, players like Billy "White Shoes" Johnson demonstrated in the end zone after scoring a touchdown. The 1984 Washington Redskins raised the bar on celebrations by performing a group high-five after scoring. The NFL had made previous attempts to curb celebrations but, after the 1984 Fun Bunch, they changed the rules and "excessive celebration" was disallowed. This is one of the few offensive squads that have managed to acquire a nickname. [cite web
url = http://www.ffbookmarks.com/photo_gallery_of_great_teams.htm#The_Fun_Bunch
title = The Fun Bunch
accessdate = 2008-02-03
]

*In his rookie season of 1988, Bengals running back Ickey Woods gained media attention with a touchdown dance that became known as the "Ickey Shuffle". He had plenty of opportunities to do this, as he set a rookie record with 15 touchdowns in the regular season and added 3 more in the playoffs en route to Super Bowl XXIII.

*Arguably the most famous NCAA celebration was Desmond Howard's end-zone move after returning a punt for a touchdown against Ohio State in 1991. In his since-copied celebration, Howard mimicked the pose of the figure on the Heisman Trophy. Howard won that same honor later that year.

*Since 1993, Green Bay Packers players have done the "Lambeau Leap", in which Packer players jump into the bleachers (and into the arms of Packer fans) at Lambeau Field after a score. Cornerback LeRoy Butler started the tradition after returning a fumble for a touchdown against the Los Angeles Raiders on December 26, 1993.

* During the 1998 NFC championship season Jamal Anderson and other members of the Atlanta Falcons did the Dirty Bird dance after touchdowns. This dance consisted of gyrating like a chicken.

* During their 2000 playoff run, the St. Louis Rams offense would circle up in the end zone and crouch down and weave from side to side after touchdowns in a performance eventually dubbed "The Bob and Weave". However, after the dance became a more regular occurrence, the NFL declared it, and all celebrations involving multiple players, illegal and began to hand out fines for them.

* Receiver Randy Moss, then with the Minnesota Vikings, was fined $10,000 after a short touchdown dance that ended with him pretending to pull down his pants and moon the Green Bay crowd in a 2004 playoff game. Moss claimed he did it because the Green Bay crowd often moons the bus of the opposing team when it pulls into Lambeau Field.

* New Orleans Saints wide receiver Joe Horn performed a highly publicized touchdown dance after he scored a touchdown against the New York Giants in the 2003 season. Horn spiked the ball after scoring the touchdown and then went to the upright, where he pulled a hidden cell phone out of its padding which he then used to call his kids. He was fined $30,000 for his actions.

* While Terrell Owens was playing for the San Francisco 49ers, he twice ran out to the midfield star on the Dallas Cowboys' field to celebrate touchdowns against them during the 2000 season. Both times the Cowboys fans loudly booed him, as an opposing player celebrating on the Star is considered an extreme "faux pas". He was suspended one game by head coach Steve Mariucci for his actions. In an interesting turn of events, Owens later went on to play for the Cowboys.

* During the 2002 season, Owens had two memorable touchdown celebrations. After a score in a Monday Night Football contest against the Seattle Seahawks, Owens pulled a sharpie out of his sock, signed the game ball which he then gave to his financial adviser who was sitting in a seat close to the end zone. After scoring a touchdown in a December contest with the Green Bay Packers, Owens celebrated with a pair of pom-poms borrowed from a 49ers cheerleader.

* In 2004, playing for the Philadelphia Eagles in a game against the Ravens, Owens mocked the dance of linebacker Ray Lewis. Also while playing for the Eagles T.O. would move his arms up and down like an eagle. In 2006, playing for the Cowboys, he was penalized for sleeping at the end zone after the touchdown against the Washington Redskins.

* Joey Galloway shows his biceps after most touchdowns that he scores.

* Cincinnati Bengals wide receiver Chad Ocho Cinco had a number of original celebrations in the 2005 season. After a touchdown early in the year against the Chicago Bears, he performed his version of the "river dance". In one game against the Indianapolis Colts, after scoring a touchdown Ocho Cinco knelt down on one knee and pretended to propose to a Bengals cheerleader, who accepted the mock gesture. After he had been fined several weeks in a row for excessive celebrations, Ocho Cinco celebrated his next touchdown by holding up a sign that read "DEAR NFL, PLEASE DON'T FINE ME AGAIN!!!" (and was subsequently fined by the NFL). Other celebrations included performing CPR on the football, and picking up a pylon in the end zone and using it to 'putt' the football into an imaginary golf hole then pumping his fist in a loose imitation of Tiger Woods, for which he was fined $5,000. Ocho Cinco is also known for doing an Irish jig, and even went so far as to do the Chicken Dance in an '06 game. In 2006 before a game he wore a nameplate that said "Ocho Cinco" and was fined by the NFL (as his last name was still Johnson at the time). On opening day 2007, he wore a jacket that read "Future HOF 20??". The next week, in Cleveland, he jumped into the Dawg Pound after a touchdown (and had beer poured on him by the fans in attendance). On November 25th, 2007 against the Titans, he pushed a cameraman aside and pretended to film the players, which drew a 15-yard penalty for using a prop (in this case the TV camera) during touchdown celebrations.

* Like Ocho Cinco, Steve Smith of the Carolina Panthers was known for his touchdown celebrations (Smith and Ocho Cinco were teammates in junior college). Some of his more memorable celebrations included treating the football like a baby on multiple occasions, going so far as to change the football's "diaper", wiping it down, and rocking it to sleep. He also posed like a supermodel in the end zone, made a "snow angel", and on one occasion against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, used the football as a sword and made swashbuckling motions, mocking the Bucs' mascot.

* Animals of all different sorts can lend their names to touchdown dances. New England Patriots wide receiver Kelley Washington is known for his distinctive touchdown celebration dubbed "The Squirrel" (which originated with his former team the Cincinnati Bengals). Former Detroit Lions and Kansas City Chiefs wide receiver Johnnie Morton liked to celebrate with "The Worm." And during his tenure with the San Francisco 49ers, defensive back Merton Hanks became famous for his unique "Funky Chicken" dance after scoring on interception returns.

* Sometimes touchdown celebrations borrow from other sports. Wide receiver Alvin Harper liked to slam dunk the football over the goalpost crossbar after scoring a touchdown. Chiefs tight end Tony Gonzalez has also adopted that as his trademark (probably because he played basketball in college). In 2006, the New York Giants defensive players celebrated by mimicking a turnaround jump shot as a reference to the Jim Jones song "We Fly High". Running back Harvey Williams often celebrated his touchdowns by pretending to swing a baseball bat and hit a home run.

*Rams (former Chiefs) KR Dante Hall, nicknamed "the X-Factor", makes an 'X' out of his forearms after a touchdown.

*Chiefs running back mocked this gesture in a December 2006 game.

* In the 2007 NFC Championship game New Orleans Saints running back Reggie Bush, after making a 85 yard touchdown, did a three yard front flip and "The Roosevelt" in the end zone. He later received a $5,000 fine for taunting the Bears' Brian Urlacher while running towards the end zone.

* New York Giants running back Brandon Jacobs, in a game against the Chicago Bears in 2006, stuck the ball under his shirt to mimic being pregnant. He received a 15-yard penalty and a $10,000 fine from the NFL. He later claimed he did that it because his pregnant wife was in the stands.

* New York Jets running back LaMont Jordan, in a game against the Houston Texans in 2003, pretended the football was a chainsaw and after pulling an imaginary cord to start the chainsaw, pretended to cut down the goalpost at Houston's Reliant Stadium.

* During a preseason game against the 49ers, Raiders wide receiver Johnnie Lee Higgins, after scoring on a 97 yard punt return, did a roundoff and a backflip. Higgins was not fined.Fact|date=May 2008

It has been argued that celebration penalties have affected the outcomes of games. The September 6, 2008 game between Washington and BYU saw the Washington quarterback, Jake Locker, score a touchdown, putting Washington within one point with two seconds to go. Upon entering the endzone, however, Locker threw the ball high in the air, for which his team was penalized, the referee applying NCAA Rule 9-2, Article 1(a)(2), which asserts that "after a score or any other play, the player in possession immediately must return the ball to an official or leave it near the dead-ball spot," paragraph (c) of which expressly forbids "throwing the ball high into the air." BYU blocked the ensuing 38-yard extra point attempt and won the game (having otherwise statistically outplayed Washington in the balance of the game).cite web|url=http://ap.google.com/article/ALeqM5jr-eVcKyHLGeGClZOdCcx93XWNRgD931HK5G0|title=BYU holds back Washington on last-second PAT block|last=Booth|first=Tim|date=2008-09-06|publisher=The Associated Press|accessdate=2008-09-08]

References

External links

* [http://www.deadspin.com/sports/nfl/why-do-we-consider-the-nfl-fun-again-163412.php Why Do We Consider The NFL Fun Again?]
* [http://www.kidzworld.com/site/p1564.htm Best Touchdown Dances and Celebrations]
* [http://www.udallasnews.com/media/storage/paper743/news/2005/12/07/Sports/Nfl-EndZone.Dances-1122844.shtml?norewrite200609241733&sourcedomain=www.udallasnews.com NFL End-Zone Dances]


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