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husheduphistory · 1 year
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Forgotten for Football: The Horrific Thanksgiving Day Disaster of 1900
Since the late 1800s Thanksgiving and football have gone hand in hand with the fevered fanbase and anticipation staying strong over the centuries. The first college football game was played on Thanksgiving Day 1876 as part of the Intercollegiate Football Association Championship, and it did not take long for fans to choose their sides. By the time 1900 appeared on calendar pages the University of California Berkeley and Stanford University were already fierce rivals, playing against each other every Thanksgiving since 1892 in a clash that became affectionately known as simply “The Big Game.” People always had high expectations for the game, but no one walking into the event ever expected to encounter tragedy.  
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The Stanford University football team circa 1900. Image via Wikimedia Commons.
No one can say the warning signs were not there. In the early days of the game there were no stadiums and it was played in any large field or industrial area that could fit them. The last few Big Game events between University of California Berkeley and Stanford were played at Recreation Field in San Francisco and in 1897 grandstands were built to accommodate the crowds. These seats were not meant to last, they were built quickly to fit 10,000 people with meager roofs that were only put there to keep spectators dry and definitely not to be used for extra seating. But, that is exactly what happened in 1897. While over 15,000 people scrambled and squeezed into the stands to see the game many others looked for alternative means to watch. Contractor J.C. Weir saw the danger and tried to warn those in charge, but his words were ignored while waves of young boys climbed up the stands and crowded the roofs to set their eyes on the teams below. They almost made it through the entire game, but in the final moments the roofs began to buckle, and then they broke. Hundreds of children came crashing down onto those seated below them, intermingled with the wood and metal that was never meant to hold their weight. Some people were knocked unconscious, some were left bleeding but remarkably only one 10-year-old-boy was injured enough to seek medical care and everyone else was, for the most part, left unscathed. One witness to the collapse remarked that the fact that no one was killed or left with permanent injuries was “miraculous”, and indeed it was, but not enough for anyone to learn from it. 
The collapse of the grandstands was the last thing on the minds of the attendees of the Big Game taking place on November 29th 1900. The games were always exciting and even though the tradition was fairly new, by 1900 the crowds were massive and the tempers hot despite the teams only having a history of nine Big Game encounters. Of the nine games, Stanford had won seven despite their football team only being founded the same year as their first game and tens of thousands of people couldn’t wait to see if University of California Berkeley would come roaring back. Like previous years, the game was to take place in San Francisco, and once again no one could have anticipated the sheer size of the crowd. It had rained earlier that morning, but when the weather passed the doors of the surrounding neighborhoods and the incoming train cars were swinging open leading to 19,000 people swarming Recreation Field by 10:30am. A ticket for the game cost one dollar, an amount that wasn’t an easy price for many younger fans that desperately wanted to watch the biggest event of their year. So, just as they did several years earlier, the fans got inventive. Some climbed water towers, others tried to dig under fences to get in, but there was one thing that seemed to be an obvious solution for those needing a bird's eye view of the Big Game. 
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Flyer for the Big Game on November 29th 1900. Image via Stanfordmag.org.
Across from Recreation Field was San Francisco and Pacific Glass Works, a brand new factory that was gearing up to open on December 3rd. Those putting up the makeshift grandstands remembered the collapse of 1897 and they told those in charge of the factory that they were required to do everything possible to prevent anyone from gathering on the roof. The Superintendent of the factory James Davis was in complete agreement with precautions being taken and he was given six tickets to the game for his compliance, but when the time came the workers that were stationed to prevent anyone from getting on the roof were simply overwhelmed. People dug under fences to get to the grounds, flung open the gates, and they poured in. According to one witness, “It was like trying to turn back the waves at the beach. The kids kept pouring through the fence anxious to see the kickoff." Factory workers who could sense the danger went into the streets, looking for police officers to help control the crowd and get the people off the roof but they could not find anyone who could assist. Soon between 500 and 1000 people were crammed onto the factory roof that was only built to withstand forty pounds per square inch. Even if someone wanted to escape it was impossible to move through the crowd to do so. They all gazed ahead, not paying any attention to the tell-tale signs around them signaling the danger they were all in.  
Twenty minutes into the game the crowds in the stands were electric. Their voices were roaring and the bands for Stanford and University of California Berkeley were booming, beating the thousands into a frenzy. The atmosphere on top of the glass works building was just as ecstatic, but in a matter of seconds it shifted to chaos. A portion of the roof of the building gave way and in a scene that was unfortunately familiar the fans began to fall. But, unlike the collapse of 1897 that had relatively minor injuries, this time the spectators fell into an absolute nightmare. 
This building was a glass factory, and although it was not due to officially begin production just yet, it was partially operational in preparation for the opening day. One thing that was up and functional was a furnace, filled with fires strong enough to melt glass and with an exterior temperature of approximately 500 degrees. Working in the factory that day were Ignace Jocz and Clarence Jeter, and they could undoubtedly hear the roars of the crowd before humanity started to unexpectedly rain down on them from above. The hole in the roof opened at the worst possible spot and between sixty and one hundred people fell forty-five feet into the factory with some of them landing directly on top of the glowing furnace.  
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Image of the roof of the factory just before the accident. Image via 30 Nov 1900, Fri The San Francisco Examiner Newspapers.com
It's impossible to imagine the scene and the sounds that filled the factory as they all hit the metal or, if they were lucky, the brick floor. Once they hit most broke enough bones to render them immobile and those that hit the furnace stuck to the sizzling top. To make things even worse the furnace was encased by binding rods surrounding the machine in what was essentially a cage, trapping anyone who fell in the spaces. Those who missed the cage were just as unlucky, some of the falling bodies struck fuel pipes on their way down, severing them and sending boiling oil through the air and dousing the already burning bodies that then exploded into flame. Adding to this already unimaginable tragedy was the fact that almost everyone who plummeted through the ceiling that day were children, some boys as young as nine years old, that were the most likely to not have the dollar to buy a ticket and the least amount of concern about climbing to the roof of a building to watch the game.  
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Illustration of the inside of the factory showing the furnace and binding rods. Image via 30 Nov 1900, Fri The San Francisco Examiner Newspapers.com.
Jocz, Clarence, and some other employees of the factory jumped into action doing what little could be done to attempt to save some of the victims, grabbing bodies and throwing them out of the way and using long metal hooks that were normally used to stir molten glass to hook people that landed on the furnace and drag them down. Watching the horrific scene from above were approximately twenty-seven people who also fell through the ceiling but somehow were able to cling to the rafters and the walls to avoid being roasted alive. One witness, young Thomas Curran, survived the ordeal by grasping a ceiling joist with his legs, forced to hang upside-down while chaos erupted under him. He later stated: “As I clung there, I saw the poor fellow who had been chatting with me strike the furnace. He curled up like a worm in that heat.” The sound of the bands and cheers of the game could still be heard filling the air. 
Incredibly, the crowds gathered to watch the Big Game were greatly unaware of the tragedy unfolding nearby. Spectators heard the crash but some believed it was simply a planned distraction by the opposing team, with one fan yelling “It’s a job!” Others believed it was just normal sounds coming from the industrial park and within moments the focus was back on the field. Those who did know that something was amiss were the residents of the surrounding towns and they quickly began to swarm the factory, screaming the names of their sons who had gone off that morning to enjoy a football game. The masses also ran to the morgue and toward the wagons being driven by the coroner, some filled with bodies burned and disfigured beyond recognition and others filled only with what remained such as socks, shoes, neck ties, and the contents of small pockets. Every possible vehicle was summoned to help, and a frantic search began for doctors that could be pulled away from their Thanksgiving meals to help the deeply wounded masses that lay on the factory floor in sheer agony while the smell of burning flesh filled the air. As the players from Stanford were marched out onto the street for an impromptu victory parade to the nearby Palace Hotel, other streets were filled with the screams and frenzy of the tragedy that seemed to have happened in another world from the game that happened only two blocks away. 
As the news spread that day as to what happened and the numbers began to rise the city was plunged into a deep state of sorrow. Hospitals became overwhelmed and the official count declared that thirteen people had died in the factory with eighty-six others critically wounded. As more recovered, others still died and soon the funerals began. On the following Sunday alone there were nine burials that had to take place back-to-back from 9am to 4pm.
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Newspaper story about the accident. Image via 30 Nov 1900, Fri The San Francisco Examiner Newspapers.com.
Amazingly, reactions to what happened remained as separated in the newspaper pages as they did on the streets the day of the tragedy. The cover of the New York Times talked about the horror of the deaths at the glass factory, but the Sports section beamed of the Stanford victory as if nothing else had happened that day, calling the game the “closest and most exciting game of football ever played by the elevens of the two California universities." No players or coaches commented on the unspeakable horror that unfolded within earshot of the game that day. The college publications from both Stanford and University of California Berkeley carried on as if it never even happened with the Stanford Daily writing a 1,500-word front-page story about the victory with no mention of the tragedy other than a casual mention of a potential rematch to raise money for the affected families that never ended up happening.  
Although the city of San Francisco felt the deaths deeply, it seemed they too wanted to move beyond it as quickly as possible. When a grand jury was assembled to determine who was at fault for the Big Game disaster it had an air about it that seemed like it was purely for appearances. The blame was placed on James Davis as the Superintendent of the San Francisco and Pacific Glass Works and then it shifted to the police for not assigning enough people to the game. Shockingly, with no one to blame and people wanting to simply move on, the blame shifted to the dead. Seven days after the tragedy, and with victims still succumbing to injuries, the jury declared that “[T]he deceased had no business being there...No one can be held responsible for their deaths other than themselves." No one fought them on this. In the minds of most, the story of the collapse was over. 
The newspapers and courts might have decided the case was closed, but for many what happened that day never went away. On December 4th 1900 young Fred Lilly died in the City and County Hospital after suffering for months from a fractured skull he sustained in the fall. He never fully regained steady consciousness but in moments of delirium he still acted as if he was watching and enjoying the football game that was playing in front of him before everything suddenly stopped. Three years after the roof collapse twenty-eight-year-old Thomas Pedler passed away after enduring spinal surgery, paralysis, and the amputation of both legs. His demise marked the twenty-third and last death resulting from the disaster, fifteen of which being children that died before their eighteenth birthday.  
To this day the tragedy, known now as the Thanksgiving Day Disaster or The Big Game, is the deadliest accident to ever happen during an American sporting event. Now the glassworks building is gone, replaced with a building belonging to the University of California. The gravestones are also gone and most of the final resting places of victims disappeared from memory and fell into ruin after San Francisco introduced regulations forbidding new burials, also in the year 1900. One small reminder of the incredible catastrophe can be found in the Holy Cross Catholic Cemetery just south of the city. Here lies a tiny stone cross that was meant to only be a temporary marker. It is inscribed with the name Cornelius McMahon, a twelve-year-old boy who died in the Thanksgiving Day Disaster and now remains as the only physical reminder of the deadliest day in American sports history. 
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Sources:
“The Big Game Disaster of 1900” by Sam Scott. Stanford Magazine November/December 2015.
“Big Game was marred by tragedy in 1900 contest” by Edvins Beitiks. November 17, 1997.
“The Thanksgiving Disaster that Most People Haven’t Heard About” by Marina Manoukian. November 19, 2022.
“Sudden Death: Boys Fell to Their Doom in S.F.'s Forgotten Disaster” by SR Weekly Staff. Aug 15, 2012.
“Thanksgiving Day Tragedy” ThePigskinDispatch.com
https://pigskindispatch.com/home/Football-Fun-Facts/Random-Football-Facts/Stadium-Disasters/Stanford-Vs-Cal-1900-Tragedy
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robknivz2312 · 2 years
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Warner Bros needs a W after a disastrous 2022. There's no telling how #TheFlash goes. But, this image? I'm just soaking it all in. #TheBigGame #SuperBowl #Batman (at The City of Long Branch, NJ) https://www.instagram.com/p/ColfcEvN-Ju/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
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longdogspottings · 2 years
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Alright. Here's the 126th Long Dog I have spotted on the episode called "The Decider" on Bluey. If anyone wants to have a look. https://instagram.com/p/CfICDpBBTxe/
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chefjohn50 · 8 months
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Get ready for the big game with this collection of fast food sauces, dips, and spreads...It's free, and Its Only Food
https://www.itsonlyfood.biz/blog/categories/fast-food-sauces
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shuckerpaddy · 3 years
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A Shucker can dream… #Challenge A-Game Shuckers…! August 13-15 #BringIt @tvoysterfest #ChallengeAccepted #PEI #OysterFest #CanadianShucking #Championships #BeenThereShuckedThat #TheBigGame #ShuckSlurpRepreat Let’s meet up in PEI! Get your #PEIPass DM for details! #Sustainable #Food #FoodMedia #Blogger #FoodTourism #CulinaryEducator @shtca.events @centennialcollege Posted @withregram • @tvoysterfest Update on the 2021 Tyne Valley Oyster Festival: As we get closer to the 2021 Rock the Boat Music Festival, we are continuing our work with the CPHO on our operational plans. We are fielding many questions around this festival, and we ask everyone for their continued patience! Hosting 2 large festivals in 2 weeks with Covid-19 policies is challenging. As noted before, the dates for this years TVOF are August 13-15th, and the festival will take place on the RTB Event Grounds. We can’t wait to host the 2022 festival inside the new rink! TICKETS -For those people who transferred their Full Festival VIP ticket (TVOF + RTB) from 2020, will receive a weekend pass to the 2021 Tyne Valley Oyster Festival. A separate ticket will be issued soon. -Weekend passes for the 2021 Tyne Valley Oyster Festival will be available soon. EVENTS -We are continuing conversations with CPHO in being able to host some of our most traditional events. We are pleased to say that the PEI Trivia Championship, PEI Oyster Grading Championship, The Canadian Oyster Shucking Championship, Pageant, Community Awards, and Family events will be taking place. -We are developing plans for our Community Parade to take place. However, as of right now, it will not be the same as previous years. Pre-registration for floats/entries will be available soon. -Fried Oyster / Scallop Suppers will not be taking place as normal this year, however we are looking at alternative methods for these delicious meals. -All other events of the festival are yet to be decided at this time and an announcement on those will be decided soon. Please continue to monitor our social media pages for announcements regarding the 2021 Tyne Valley Oyster Festival! (at Tyne Valley, Prince Edward Island) https://www.instagram.com/p/CRnX-MDrFaM/?utm_medium=tumblr
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waynelvslcy · 4 years
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Original Lucy scripts from 'Here's Lucy', 'Lucy Moves To NBC' and 'Life With Lucy'. (The 'Here's Lucy' script from "The Big Game" with OJ Simpson was writer Bob O'Brien's personal copy) #lucilleball #lucille #ojsimpson #sitcoms #classictelevision #scripts #writers #writer #thebiggame #mycollection #nbc #cbs https://www.instagram.com/p/B_kyJU3HZH3/?igshid=evczsu3g1wui
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maikaswimwear · 5 years
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Who will you be rooting for? #superbowl2020 #superbowl #supebowlLIV #TheBigGame #SuperBowlSunday https://www.instagram.com/p/B8E1M4AHe6G/?igshid=1hdh2wizij3l4
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imohitsoni · 5 years
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Super Bowl Sunday: The only time of the year people are excited about commercials. 
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Food & drinks @citykitchencafe 
@deadlinejunkiesla writers group
Homeboy @richardryan7 
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https://www.instagram.com/p/B8HXAGIBy8r/?igshid=1kzhlv3h7up3e
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mapecl-stories · 2 years
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The Big Game
Marcus was excited as he walked towards the sports field. Today was the big game against TSV Weiche Flensburg and he didn't yet know how the coach would set him up.
Maybe as a striker? Maybe as a midfielder? He definitely didn't want to be a goalkeeper, he would have to catch all the balls with pain. It was his first game, but maybe he's just on the bench anyway.
Arriving at the sports field, the other boys looked at them funny at first: "What's he supposed to do here, if he plays, we'll lose anyway?!" said Klaus. Another frowned and then headed for the dressing room. Marcus followed him and changed, then we went towards the square. "So, warm up!" said the trainer, but Marcus really didn't feel like it. "WARM UP OR YOU WON'T PLAY!" the trainer yelled at him. "Am I playing at all?", asked Marcus. "Let's see, I really want to know what you're capable of!" the coach replied and so Marcus went to the other players.
One ran from one half of the pitch to the other, the next stretched his calves and the goalkeeper kept letting balls be passed to him, which he then caught. "I don't have to go into the goal, that's for sure!" thought Marcus. He also started stretching his calves, which is why athletes who were present on the sports field, critically appraised: "Put your leg on the railing and bend forward!" one said to him. But Marcus was only 13 years old and the railing was much too high for him?! The athletes just laughed and then continued their exercises. Marcus made do with stretching and stretching and said: "it works too."
After a while, the coach called everyone together and announced the line-up. Marcus was assigned to the substitutes' bench and was disappointed: "You said I could play?"
he said to the coach, who replied: "wait and see". Marcus's club, the SG Flensburg lined up, the referee made the choice of seats, the opposing team was allowed to start. It only took 5 minutes before the ball came into the opponent's penalty area, Klaus took the ball as a striker from SC and sunk it in the opponent's goal. Of course, the athletes who had just warmed up were also very happy. Marcus continued to warm up and lost interest in the game. "I don't have that kind of feeling for the ball," he regretted.
"Marcus, come here!" said one. No sooner said than done and Marcus was passed a ball. He stopped this when Marcus put his foot on the ball and played it back. "He can't even stop the ball properly!" his opponent laughed and passed Marcus the next ball. This Marcus hit back with full force, whereupon the ball almost went onto the playing field. "Look, you can't stop the ball in play by stepping on it without control you shouldn't play him back either!" said the adult athlete who practiced with him. After a while Marcus got the hang of it and got the hang of it.
The coach whistled loudly, waved Marcus over and said: "Now it's your turn! You'll be in midfield for Sven.". In the meantime it was already 2:0 for SC Flensburg in the second half. Marcus ran onto the field, one of the opponents said: "Another one like that" and Marcus got the ball. "Come on, show us what you can do!" shouted the trainer. Of course, Marcus passed the ball immediately because he didn't know exactly what to do.
"Don't play back, go forward" his team-mate complained and made his way towards to goal himself... 3:0! After the goal, the teams gathered in their halves and the other team kicked off first. Jens took the ball from the TSV player and passed it to Marcus.
"Hurry up, we want to see something!" he said, Marcus made his way towards the gate. "Surrender, surrender!" shouted a player from TSV. At some point it became too colorful for Marcus and he pushed the ball to the opponent. He laughed: "he really gave me the ball!" "What are you doing?" said Klaus and the trainer shouted: "Come out of here you idiot!" But Marcus remained stubborn and did not leave the field. "I want a little more" he called and the coach couldn't believe it. "Don't just give him the ball, or we'll get one in too!" shouted the goalkeeper from behind, but Marcus didn't care. "It's getting boring here, leave the others alone!", he shouted and Klaus scored the 4:0 after taking the ball from an opposing player. "We want to win and not lose!" snapped Klaus Marcus.
"To zero? They cry themselves to sleep and never compete again?!" "That's what we want from you!" Klaus replied and went back to his position. After the next push from the opposing team, Marcus got the ball again. "Come on, is that going to happen? You'll never come out on the pitch again!" yelled the resigned coach and turned around. Marcus saw that football wasn't really his sport and called the coach to: "Give me something I can learn that I would enjoy!" "and what?" the trainer replied, Marcus shouted "Referee!". The coach said nothing at first and Sven scored the 5:0 in the 89th minute.
"Referee could work, make him the referee, he doesn't have a feel for the ball anyway."
The coach asked, "would you really do that Marcus?" and he replied "Yes, I would at least try". "We can't find any in the district league!" the referee murmured and called off the game.
All of the SG Flensbung met again after the game on the field and the trainer said: "You can referee, I will definitely never set you up again!". "Then I'll try refereeing, if that doesn't work I'll leave the club.", Marcus replied.
No sooner said than done, Marcus changed his sport clothings with the others and got his referee's license after a few weeks (but that's another story).
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viberevstudios · 3 years
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Discussion Topics: GEEK BROS approved video games, TV Shows and Movies! Trailers and TV spots from the Big Game, Netflix to remove Marvel shows March 1st, Chip ‘n Dale: Rescue Rangers Movie Trailer Reaction, Lightyear Official Trailer Reaction, Jurassic World Dominion Official Trailer Reaction, #BenderGate, Lord of the Rings gaming and movies rights for sale, Ray Stevenson joins Ahsoka series cast as Thrawn, Blade Runner live-action series in development by Amazon, Cyberpunk 2077 gets a new patch and its next-gen versions are out now, Bishop movie in development by Netflix, Microsoft reportedly plans to bring Activision/Blizzard games to the Switch, The Book of Boba Fett series finale review, Nintendo Direct February, 2022. All this and more on this week’s episode of the Keepin’ Up With The GEEK BROS podcast! TUNE IN on your favorite podcasting app or listen here - https://webegeekspc.com/keepin-up-with-the-geek-bros-podcast-the-149th/ #Ahsokaseries #Amazon #BenderGate #BladeRunner #ChipnDale #ChipnDaleRescueRangers #MovieTrailerReaction #Cyberpunk2077 #JurassicWorldDominion #TrailerReaction #LightyearOfficialTrailer #Lightyear #LordoftheRings #LordoftheRingsrights #Marvel #Netflix #RayStevenson #theBigGame #TheBookofBobaFett #VideoGames (at Vibe_Revelation Studio(s)) https://www.instagram.com/p/Cavtbv1udey/?utm_medium=tumblr
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Super Bowl Sunday and a Story for the ages
Super Bowl Sunday and a Story for the ages
  The Super Bowl The Super Bowl is the biggest game of the year, well for football anyway. Have you ever thought of it as being something spiritual? Sports, in general, point us to competition and competing for a prize. 1 Corinthians 9:24 says, “Do you not know that in a race all the runners run, but only one gets the prize? Run in such a way as to get the prize.” The Super Bowl is a competition…
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fajitatone · 3 years
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Rib rub ready!!! #thebiggame #Super Bowl #smokedmeat (at Black Diamond, Washington) https://www.instagram.com/p/CZ3N_eMrjmK/?utm_medium=tumblr
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djmixx649 · 3 years
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SUNDAY, SUNDAY, SUNDAY! Superbowl Sunday February 13th... Tailgate Pre-Party starts at 4PM with raffles and prizes. Watch the BIG Game with game sound, Free Halftime buffet! *limited reservations for the first 100 people only* Call 847-588-PLAY to reserve your spot now! #SuperBowl2022 #superbowl #playbookchi #djmixx649 #thebiggame #superbowlsunday (at Play Book Sports Bar) https://www.instagram.com/djmixx649/p/CYxPYebvZL2/?utm_medium=tumblr
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eric-sadahire · 3 years
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Me wondering what to do to annoy him because I'm bored
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mikebarbre · 4 years
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First suds since the #Seahawks-Rams divisional. Let's help get #NFLManOfTheYear @dangerusswilson back to #TheBigGame NEXT YEAR! #SudsWithSafety #SuperBowl (at Admiral Pub West Seattle) https://www.instagram.com/p/CLArmDmgf9o/?igshid=1lzg711l0xbbp
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hopwinsbrewery · 4 years
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Come down this Sunday for Super We will have a foodtruck on site with Wings, Chili, and much more. It’s gonna be a great game. We open at 12:00 but will be here until the game is over! So come down and watch the game with friends. Hope to see ya then! #Superbowl #thebiggame #tombrady #chiefs #Buccaneers #Patrickmahomes #football #wings #chili #food #foodtruck #craftbeer #fans #footballfans #fun #whosyourteam #Sunday #superbowlsunday #greatpeople #beer #footballandbeer @rhiannon104 @winnypooh824 @swinn125 @swinngolf @robert.morin.338 @hoppe_trails @richardchristy1974 (at HopWin's Brewery) https://www.instagram.com/p/CK1tdO_HTNA/?igshid=116z7ps6pgfg9
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