Sports include many games structured in threes. In baseball, there are three strikes and you are out, three outs to an inning, and a trinity of trinities (3X3), in other words, 9 innings. Do you know about "Tinker to Evers to Chance?" Pictured to the right is none other than Joe Dimaggio.
Cricket. The game of cricket is inundated with threes. 3 stumps. 3 sections of the field, pitch, infield, outfield, 3 sessions to the game, before lunch, after lunch, after tea. 3 groups of players, batsmen, bowler, fielders. In test matches 3 umpires. The game is about 300 years old. Batting, waiting to bat, in, out. Three types of bowling, pace, swing, spin. Continue reading Cricket
Three units on a football team; Offense, Defense, and Special Teams
Three ways of advancing a football; run, kick and pass
Three points for a field goal
In the football league the team that wins the game gets three points
In football you are allowed to call only 3 timeouts during each half of the game
Football’s 3-point stance
England football association – three lions crest
Threes in European Football
Three football teams in Glasgow – Celtic, Rangers & Partick Thistle
Three lions on an England football shirt (sorry, soccer shirt)
Three lines: Forwards, Halfback, Fullback
“Three Lions” was the official song of the England football team for the 1996 European Championships, which were held in England. The music was written by The Lightning Seeds, with comedians David Baddiel and Frank Skinner providing the lyrics. The song was a much bigger success than most football songs, capturing the Zeitgeist perfectly.
Three Lions Footballs-Coming Home Official Video
The lyrics spoke not of unbounded optimism for victory, but instead told of how, ever since 1966 and the one unequivocal success of the English football team, every tournament has ended in dashed hopes and the feeling that England will never again reach those heights (“Three Lions on a shirt, Jules Rimet still gleaming Thirty years of hurt, never stopped me dreaming”).
The song’s intro included samples of pessimism from football commentators Alan Hansen (“I think it’s bad news for the English game”), Trevor Brooking (“We’re not creative enough; we’re not positive enough”), and Jimmy Hill (“We’ll go on getting bad results”).
Despite the failures of the past, each tournament is greeted with fresh hopes that this might be the year they do it again, and the song’s exuberant chorus proclaimed that “It’s coming home, it’s coming home, it’s coming, football’s coming home”.