Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Boom goes the dynamite!" is a catchphrase coined by Ball State University student Brian Collins, popularized after a video of him delivering an ill-fated sports broadcast that included the phrase was shared on YouTube in 2005. In the ensuing years it has become a popular phrase, used to indicate a pivotal moment.
"On, Brave Old Army Team" has been called a "classic fight song" by the Phoenix New Times, one of the "50 Greatest College Fight Songs of All Time" by Bleacher Report, one of the "12 best fight songs in college football" by the Buffalo News, and was listed as one of the "Top Twenty-Five College Fight Songs" by William Studwell in his book College Fight Songs II: A Supplementary Anthology.
Boom, boom, boom! Ah! Princeton! Princeton! Princeton! It is called the "Locomotive" cheer because it sounds like a train engine that starts slowly then picks up speed. Princeton University also established the first pep club. All-male "yell leaders" supported the Princeton football team with cheers from the sidelines. (cited:: Valliant, Doris ...
For premium support please call: 800-290-4726 more ways to reach us
Heisman Memorial Trophy: What to know about career of John Heisman Heisman Trophy winners listed by school USC Trojans (eight) Mike Garrett (1965) O.J. Simpson (1968) Charles White (1979) Marcus ...
If this was just five years ago, let alone 10 or 20, the prospect of 72-year-old Bill Belichick as a college football coach would have been more about a splashy hire than the promise of great success.
The Spirit of Gold Marching Band plays Vanderbilt's fight song, "Dynamite" "Dynamite" is the official fight song of Vanderbilt University, written by Vanderbilt alumni Francis Craig in 1938 a week prior to a football game between the college and the University of Tennessee. [1]
During the team's scrimmages, Peebles would often yell "Sis-Boom-Ah, Princeton!" after a score, relying on a cheer from his alma mater. Team captain John W. Adams and a co-captain sought a counter-cheer, one that would have "a characteristic Minnesota flavor." While brainstorming, Adams recalled hearing native Dakota boys yell "ski-oo!"