Once considered the world's fastest man by virtue of his multiple world records in the 60-yard, 100-yard, 220-yard, and Olympic 100-meter dashes, Hayes was the first man to win both an Olympic gold medal and a Super Bowl ring.
High school and college
Hayes attended Matthew Gilbert High School (now a middle school) in Jacksonville, where he was a backup halfback on the football team. The 1958 Gilbert High Panthers finished 12–0, winning the Florida Interscholastic Athletic Association black school state championship with a 14–7 victory over Dillard High School of Fort Lauderdale before more than 11,000 spectators. In times of segregation laws, their achievement went basically unnoticed, yet 50 years later they were recognized as one of the best teams in FHSAA history.
Bob Hayes - Only Man To Win Olympic Gold & Superbowl | Tokyo 1964 Olympics
📲 Subscribe to @olympics: http://oly.ch/Subscribe
Highlights from the Tokyo 1964 Olympic Games as the USA's Bob Hayes wins the gold medal in the men's 100m event before going on to add the Superbowl to his impressive list of accolades.
The 100m title at the Tokyo 1964 Olympic Games went to Bob Hayes, probably one of the fastest runners who has ever lived and certainly one of the most successful, even though his career was short. In the run-up to the Olympic Games, he appeared entirely unbeatable, winning each of 49 races in which he took part between 1962 and 1964.
Hayes set a clutch of sprinting records. He was the first person to run the 100 yards (91.4m) in 9.1 seconds, and the first person to cover 60 yards (54.8m) in less than six seconds. The form book had him down as a red-ho...
published: 01 Jun 2013
Close-up of Bob Hayes, 100m final, Tokyo 1964
Colour, close-ups and slow motion… The videos of the men’s 100m at the Tokyo 1964 Games showed the tiniest details of African-American champion Robert (Bob) Hayes. Had we ever seen thigh muscles with such precision?
Television offered sports fans the chance to get closer to the athletes than ever before.
published: 18 Oct 2016
How fast was Bob Hayes?
over 50 years ago Bob Hayes emerged in the sprinting world, and dominated for his brief career. He is still remembered as one of the fastest man to ever live and as such we take a look at this Athletics legend.
Like my videos and would like to Support? Join me on Patreon:https://www.patreon.com/creator-home
Remember to subscribe if you like this and my other videos.
published: 24 Feb 2020
This man is the FASTEST human in history
Bob Hayes' fans say that Bob Hayes is the fastest man ever, especially because of his insane comeback in the 4x100m relay at the Tokyo 1964 Olympics. He was handtimed 8.5 for his anchor leg. I verified this by counting the number of frames in the clip and by dividing it by the frame rate. I found something around 8.55...
But what about the 4x100 semi-final ?
I read somewhere that Bob Hayes was something like 2 yards behind when he got the baton in the semi, but no problem, he blew past the french team to win in 39.5. So I started searching for a video of the 4x100m relay semi-finals from the Tokyo 1964 Games, and I found !
And I have got the idea to time it, to find that Hayes ran almost as fast as in the semi-final than in the final !
Incredible !
Hope you will enjoy it, and sorry for the...
published: 20 Aug 2019
The Fastest 4x100 Anchor Runners in History | From Bob Hayes to Noah Lyles
Track and Field Athletics Analysis and Education
published: 25 Aug 2020
Bullet Bob Hayes
Bob Hayes was born on this date in 1942. This is pretty complete for his Dallas career at least. Only NFL Films stuff exists for the most part.
published: 21 Dec 2020
"BULLET" BOB HAYES EVERY 50+ YARD NFL TOUCHDOWN
1964 GOLD MEDAL WINNER / 2009 PRO FOOTBALL HOF
NFL ULTIMATE CONNECTIONS - "DANDY" DON MEREDITH TO "BULLET" BOB HAYES https://youtu.be/ClVcdKhvefI
IF YOU ENJOY THIS VIDEO PLEASE FEEL FREE TO LIKE & SUBSCRIBE TO THE CHANNEL.
MUCH MORE COMING SOON. THANK YOU FOR WATCHING.
0:00 Introduction
0:17 BOR HAYES
1:03 ROGER STAUBACH 51 YARDS TO BOB HAYES
2:22 LANCE RENTZEL 56 YARDS TO BOB HAYES
2:40 DON MEREDITH 59 YARDS TO BOB HAYES
3:06 BOB HAYES 63 YARD PUNT RETURN
3:32 CRAIG MORTON 64 YARDS TO BOB HAYES
3:48 DON MEREDITH 65 YARDS TO BOB HAYES
4:28 BOB HAYES 69 YARD PUNT RETURN
5:04 DON MEREDITH 74 YARDS TO BOB HAYES
5:21 CRAIG MORTON 26 YARDS TO ROB HAYES
5:38 CRAIG MORTON 80 YARDS TO BOB HAYES
5:56 JERRY RHOME 82 YARDS TO BOB HAYES
6:19 ROGER STAUBACH 85 YARDS TO BOB HAYES
6:34 DON MEREDITH ...
published: 10 Mar 2021
Bob Hayes goes to Prison
Story from 1979. Hayes would serve 10 months in prison.
published: 25 Nov 2019
Bob Hayes, Olympic Gold Medalist and Dallas Cowboys WR, Dies (2002)
Bob Hayes also known as "Bullet Bob" was a Olympic gold medalist sprinter in 1964 and was known as the worlds fastest human. Also in 1964, he was drafted into the NFL by the Dallas Cowboys.
He is known also the only athlete to have won both an Olympic gold medal and a Super Bowl ring.
Bob is in the Cowboys Ring of Honor and the NFL's Hall of Fame.
Video is from the Best Damn Sports Show Period with Lisa Guerrero.
📲 Subscribe to @olympics: http://oly.ch/Subscribe
Highlights from the Tokyo 1964 Olympic Games as the USA's Bob Hayes wins the gold medal in the men's 100m e...
📲 Subscribe to @olympics: http://oly.ch/Subscribe
Highlights from the Tokyo 1964 Olympic Games as the USA's Bob Hayes wins the gold medal in the men's 100m event before going on to add the Superbowl to his impressive list of accolades.
The 100m title at the Tokyo 1964 Olympic Games went to Bob Hayes, probably one of the fastest runners who has ever lived and certainly one of the most successful, even though his career was short. In the run-up to the Olympic Games, he appeared entirely unbeatable, winning each of 49 races in which he took part between 1962 and 1964.
Hayes set a clutch of sprinting records. He was the first person to run the 100 yards (91.4m) in 9.1 seconds, and the first person to cover 60 yards (54.8m) in less than six seconds. The form book had him down as a red-hot favourite. He won his first-round race with ease, then won his quarter-final with a similar level of comfort. The only question now remaining was whether, under pressure, he may be hampered by a leg injury he had sustained a few months previously, but the semi-final seemed to answer that final doubt. He recorded a time of 9.91 seconds, which would have smashed the world record, but was not recognised because it was wind-assisted. It was more than enough, though, to get him into the final.
He was placed in Lane 1, which had to be raked over after being badly dug up by athletes at the start of the 20km walk. Hayes was also wearing borrowed spikes, because one of his own pair was lost when it was kicked under his bed in the athletes' village. Yet he exploded out of the blocks, took an early lead, and won by 2m, equalling the world record. It was the 49th win in a row -- Hayes only lost once over 100m, and never over 100 yards (91.4m).
His final act as an athlete, though, may have been his greatest. He ran the anchor leg in the 4x100m, and took over with the USA team in fifth place. What followed was an astonishing display of speed, strength and determination as he brought the baton home with a three-metre margin. It's believed his time for that 100m was around 8.8 secs, a remarkable pace even allowing for the flying start.
After the Games, Hayes transferred to playing professional American football and was a huge success. He spent nearly a decade playing for the Dallas Cowboys, before finishing his career with the San Francisco 49ers, and is the only person to have secured victory in both the Olympic Games and the Super Bowl.
Find more about the Tokyo 1964 Olympic Games: http://www.olympic.org/tokyo-1964-summer-olympics
_____________________________________________________
🇨🇳 #Beijing2022 replays: https://oly.ch/B22Replays
🇯🇵 #Tokyo2020 replays: https://oly.ch/T20Replays
🗞️ News from the Olympic world: https://oly.ch/News
📲 Subscribe to @olympics: http://oly.ch/Subscribe
Highlights from the Tokyo 1964 Olympic Games as the USA's Bob Hayes wins the gold medal in the men's 100m event before going on to add the Superbowl to his impressive list of accolades.
The 100m title at the Tokyo 1964 Olympic Games went to Bob Hayes, probably one of the fastest runners who has ever lived and certainly one of the most successful, even though his career was short. In the run-up to the Olympic Games, he appeared entirely unbeatable, winning each of 49 races in which he took part between 1962 and 1964.
Hayes set a clutch of sprinting records. He was the first person to run the 100 yards (91.4m) in 9.1 seconds, and the first person to cover 60 yards (54.8m) in less than six seconds. The form book had him down as a red-hot favourite. He won his first-round race with ease, then won his quarter-final with a similar level of comfort. The only question now remaining was whether, under pressure, he may be hampered by a leg injury he had sustained a few months previously, but the semi-final seemed to answer that final doubt. He recorded a time of 9.91 seconds, which would have smashed the world record, but was not recognised because it was wind-assisted. It was more than enough, though, to get him into the final.
He was placed in Lane 1, which had to be raked over after being badly dug up by athletes at the start of the 20km walk. Hayes was also wearing borrowed spikes, because one of his own pair was lost when it was kicked under his bed in the athletes' village. Yet he exploded out of the blocks, took an early lead, and won by 2m, equalling the world record. It was the 49th win in a row -- Hayes only lost once over 100m, and never over 100 yards (91.4m).
His final act as an athlete, though, may have been his greatest. He ran the anchor leg in the 4x100m, and took over with the USA team in fifth place. What followed was an astonishing display of speed, strength and determination as he brought the baton home with a three-metre margin. It's believed his time for that 100m was around 8.8 secs, a remarkable pace even allowing for the flying start.
After the Games, Hayes transferred to playing professional American football and was a huge success. He spent nearly a decade playing for the Dallas Cowboys, before finishing his career with the San Francisco 49ers, and is the only person to have secured victory in both the Olympic Games and the Super Bowl.
Find more about the Tokyo 1964 Olympic Games: http://www.olympic.org/tokyo-1964-summer-olympics
_____________________________________________________
🇨🇳 #Beijing2022 replays: https://oly.ch/B22Replays
🇯🇵 #Tokyo2020 replays: https://oly.ch/T20Replays
🗞️ News from the Olympic world: https://oly.ch/News
Colour, close-ups and slow motion… The videos of the men’s 100m at the Tokyo 1964 Games showed the tiniest details of African-American champion Robert (Bob) Hay...
Colour, close-ups and slow motion… The videos of the men’s 100m at the Tokyo 1964 Games showed the tiniest details of African-American champion Robert (Bob) Hayes. Had we ever seen thigh muscles with such precision?
Television offered sports fans the chance to get closer to the athletes than ever before.
Colour, close-ups and slow motion… The videos of the men’s 100m at the Tokyo 1964 Games showed the tiniest details of African-American champion Robert (Bob) Hayes. Had we ever seen thigh muscles with such precision?
Television offered sports fans the chance to get closer to the athletes than ever before.
over 50 years ago Bob Hayes emerged in the sprinting world, and dominated for his brief career. He is still remembered as one of the fastest man to ever live an...
over 50 years ago Bob Hayes emerged in the sprinting world, and dominated for his brief career. He is still remembered as one of the fastest man to ever live and as such we take a look at this Athletics legend.
Like my videos and would like to Support? Join me on Patreon:https://www.patreon.com/creator-home
Remember to subscribe if you like this and my other videos.
over 50 years ago Bob Hayes emerged in the sprinting world, and dominated for his brief career. He is still remembered as one of the fastest man to ever live and as such we take a look at this Athletics legend.
Like my videos and would like to Support? Join me on Patreon:https://www.patreon.com/creator-home
Remember to subscribe if you like this and my other videos.
Bob Hayes' fans say that Bob Hayes is the fastest man ever, especially because of his insane comeback in the 4x100m relay at the Tokyo 1964 Olympics. He was han...
Bob Hayes' fans say that Bob Hayes is the fastest man ever, especially because of his insane comeback in the 4x100m relay at the Tokyo 1964 Olympics. He was handtimed 8.5 for his anchor leg. I verified this by counting the number of frames in the clip and by dividing it by the frame rate. I found something around 8.55...
But what about the 4x100 semi-final ?
I read somewhere that Bob Hayes was something like 2 yards behind when he got the baton in the semi, but no problem, he blew past the french team to win in 39.5. So I started searching for a video of the 4x100m relay semi-finals from the Tokyo 1964 Games, and I found !
And I have got the idea to time it, to find that Hayes ran almost as fast as in the semi-final than in the final !
Incredible !
Hope you will enjoy it, and sorry for the very poor quality, remember that the video clips are from the 1960'... :)
Bob Hayes' fans say that Bob Hayes is the fastest man ever, especially because of his insane comeback in the 4x100m relay at the Tokyo 1964 Olympics. He was handtimed 8.5 for his anchor leg. I verified this by counting the number of frames in the clip and by dividing it by the frame rate. I found something around 8.55...
But what about the 4x100 semi-final ?
I read somewhere that Bob Hayes was something like 2 yards behind when he got the baton in the semi, but no problem, he blew past the french team to win in 39.5. So I started searching for a video of the 4x100m relay semi-finals from the Tokyo 1964 Games, and I found !
And I have got the idea to time it, to find that Hayes ran almost as fast as in the semi-final than in the final !
Incredible !
Hope you will enjoy it, and sorry for the very poor quality, remember that the video clips are from the 1960'... :)
1964 GOLD MEDAL WINNER / 2009 PRO FOOTBALL HOF
NFL ULTIMATE CONNECTIONS - "DANDY" DON MEREDITH TO "BULLET" BOB HAYES https://youtu.be/ClVcdKhvefI
IF YOU ENJOY...
1964 GOLD MEDAL WINNER / 2009 PRO FOOTBALL HOF
NFL ULTIMATE CONNECTIONS - "DANDY" DON MEREDITH TO "BULLET" BOB HAYES https://youtu.be/ClVcdKhvefI
IF YOU ENJOY THIS VIDEO PLEASE FEEL FREE TO LIKE & SUBSCRIBE TO THE CHANNEL.
MUCH MORE COMING SOON. THANK YOU FOR WATCHING.
0:00 Introduction
0:17 BOR HAYES
1:03 ROGER STAUBACH 51 YARDS TO BOB HAYES
2:22 LANCE RENTZEL 56 YARDS TO BOB HAYES
2:40 DON MEREDITH 59 YARDS TO BOB HAYES
3:06 BOB HAYES 63 YARD PUNT RETURN
3:32 CRAIG MORTON 64 YARDS TO BOB HAYES
3:48 DON MEREDITH 65 YARDS TO BOB HAYES
4:28 BOB HAYES 69 YARD PUNT RETURN
5:04 DON MEREDITH 74 YARDS TO BOB HAYES
5:21 CRAIG MORTON 26 YARDS TO ROB HAYES
5:38 CRAIG MORTON 80 YARDS TO BOB HAYES
5:56 JERRY RHOME 82 YARDS TO BOB HAYES
6:19 ROGER STAUBACH 85 YARDS TO BOB HAYES
6:34 DON MEREDITH 86 YARDS TO BOB HAYES
6:39 1967 NFL DIVISIONAL PLAYOFF
6:48 CRAIG MORTON 89 YARDS TO BOB HAYES
7:56 DON MEREDITH 95 YARDS TO BOB HAYES
8:12 OLYMPIC GOLD 1964 - PRO FOOTBALL HOF 2009
1964 GOLD MEDAL WINNER / 2009 PRO FOOTBALL HOF
NFL ULTIMATE CONNECTIONS - "DANDY" DON MEREDITH TO "BULLET" BOB HAYES https://youtu.be/ClVcdKhvefI
IF YOU ENJOY THIS VIDEO PLEASE FEEL FREE TO LIKE & SUBSCRIBE TO THE CHANNEL.
MUCH MORE COMING SOON. THANK YOU FOR WATCHING.
0:00 Introduction
0:17 BOR HAYES
1:03 ROGER STAUBACH 51 YARDS TO BOB HAYES
2:22 LANCE RENTZEL 56 YARDS TO BOB HAYES
2:40 DON MEREDITH 59 YARDS TO BOB HAYES
3:06 BOB HAYES 63 YARD PUNT RETURN
3:32 CRAIG MORTON 64 YARDS TO BOB HAYES
3:48 DON MEREDITH 65 YARDS TO BOB HAYES
4:28 BOB HAYES 69 YARD PUNT RETURN
5:04 DON MEREDITH 74 YARDS TO BOB HAYES
5:21 CRAIG MORTON 26 YARDS TO ROB HAYES
5:38 CRAIG MORTON 80 YARDS TO BOB HAYES
5:56 JERRY RHOME 82 YARDS TO BOB HAYES
6:19 ROGER STAUBACH 85 YARDS TO BOB HAYES
6:34 DON MEREDITH 86 YARDS TO BOB HAYES
6:39 1967 NFL DIVISIONAL PLAYOFF
6:48 CRAIG MORTON 89 YARDS TO BOB HAYES
7:56 DON MEREDITH 95 YARDS TO BOB HAYES
8:12 OLYMPIC GOLD 1964 - PRO FOOTBALL HOF 2009
Bob Hayes also known as "Bullet Bob" was a Olympic gold medalist sprinter in 1964 and was known as the worlds fastest human. Also in 1964, he was drafted into t...
Bob Hayes also known as "Bullet Bob" was a Olympic gold medalist sprinter in 1964 and was known as the worlds fastest human. Also in 1964, he was drafted into the NFL by the Dallas Cowboys.
He is known also the only athlete to have won both an Olympic gold medal and a Super Bowl ring.
Bob is in the Cowboys Ring of Honor and the NFL's Hall of Fame.
Video is from the Best Damn Sports Show Period with Lisa Guerrero.
Bob Hayes also known as "Bullet Bob" was a Olympic gold medalist sprinter in 1964 and was known as the worlds fastest human. Also in 1964, he was drafted into the NFL by the Dallas Cowboys.
He is known also the only athlete to have won both an Olympic gold medal and a Super Bowl ring.
Bob is in the Cowboys Ring of Honor and the NFL's Hall of Fame.
Video is from the Best Damn Sports Show Period with Lisa Guerrero.
📲 Subscribe to @olympics: http://oly.ch/Subscribe
Highlights from the Tokyo 1964 Olympic Games as the USA's Bob Hayes wins the gold medal in the men's 100m event before going on to add the Superbowl to his impressive list of accolades.
The 100m title at the Tokyo 1964 Olympic Games went to Bob Hayes, probably one of the fastest runners who has ever lived and certainly one of the most successful, even though his career was short. In the run-up to the Olympic Games, he appeared entirely unbeatable, winning each of 49 races in which he took part between 1962 and 1964.
Hayes set a clutch of sprinting records. He was the first person to run the 100 yards (91.4m) in 9.1 seconds, and the first person to cover 60 yards (54.8m) in less than six seconds. The form book had him down as a red-hot favourite. He won his first-round race with ease, then won his quarter-final with a similar level of comfort. The only question now remaining was whether, under pressure, he may be hampered by a leg injury he had sustained a few months previously, but the semi-final seemed to answer that final doubt. He recorded a time of 9.91 seconds, which would have smashed the world record, but was not recognised because it was wind-assisted. It was more than enough, though, to get him into the final.
He was placed in Lane 1, which had to be raked over after being badly dug up by athletes at the start of the 20km walk. Hayes was also wearing borrowed spikes, because one of his own pair was lost when it was kicked under his bed in the athletes' village. Yet he exploded out of the blocks, took an early lead, and won by 2m, equalling the world record. It was the 49th win in a row -- Hayes only lost once over 100m, and never over 100 yards (91.4m).
His final act as an athlete, though, may have been his greatest. He ran the anchor leg in the 4x100m, and took over with the USA team in fifth place. What followed was an astonishing display of speed, strength and determination as he brought the baton home with a three-metre margin. It's believed his time for that 100m was around 8.8 secs, a remarkable pace even allowing for the flying start.
After the Games, Hayes transferred to playing professional American football and was a huge success. He spent nearly a decade playing for the Dallas Cowboys, before finishing his career with the San Francisco 49ers, and is the only person to have secured victory in both the Olympic Games and the Super Bowl.
Find more about the Tokyo 1964 Olympic Games: http://www.olympic.org/tokyo-1964-summer-olympics
_____________________________________________________
🇨🇳 #Beijing2022 replays: https://oly.ch/B22Replays
🇯🇵 #Tokyo2020 replays: https://oly.ch/T20Replays
🗞️ News from the Olympic world: https://oly.ch/News
Colour, close-ups and slow motion… The videos of the men’s 100m at the Tokyo 1964 Games showed the tiniest details of African-American champion Robert (Bob) Hayes. Had we ever seen thigh muscles with such precision?
Television offered sports fans the chance to get closer to the athletes than ever before.
over 50 years ago Bob Hayes emerged in the sprinting world, and dominated for his brief career. He is still remembered as one of the fastest man to ever live and as such we take a look at this Athletics legend.
Like my videos and would like to Support? Join me on Patreon:https://www.patreon.com/creator-home
Remember to subscribe if you like this and my other videos.
Bob Hayes' fans say that Bob Hayes is the fastest man ever, especially because of his insane comeback in the 4x100m relay at the Tokyo 1964 Olympics. He was handtimed 8.5 for his anchor leg. I verified this by counting the number of frames in the clip and by dividing it by the frame rate. I found something around 8.55...
But what about the 4x100 semi-final ?
I read somewhere that Bob Hayes was something like 2 yards behind when he got the baton in the semi, but no problem, he blew past the french team to win in 39.5. So I started searching for a video of the 4x100m relay semi-finals from the Tokyo 1964 Games, and I found !
And I have got the idea to time it, to find that Hayes ran almost as fast as in the semi-final than in the final !
Incredible !
Hope you will enjoy it, and sorry for the very poor quality, remember that the video clips are from the 1960'... :)
1964 GOLD MEDAL WINNER / 2009 PRO FOOTBALL HOF
NFL ULTIMATE CONNECTIONS - "DANDY" DON MEREDITH TO "BULLET" BOB HAYES https://youtu.be/ClVcdKhvefI
IF YOU ENJOY THIS VIDEO PLEASE FEEL FREE TO LIKE & SUBSCRIBE TO THE CHANNEL.
MUCH MORE COMING SOON. THANK YOU FOR WATCHING.
0:00 Introduction
0:17 BOR HAYES
1:03 ROGER STAUBACH 51 YARDS TO BOB HAYES
2:22 LANCE RENTZEL 56 YARDS TO BOB HAYES
2:40 DON MEREDITH 59 YARDS TO BOB HAYES
3:06 BOB HAYES 63 YARD PUNT RETURN
3:32 CRAIG MORTON 64 YARDS TO BOB HAYES
3:48 DON MEREDITH 65 YARDS TO BOB HAYES
4:28 BOB HAYES 69 YARD PUNT RETURN
5:04 DON MEREDITH 74 YARDS TO BOB HAYES
5:21 CRAIG MORTON 26 YARDS TO ROB HAYES
5:38 CRAIG MORTON 80 YARDS TO BOB HAYES
5:56 JERRY RHOME 82 YARDS TO BOB HAYES
6:19 ROGER STAUBACH 85 YARDS TO BOB HAYES
6:34 DON MEREDITH 86 YARDS TO BOB HAYES
6:39 1967 NFL DIVISIONAL PLAYOFF
6:48 CRAIG MORTON 89 YARDS TO BOB HAYES
7:56 DON MEREDITH 95 YARDS TO BOB HAYES
8:12 OLYMPIC GOLD 1964 - PRO FOOTBALL HOF 2009
Bob Hayes also known as "Bullet Bob" was a Olympic gold medalist sprinter in 1964 and was known as the worlds fastest human. Also in 1964, he was drafted into the NFL by the Dallas Cowboys.
He is known also the only athlete to have won both an Olympic gold medal and a Super Bowl ring.
Bob is in the Cowboys Ring of Honor and the NFL's Hall of Fame.
Video is from the Best Damn Sports Show Period with Lisa Guerrero.
Once considered the world's fastest man by virtue of his multiple world records in the 60-yard, 100-yard, 220-yard, and Olympic 100-meter dashes, Hayes was the first man to win both an Olympic gold medal and a Super Bowl ring.
High school and college
Hayes attended Matthew Gilbert High School (now a middle school) in Jacksonville, where he was a backup halfback on the football team. The 1958 Gilbert High Panthers finished 12–0, winning the Florida Interscholastic Athletic Association black school state championship with a 14–7 victory over Dillard High School of Fort Lauderdale before more than 11,000 spectators. In times of segregation laws, their achievement went basically unnoticed, yet 50 years later they were recognized as one of the best teams in FHSAA history.
I said for a reason about what you do. I said for a reason why I'm confused about you. Saying shit, yeah you don't want me. Then saying bitch, I'mma turn on. Your contradicting yourself babe, contradicting. Say one thing then fuck around doing the opposite. Well fuck you cunt, I know your something special but you know it good and you're using it to your advantage. Think you're clever huh? Or pure doing what you want? Do you have any feelings or care for those who do? I know you do but not always like to show it. I can't tell anyone though, we are now friends. I thought we kinda were, and thought we'd always be. Clearly we are on the wrong page, when the big headed one decided, she wanted more with him. Something along with love. Something all touchy touch. Something to do with the lips clashing before. But HA! He were wrong. La la la la la I don't wanna be with you La la la la la Neither do I I want a nice friendship, and if this odd lust continues, I might wanna fuck you wonderful. Or play around freely. Maybe if you didn't ask me "Why does this always happen?" I may have moved on but you're so amazing I'm still bleedin' thinking. I've worried you have I? WHY IS THAT? You've missed me eh? WHY IS THAT? Your hands are on me.. WHY THE FUCK IS THAT?! And you're rubbing your nose on mine in the cute way. Trying to act sweet. Pulling me in for the kill, you pulled me in but you killed me last month. Now I can't stop thinking about you. Do I take revenge or won't you care? Basically you say I'm just attractive but is it you who wants more? La la la la la I don't wanna relationship La la la la la Neither do I I want you. But I don't want a relationship. I want to own you. But not to be own-owned. I said for a reason about what you do. I said for a reason why I'm confused about you. I said for a reason about what you do. I said for a reason why I'm confused about you. I said for a reason about what you do. I said for a reason why I'M CONFUSED ABOUT YOU. I SAID FOR A REASON ABOUT WHAT YOU DO! I SAID FOR A REASON WHY I'M CONFUSED ABOUT YOU! CONFUSED ABOUT YOUU! Yeah sure thing you're pretty hot, but simpleness ain't what you got. I had to ask earlier how do you tell when you're falling in love? Response was well if you get butterflies it's a start. Yeah I get that pretty trash but it's a buzz not something heart ache hard. Hate being called sugar sweety baby sugar? I hate the fact you're a faggot! Not literally but you know what I mean. I'm not being insulting I'm just simply keen. To know what you want. You're a lying cunt, the things you've said to me. Happily mixed up set-up emotions, I hate you cause I want you. And you're so hard to fucking get. Oh Woaaah woaaah. La la la la la I don't wanna get with you La la la la la
Tributes have flooded in for veteran New Zealand journalist and broadcaster Bob McNeil who has passed away aged 82 ... Bob's TV3 (now known as Three) colleague SamanthaHayes remembered Bob as a 'joy' ... Bob's 2014 autobiography.
At the age of 90 when Bob and Jan could no longer maintain a remote rural property, they donated their home and land to the Center to support ongoing land stewardship of the region they had adopted, ...
La tradición navideña se ha vuelto casi global ... Millones más lo siguen en línea en nueve idiomas, desde inglés hasta japonés ... “Hay gritos, risitas y carcajadas”, dijo Bob Sommers, de 63 años, contratista civil y voluntario de NORAD ... Un niño llamó ... .
He scares off carolers, speaks dismissively of the poor and treats his employee, Bob Cratchit, with contempt ... Other actors in the film include Michael Redgrave (narrator) and Melvyn Hayes as the voice of Bob Cratchit.
Fred Richards is the new executive director of the Jacksonville-based Timucuan Parks Foundation land conservation organization ... "We are excited to embark on this new chapter," board chairman Bob Hayes said.
Story continues below. This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below ...Article content ... Hockey said goodbye to Bill Hay and Murray Costello, who helped build the game in this country, and goodbye to the genius that was Bob Cole.
It's time Live Auction at "Christmas in the Sky. "Sinsational. It's Vegas, Baby" Dec. 14 at Louisiana Downs. Admission is $350 for individual tickets ... Dr. Michael T ... (Atchison's hubby Bob Atchison's Sky job is to manage the Canteen with ChefChrisHayes ... 2.