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yes you could crack your little jewls
"Football cleats give you more support in the midsole than soccer or baseball cleats," says Joseph Skiba, equipment manager for the New York Giants. "This helps with lateral movement and with things like taking hits or making tackles." With a sturdier feel than a soccer cleat, football cleats keep your feet and ankles from turning. This allows for quick movements and helps keep your feet under you when tackling, blocking or taking hits. So it's probably fine to wear football cleats for baseball or soccer, but you shouldn't wear baseball or soccer cleats for football.
The man Scott Norwood is known for being a National Football League kicker. He was the kicker for the Buffalo Bills and kicked for the Bills in their first two Super Bowls.
He was quite embarrassed how he told the German Football Magazine Kicker. He got mails from all over the world.
Sam Baker was famous for just that, being a NFL football player. Sam Baker played for a number of different teams and was renown as a great punter and kicker.
A free-body diagram of a football being kicked would include forces such as gravity pulling the ball downward, the force exerted by the kicker's foot pushing the ball forward, and air resistance opposing the ball's motion. The diagram would show these forces acting on the football as vectors.
Apart from being very stylish these cleats are very light and durable.
When a football is kicked upward, the main energy transfer occurring is from the kicker's leg muscles to the football. This transfer involves potential energy being converted to kinetic energy as the football gains height due to the force of the kick. Gravitational potential energy is also a factor as the football gains altitude.
Odd question, but to answer it...I have been playing Football (Soccer) for better part of 40 years and have seen terribly manufactured cleats as well as very well constructed cleats from ALL Manufacturers. If you purchase the lower cost cleats, you get lower quality cleats. Same goes for the opposite, often if you spend more money you receive a better quality cleat. That being said you can have cleats that will prove me wrong on both points. One of the cheapest cleats I bought (Mitres) lasted me a long time with continual use. I have also purchased very expensive cleats (Adidas Copa's) and they didn't make it half a season. My experience with Diadora has actually been quite good, as long as you purchase a higher quality leather pair, you will usually get your wear out of them.
Obviously, it would be lighter without anything on, but if you find that being light is an importance, than you can buy some pads that are lighter, as well as cleats.
You're using wrong sized cleats, most probably too tight.
Objects like glass, ceramics, and diamonds are not easily molded due to their rigid atomic structures. These materials have strong bonds that prevent them from easily changing shape or being molded.