I don't know if he was the first, but I think he was the first and only: Bo Jackson.
Baseball is to football
Jim Thorpe, in 1917.
Billy Johnson was to touchdown celebrations what Babe Ruth was to the home run -- he may not have been the first, but he is the most memorable. Elmo Wright of the Kansas City Chiefs is credited as the first NFL player to celebrate in the end zone. On Nov. 18, 1973, after catching a touchdown pass thrown by Len Dawson in a 38-14 win over the Houston Oilers, Wright ran in place at a frantic pace, pumping his knees and his arms, stopping long enough to slam the ball to the ground. Eight years before that, Homer Jones, a wide receiver for the New York Giants, delivered the league's first spike. www.jsonline.com/packer/s...120998.asp The first player to spike the football after a touchdown was Homer Jones in a game in 1965.
Deion Sanders
Jefferson Pérez walked home to Ecuador after winning,;I'm not sure about losing.
Manchester City surely ?
The visitor is listed first, and the home team second.
The first NFL touchdown for Dallas running back Marion Barber III occurred in the Cowboys' eighth game of the 2005 season. On October 30, in a home game against the Arizona Cardinals, he scored on a 28-yard run in the first quarter. He also scored on a 10-yard run in the second quarter. The Cowboys defeated the Cardinals, 34-13.
In which London Stadium to Chelsea play their home football matches? In which London Stadium to Chelsea play their home football matches? In which London Stadium to Chelsea play their home football matches?
The home team was able to score a touchdown by throwing a lateral pass.
Eugene Davis, University of Penn Quakers Sources have cited a University of Pennsylvania home football game from 1938 as the first televised football game.[8] This is likely due to the 1981 NCAA Television Briefing Book, which saidCollege football television had begun in 1938, when one of the University of Pennsylvania's games was beamed from Franklin Field to the Philco offices-laboratories, also in Philadelphia. As far as is known, there were six television sets in Philadelphia; and all were tuned to the game.[9] However, this game occurred before the 1939 world's fair, which marked the beginning of regularly scheduled television broadcasts.[10] This, along with the fact that the game was broadcast to the Philco laboratories, likely means the game was used as a field test. The University of Pennsylvania hosted the first full schedule of college football games in 1940.[11]
John Madden Football first came out as a computer game for Apple in 1988 and made its home gaming debut in 1990 for the Sega Genesis.