Hall of Fame player Deacon Jones coined the term "sack".
Any person born in the United States is Considered to be an American Citizen. A person of Mexican origin may call themselves Mexican American, but the correct term is American.
The term for defensive player catching opposing team's pass is an interception.
There are so many rules that even people who grew up playing and loving the game do not know. There is a reason why there are "laws" of the game in soccer (association football) and that you never hear this term mentioned in American football. In short, no one I have ever asked this question has been able to answer.
The term soccer officially changed to football on December 16, 2004
In the English term, "football" means soccer. But The American term football is played with the hands And helmets on!
It is a sports slang term from American Football. the second half of the 1900's meaning deliberate roughness against an unprepared apponent
The stitches in an American Football are called Laces.
soccer in an american term means football to the english.its the same thing.
Hall of Fame player Deacon Jones coined the term "sack".
Mexican American or Hispanic
Sack Bruce Smith had 200 career sacks, and Reggie White had 198 sacks.
There is no common term "coda sack." It may be a misspelling or incorrectly remembered term. Can you provide more context or clarify the term you are referring to?
The term "jocks" is thought to be derived from the personal protective equipment called the "jockstrap", which is worn by American Football Players. The term can be applied to any athletically-inclined male.
The term Hacky Sack is the trademarked name of a type of footbag, but has since become the generic term for either the foot bag itself or the game itself.
"Yoke sack" comes from the term "yolk sac," and is a membrane that encloses the yolk of an egg.
The term "cul-de-sac" is of French origin, where it literally means "bottom of a sack." It is commonly used in English-speaking countries to refer to a dead-end street or a road with only one way in or out.