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Cryptocurrency News Articles

The high school championship game between two small Utah cities may have just invented the future of the coin flip

Nov 18, 2024 at 06:05 am

Prior to the game between 1A teams Rich High School (Randolph, Utah) and Monticello High School (Utah), a helicopter flew over the stadium low in the air.

The high school championship game between two small Utah cities may have just invented the future of the coin flip

A helicopter dropped a football onto the field at the 1A high school championship game in Utah, and two captains charged to wrestle over possession.

This was not the official coin toss, but an assistant running backs coach for the Kansas City Chiefs posted the video to Twitter and wrote, "Bring it to the league," tagging the NFL.

Two high school football captains in Utah may have just invented the future of the coin flip.

Prior to the 1A championship game between Rich High School (Randolph, Utah) and Monticello High School (Utah), a helicopter flew over the stadium low in the air. Hovering above midfield of Southern Utah University in Cedar City, a person in the chopper dropped a football onto the logo.

The two captains charged, wrestling over possession of the gridiron prize. One ended up with the football, and the crowd went wild.

But wait, there's more!

An assistant running backs coach for the Kansas City Chiefs happened to be at the game, and his nephew was playing. He couldn't help but post the video to Twitter, and he tagged the NFL in his post.

"Bring it to the league," Porter Ellett wrote with a football emoji and a helicopter emoji.

He also clarified in a later tweet that a traditional coin toss did take place before this showdown, and it wasn't clear if the winner of the wrestle got more than bragging rights.

"Coin toss did happen before this," Ellett tweeted. "Wasn't sure if the winner got anything else. Maybe just bragging rights?"

Rich High School ended up with the football, and it proved to be a good omen for the Rebels: They beat Monticello 50-14 to repeat as 1A eight-player state champions.

News source:www.usatodayhss.com

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