As sports fans, we sometimes wonder how history might have changed if something different happened- if a ball bounced the other way, if a certain team won, if a certain player got traded, etc.
Let's say you could change three events/outcomes in sports- if you had the power to change sports history, what would you have done?
Here are mine:
1. Scott Norwood's kick does not sail wide right, Bills win Super Bowl XXV
2. Sabres win the 2006 Stanley Cup (I know they made the Finals in 1999 and everyone talks about Brett Hull's controversial crease goal, but that team was basically Dominik Hasek and 20 guys named moe who couldn't score. Nowadays, that team would be the Islanders. Also, I know they finished first overall in 2007, but I don't think they would have beaten Anaheim. The 2006 team, OTOH, would have steamrolled the eighth-seeded Oilers.)
3. The Pittsburgh Penguins beat the Florida Panthers in the 1996 NHL Eastern Conference Finals, play the Avalanche in the Stanley Cup Finals, and possibly change NHL history. Had the exciting, explosive, and entertaining Pens beaten the defense-first Panthers, the dead-puck era that followed may never have occured, and the exciting hockey that was around from 1970-1996 woud have continued.
Let's say you could change three events/outcomes in sports- if you had the power to change sports history, what would you have done?
Here are mine:
1. Scott Norwood's kick does not sail wide right, Bills win Super Bowl XXV
2. Sabres win the 2006 Stanley Cup (I know they made the Finals in 1999 and everyone talks about Brett Hull's controversial crease goal, but that team was basically Dominik Hasek and 20 guys named moe who couldn't score. Nowadays, that team would be the Islanders. Also, I know they finished first overall in 2007, but I don't think they would have beaten Anaheim. The 2006 team, OTOH, would have steamrolled the eighth-seeded Oilers.)
3. The Pittsburgh Penguins beat the Florida Panthers in the 1996 NHL Eastern Conference Finals, play the Avalanche in the Stanley Cup Finals, and possibly change NHL history. Had the exciting, explosive, and entertaining Pens beaten the defense-first Panthers, the dead-puck era that followed may never have occured, and the exciting hockey that was around from 1970-1996 woud have continued.