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Trivial Questions
:DWhat do NASCAR and basketball have in common?
Steve D did not provide the correct answer. Sorry Cliff, Brad's not the ticket. Hint: This would apply to all participants in both sports. Nice try Peter. No credit. Good guess, Jim, but incorrect. Just saw the Paul S answer and he is very close. The correct answer will be posted in the next post. Hint: Movement is critical in the correct answer. Raymond, your mother may be more upset with your incorrect answer than you grammar.:D It may be truthful at some level, but it is not a correct answer unless I say so. Sorry, Mom. I like it Steve, but squeaky sneakers aren’t unique to basketball and the hint referenced movement, not the lack of movement.;) Peter, back to the drawing board. |
They both have sponsor patches/company ads on their uniforms?
Steve |
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Brad Daugherty?
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Both are more popular than lacrosse.
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Both are alternatives to sleeping pills.
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Participants in each perform over rubber? or wear rubber.
I may have the correct answer...just can't seem to say it in a grammatically correct sentence. Mom would be real upset at that. |
Getting stuck in the net is bad?
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They both "travel", in the sense that NASCAR does it on a racetrack and basketball players do it on a court.
What do I win? |
Something to do with driving in lanes?
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Frank-
I guess the best way to state my guess, which you labeled incorrect, would be that they both perform with rubber hitting the surface on which they perform. Now, THAT's, both a grammatically correct sentence AND is A correct response...whether or not it's the one you choose or not. Mom is looking down on this second post much more favorably regardless of the 'correctness' of the response. |
When a basketball player stops, and when a driver slams on the brakes, the player's shoes, as well as the car's tires, squeek or squeal.
Steve |
OK, let's go with the reverse:
When a driver hits the gas pedal, and when the player starts moving after having stood still, the tires and shoes squeek and/or squeal. :D Steve |
Is there a fast break in NASCAR?
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NASCAR and basketball are two sports where sitting on your butt can result in ‘traveling’. :eek:
Paul S gets honorable mention for alluding to traveling, but with no ands, ifs or butts cited. Another trivial question is more than welcome. |
Definitely not up to standard, this question.
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:rolleyes:
Steve |
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It's okay Frank...just call it a comfortable 0-for-3 |
The traveling paradox precipitated this thread.
When a basketball player lands on his rear end with the ball, he is guilty of “traveling”. I maintain that such a player is guilty of “sitting”, not “traveling”.;) If the basketball player were sitting in a car, like the NASCAR driver, “traveling” might be a plausible violation, but a sitting basketball player is quite stationary in reality. In NASCAR you can go 200mph while sitting, whereas in basketball the speedometer drops to zero. |
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You might even say he's off a different type of grid. I mean that as a compliment. |
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