Blue bags up.
Japan 2, Netherlands 2 — an absolute thriller in Arlington. And then the real show started.
The Japanese end pulls out thousands of bright blue bags. First they wave them like flags, bouncing and chanting until the whole section is one giant wall of blue. Then — same bags, new mission. They fan out across the stands and scoop up every bottle, wrapper and cup till the seats look brand new.
And who's right in the middle of it, grinning with a bag in his hand? Jameis Winston. Giants QB. Heisman winner. Out there cleaning up with the Samurai Blue like it's the best gig of his summer.
No chore. No lecture. Just a party that cleans up after itself.
Best fans on the planet. 🇯🇵💙
Most people remember Tom Landry standing on the sidelines of Dallas Cowboys games.
Few remember him sitting in the cockpit of a dying bomber over Europe.
Before he became one of football's most famous coaches, Landry served as a B-17 pilot during World War II. Flying from England, he led missions deep into enemy territory where every flight carried the possibility of never returning home.
Then came his 30th mission.
High above Europe, German anti-aircraft fire found its target.
Explosions ripped through the bomber.
One engine failed.
Then another.
Then another.
Then another.
Suddenly, all four engines were gone.
The massive B-17 was no longer flying.
It was falling.
Inside the aircraft were young airmen who knew exactly what that usually meant.
D*ath.
Panic could have spread through the crew.
Landry never allowed it.
Witnesses later recalled how calmly he fought to keep control of the powerless aircraft as it dropped toward the ground. With no engines and almost no options left, he guided the crippled bomber toward a field in France.
Then came the impact.
Steel scraped across the earth.
The aircraft slammed into the ground.
Against all odds, the crew survived.
The young pilot had brought them home.
Years later, America would know Tom Landry as the coach who built the Dallas Cowboys into a dynasty. Fans would admire his discipline, leadership, and calm under pressure.
What many never realized was where those qualities were forged.
Not on a football field.
But inside a shattered bomber falling from the sky during World War II.
Long before he coached champions, Tom Landry was already saving lives.
Story based on historical records. This post is for educational purposes.
Credit - timefold
HORRIFIC FOOTAGE: A 21-year-old woman was pushed off a 40-meter bridge in Limeira, Brazil by bungee jump workers who failed to attach her safety rope. She died from the fall.