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Dan Carson@@DrCarson73Twitter LogoTrending Lead WriterApril 1, 2014
The Species of Sports Bro
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- Charles Rex Arbogast
Where do they come from? How do they sustain themselves? Is that a Blues Traveler poster?
These are the questions bro-ologists seek to answer—the quandaries they parse as they pick through footage of bros in the wild and captivity.
Perhaps the most interesting of man’s tribes, bros have a culture all their own, complete with a self-governed moral code and social hierarchy. They are not an extant offshoot of the human race, but if one were to study them as such, you’d quickly see a great variety of sub-species within the bro community.
Today we’ll be looking at the different kinds of sports bro—a class of male that enjoys athletic events, Fireball whiskey and a “hands-on” sporting experience.
These are the different species of sports bro.
The Brolympian
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- Jeff Reinking/Getty Images
“Dude, I could’ve freaking [hit that shot, made that pass, outran that pro athlete…].”
If you’ve heard these words before, you were dealing with a Brolympian—an individual who becomes Bro Jackson after four shots of Rumplemintz and starts thinking they could “hang” with professional athletes on the field.
Habitat: The past, Never Neverland.
Conservation Status: Threatened.
Brolympians have short life spans, as they are often shot down before they can finish their second sentence.
Victory Bro
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- GIF via SB NAtion
Living in a state of euphoria, Victory Bro is a species of brosephyus with an intricate language based entirely on movement.
Victory Bros communicate through high fives, Superman chest rips and interpretive dance. Like the Bird of Paradise, they transform into a gyrating, Chaka Khan-ing whirlwind the moment victory is at hand.
Habitat: Victory Lane, EastBay.com.
Conservation Status: Not Threatened.
You can find Victory Bros at any sporting event, although few specimens are as pure and wonderful as Baylor Bro.
Rambro
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The most volatile and unpredictable of brosephs, the Rambro is a war-like species bent on the ruining of athletic contests.
A malignant parasite, Rambros use mimicry and guile to Trojan Horse their way into packs of other, more innocuous bros. They keep their true nature revealed until they’ve reached the stadium, at which time anyone and everyone becomes their target.
Old people? Stand the [bleep] up. Female fans of the other team? Get the [bleep] out of here. This is the Rambro code, their battle plan, and it will not cease until an authority figure places a knee in their back.
Habitat: The upper balcony, the drunk tank, in somebody’s face.
Conservation Status: Threatened.
You don’t always run into Rambro, but when you do, you’ve experienced enough forever.
The Brolar Bear
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- Don Heupel
Sun’s out, guns out. Sky’s out, thighs out.
The Brolar Bear was born without the faculty for embarrassment. His disregard for cold weather is only matched by his inability to process shame. Any misgivings he might harbor about popping the top at Soldier Field are easily remedied by a salvo of strategically placed tall boys.
Shirtless Bros always travel in packs, their hands rarely dropping below shoulder height. Many adorn their naked upper body with runes or symbols denoting their native tribes. While generally harmless, sub freezing temperatures can render their nipples capable of carving a pot roast.
Habitat: Lambeau Field, Solider Field, Skyrim.
Conservation Status: Plentiful.
Unlike their furry cousins in the Arctic Circle, the Brolar Bear is making a big comeback in modern sports.
The Zom-Bro
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- Ezra Shaw/Getty Images
You’ll know a Zom-bro when you see one.
They’re the bros who were up at 4 a.m. on game day, blasting Beastie Boys and drinking as if wolves with guns were at the doors.
They are not bad people, merely overzealous. They mean well, but by the time the game is over they’ve developed a Walking Dead gangster lean and close their eyes constantly for miniature coma-naps. Shhh…they’re dreaming of pizza.
Habitat: Semiconsciousness, facedown in Section E26.
Conservation Status: Moderate.
There will always be extremely intoxicated bros at sporting events, although security personnel is working harder than ever to keep pilfered alcohol out of the stadium. There are workarounds, however.
Field Stormer Bro
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- Rob Carr/Getty Images
He came, he saw and he didn’t conquer. He didn’t even come close.
Much like his cousin, the Brolar Bear, the Field Stormer Bro is all about exhibition. He gauges the scene, tweets his intentions and makes a break for it when the coast is clear.
Many fans storm the field, but few do it with the panache—the pageantry—of the Fielder Stormer Bro, who is generally derobed or garbed in a cape. Where other field rushers surrender peacefully, the Field Stormer Bro goes down in a glaze of arm tackles and separated shoulders. He is always arrested.
Habitat: Holding cell, in our hearts forever.
Conservation Status: Endangered.
The number of Field Stormer Bros actually making it on national television is falling, as networks have begun cutting away from the field in order to discourage the practice.
Brose Canseco
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He’s large and not really in charge.
Brose Canseco is one of the largest species of bros known to man. They are complete wildcards (and sometimes Wildcats) who generally make it their life’s mission to be in the middle of any and all rowdiness.
If someone suggests burning a couch after the National Championship game, matches practically fall out of Brose Canseco’s sleeves. He’s about the party as much as he’s about the athletics, and he bows to no stadium usher or authority figure. Even if it means taking a stroll into a wall of pepper balls.
Habitat: Posted up at the bar, back of the cruiser.
Conservation Status: Endangered.
You don’t find too many dyed in the wool Brose Cansecos out there anymore, but the good news is they’re next to impossible to kill.
Glasses Indoors Bro
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- GIF via Pandawhale.com
“I call them my ‘hater blockerz.'”
Habitat: Court side seats they’ll never appreciate.
Conservation Status: Pest.
The National Bro Conservation Association allows fans to terminate any and all indoors sunglasses bros on sight with complete impunity.
The Brofessional
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Link to Media
He did it. He made it to the big leagues.
The Brofessional is a rare breed of bro whose physical gifts and focus helped him break on through to level of professional athlete. Granted, most Brofessionals excel in sports featuring drink carts and club houses.
This isn’t to say bros can’t run, gun and Wang Chung. See: Rob Gronkowski, Sage Kostenburg, Patrick Kane, Johnny Manziel.
Habitat: In the end zone, atop the winner’s podium, the Red Bull Guesthouse.
Conservation Status: Threatened.
Bros continue to trickle into professional athletics, but tend to be the target of extra media scrutiny for not staying inside and playing X Box every Saturday night.
Bro Pesci
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Warning: Video contains NSFW language.
Constantly running his mouth, the Bro Pesci is the verbal assassin of the brosephyus genus of male sports fans.
Armed with nothing but a piercing voice and list of moderately clever quips, this bro can bring down large prey with a few well-placed remarks. *
*The Bro Pesci does not make signs.
Habitat: Directly behind the away team bench, around the stadium tunnel.
Conservation Status: Abundant.
The Bromeleon
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- Screenshot via Twitter
Featuring a unique, allegiance shifting hide, the Bromeleon can transform from a Redskins fan to a Seattle Seahawks fan over the course of several minutes.
Their closets are filled with an assortment of jerseys and flat brims from various—and many times conflicting—franchises. “Bro, I like more than one team” is their mating call. This is their leader.
Habitat: Lids, Chinese jersey seller websites.
Conservation Status: More abundant than you’d like.
How the World’s Most ‘Bro’ Sport Is Making Space for LGBTQ People
Being bad at sports as a teen didn’t just make you non-athletic in the suburbs of Salt Lake City — it also made you a queer. And since I was queer, by the transitive law of homophobia, I figured I must also be bad at sports (I was also bad at math). So why even try?
With sexuality and athletic ability linked in my mind, I tended to avoid gyms, sporting events and REIs throughout my childhood — anywhere, really, that straight men might congregate and chest-bump one another without warning. But as a result of avoiding these spaces, I developed an unhealthy relationship with exercise (meaning a non-existent one) until I was well into my 20s.
That’s when I found CrossFit.
Before you stop reading, allow me to acknowledge upfront: Yes, CrossFitters are obnoxious. We talk about it constantly, speak in a language with enough jargon to justify its own Duolingo course, and are one #fitfam post away from being kicked off the proverbial group chat. With that mea culpa out of the way, I’m hoping to discuss an interesting trend within the self-proclaimed “sport of fitness.”
CrossFit, the tire-flipping frat bro of the fitness community, is actually pretty damn queer.
But it wasn’t always this way. In 2009, when I first joined CrossFit NYC — or, more accurately, dragged by a friend sick of hearing me complain about being out of shape — I was one of a few openly gay members. Walk in today, and you could easily mistake it for a Bed Bath & Beyond during peak cruising hours. This isn’t just a coastal city phenomenal, either. Most of the more than 50 CrossFit athletes I spoke to for this article reported sizable, and growing, LGBTQ memberships at their local box (sorry, that’s “gym” to you civilians.)
The most compelling evidence of the queer community’s secret plan to take over CrossFit, though, is the explosive growth of OUTWOD — a group founded by Will Lanier, a 33-year-old Austin, Texas-based coach, that hosts CrossFit workouts for the LGBTQ community. In 2009, just six people came to the group’s inaugural event in New York. This year, OUTWOD hosted 40 workouts in June alone, surpassed 15,000 followers on Instagram, and is on track to welcome over 5,000 queer athletes at workouts the world over from Belgium to Boise.
So how did CrossFit — whose unofficial mascot combines two of the LGBTQ community’s least favorite things: clowns and vomit — become so popular among the queers?
Above right: Chloie Jonsson
***
“I don’t know, but I fucking want you here,” Greg Glassman, CrossFit’s 63-year-old founder and CEO, told me when I asked why he thought so many LGBTQ people were drawn to the sport. “That doesn’t make me a fucking hero, by the way, it’s just basic human decency.”
“Also,” he added, “it’s effective.”
Since joining CrossFit NYC, I’ve lost 40 pounds and learned to do things I never thought possible, like walking on my hands, snatch my bodyweight over my head, and rock athletic wear without any sense of irony. If CrossFit helped me, of all people (I once scored a goal for the opposite soccer team while chasing a butterfly) it can help anyone. But effectiveness alone doesn’t explain why I stuck with CrossFit when other proven methods — like personal trainers, Jane Fonda videos, and trapeze classes — all failed, to varying degrees of embarrassment.
“Well I’ll say this,” Glassman said. “CrossFit is the only gym experience I know of where personal interaction is every bit the norm.”
This was very much by design, he added, and a response to the big-box athletic chains where he got his start as a personal trainer in Los Angeles in the 1980s. “I come out of Gold’s Gym, where all the pretty boys and girls just put their earphones in. The message was: leave me alone.” Glassman’s training techniques — which involved a lot of high-intensity circuits and noisy grunting on the part of his clients — unduly disturbed these gym bunnies to the point of getting him kicked out of the area’s athletic clubs.
So in 1995, Glassman opened up his own space in Santa Cruz, Calif., and set about creating a communal gym culture that would become the antithesis to those that rejected him. You won’t see headphones, televisions or even mirrors in most CrossFit boxes, for instance. With nothing to distract you (or flex in front of) it suddenly becomes “abnormal,” Glassman said, “not to say ‘Hi, how are you doing?’ and shake hands” with fellow gym goers.
“It’s an instant family,” Glassman added.
While it’s definitely this type of talk that makes people think we’re headed towards are very own Jonestown moment, Glassman’s origin story also probably sounds pretty familiar to many LGBQT people. Set it to music — shunned by the mainstream only to thrive in a community of his own making — and we’d practically have the latest queer anthem on our hands.
More so than any weight lost or skills gained, this emphasis on community building is also a big reason many of the LGBTQ athletes I spoke to said they were so drawn to the sport — for many of us, CrossFit is the first opportunity we’ve had to discover our inner Sporty Spice free from the unspeakable horrors of a high school gym class.
Above: CrossFit Founder Greg Glassman and Will Lanier
Lest I paint too pink-washy a picture, the LGBTQ community’s relationship with CrossFit has not always been one big rainbow explosion of crop tops and leg warmers. And Chloie Jonsson, a 39-year-old CrossFit athlete at Black Iron Gym in Reno, Nev., knows this better than most. In 2014, Jonsson was part of a team vying to qualify for the CrossFit Games — the community’s annual fitness competition beginning this week in Madison, Wis. But as a trans athlete, she was told she’d have to compete in the men’s division, despite the medical community’s near consensus that trans women hold no advantage over cisgender competitors.
CrossFit initially doubled down amid the backlash that followed. The company’s general counsel penned an aggressive letter claiming Jonsson’s rejection was based on “a very real understanding of the human genome” that “you are either intentionally ignoring or missed in high school.” CrossFit ultimately changed its policy last summer, after sustained pressure from advocates. But many remain disillusioned by the company’s original handling of the situation.
Critics appear to include Greg Glassman himself. “It was embarrassing,” he said. “What I wanted to tell Chloie is that I don’t care what box you check — it should be entirely up to you.”
Perhaps fueled by his frustration with this experience, Glassman has become more vocal in his support for CrossFit’s LGBTQ members in recent years. After Russell Berger, a high-ranking CrossFit employee, publicly equated the celebration of Pride with “sin” on Twitter, Glassman fired him within hours.
“You can be religious all you want, but when you say homosexuality is a sin, you’re saying someone is earning of damnation,” Glassman said of his decision. “I see that as code for violence, and we have absolutely no room for that — you’re gone.”
Above: Dillon King (left) and buddy.
CrossFit’s CEO may have our back, but the broader community within the sport — originally comprised mainly of members of the military, police, and even some Christian churches — has some decidedly conservative influences. Many within CrossFit viciously mocked the company’s new trans-inclusive policy while others rushed to Berger’s defense after his firing despite his deeply homophobic comments.
Dillon King, a 30-year-old coach in Metairie, Louisiana, started his own gym for precisely these sorts of sentiments. “The box I was renting space from didn’t want me to advertise training that was LGBT focused,” King said. So he founded Flambeaux CrossFit to be “unapologetically welcoming” of queer athletes. “I’m proud of creating a space where even some of our pre-op trans men feel comfortable working out in a sports bra when it’s 90 degrees outside.”
But even in this environment, King contends with bias.
Recently, he was chatting with a member who mentioned she found transgender people “weird,” and that having a trans family member must be “hard.” “Well, I’m transgender — and yes it’s hard,” King replied, hoping for a teachable moment. Instead, the member quit his gym.
Though OUTWOD workouts are fun and social, Will Lanier says he started the group mainly as a way to push back against the “overly hetero” culture in many CrossFit gyms. “Bro culture runs deep,” he said.
“There’s just always that one dude uncomfortable with the fabulous gays in class.” But during his events, which double as fundraisers, “the gays are in charge,” Lanier said. “We get to blast Britney, dance between sets, and ignore the weird looks we get from other members.”
Of course, we have just as many cheerleaders within the community as detractors — after the owners of CrossFit Infiltrate in Indianapolis refused to let a group of LGBTQ athletes organize a Pride workout, citing religious objections, so many members quit in protest that the box was forced to permanently close. But the very need to advocate for LGBTQ inclusion in this way would seem almost laughable in other fitness communities. It’s notable, in other words, that no high-ranking Soul Cycle employee has been engulfed in a homophobic tweet storm, or that an equivalent to OUTWOD in the yoga world (YAAASYogis? NamasteNANCIES?) is still not a thing.
Above: Will Lanier (center).
For me and many LGBTQ athletes, CrossFit is not just a good workout: it’s a second chance at gym class — same short shorts, maybe, just minus that pesky fear that a game of “smear the queer” might one day be taken too literally.
Not all CrossFit gyms, however, are created equal.
While most of the LGBTQ athletes I spoke to had no problem finding a supportive CrossFit box to call home, they could also recall plenty of instances of homophobia and transphobia within the sport’s wider culture — leading some of us to question our affiliation, at times, with a community that doesn’t always seem so thrilled with CrossFit’s increasingly rainbow-tinged hue.
“I’ve always been a proud trans business owner,” said affiliate owner Dillon King. “But I was also always a little weary of being proud of a company that wasn’t proud of me.” For many LGBTQ athletes, CrossFit’s recent moves in support of the queer community have gone a long way towards mending old wounds. Now that CrossFit updated its policy on trans athletes, for instance, King said he feels, “nothing but pride in the company I’ve shaped my life around.”
Asked what more could be done to support CrossFit’s LGBTQ community, Glassman pledged, at a minimum, to give the Russell Berger treatment to any affiliate owner or employee who publicly engages in hate speech. (“They can go form their own hate-filled version of CrossFit if they want.”) But as for more subtle ways to improve the day-to-day experience of queer athletes, Glassman admitted to needing some direction.
“Tell me,” he said. “I’m listening.”
Will Lanier’s latest effort, the OUT Foundation (of which Glassman is a major donor), is attempting to do just that. The Foundation organizes public education campaigns, for instance, which Lanier hopes will bring about a longer-term cultural shift within the sport. This past winter, in an effort cheekily called the “Don’t be an Asshole” tour, he recruited athletes like Chloie Jonsson to travel to boxes across the country to discuss ways even the most LGBTQ-friendly CrossFit affiliates can be more inclusive of their queer athletes.
“A lot can be solved with simple tweaks in language, like referring to gym equipment by weight instead of gender,” said Jonsson. “That’s not even just a trans thing — some guys have small hands, but get shit if they use the ‘women’s bar. ‘”
The OUT Foundation is also starting to look at some of the more entrenched, structural ways the LGBTQ community continues to be excluded from athletic spaces like CrossFit. The Foundation’s scholarship program, for instance, gives free CrossFit memberships to low-income LGBTQ people, and a separate fund helps offset the costs for gender-affirming surgeries for trans athletes. “For lots of reasons, gyms continue to be really intimidating and inaccessible places for LGBTQ people,” Lanier said. “We want to do all we can to bring them into health and wellness.”
Of course, CrossFit is by no means the only athletic community struggling with inclusion. “Sports has long been very hetero and binary,” said Jonsson. “It’s not going to change overnight.”
So while we wait for the world to catch up?
“I don’t know, keep blasting Britney?” Lanier suggested. “Keep dancing between sets.”
Above: OUTWOD at CrossFit Atlanta.
“Cart, bro!” on Apple Podcasts
Issues: 25
The Sports. ru Hockey Podcast is your benchmark for the fastest team game on the planet.
SHIKSATDAROV – battles with Spartak, match against Jagr and Plekanets, Champions League final
SHIKSATDAROV – battles with Spartak, match against Jagr and Plekanets, Champions League final
Visiting Sports.ru Ildar Shiksatdarov – the legend of the youth team of CSKA and Neftekhimik in the late 2010s.
Sergey Shchenkov https://www.instagram.com/sergey_shch…
Artem Batrak https://www.instagram.com/batrakartem93/
Nikita Petukhov https://t.me/thepuck
Hockey on Sports. ru (http://sports.ru/) https://t.me/hockey_sportsru0:00 Just a story about Milos Rzhiga
2:03 Does Ildar consider himself a Spartak player
4:12 The best final in the history of the MHL
6 :45 In Sokolniki they hung a banner in honor of Laborer
14:15 Shesterkin’s style
18:25 Why they hated Shiksatdarov
23:15 The players are friends, but they fought on the ice. What’s next?
25:36 Ildar played in Slovakia. How are things there?
27:20 How the name “Shiksatdarov” was distorted
29:25 Meeting with Yagr
36:30 What is 3-on-3 hockey
43:25 How Seryoga sent Misha Anisin
46:51 Cybersport
51:11 Hockey players played in CS
52:37 Ildar was at the final of the Champions League
56:55 How Artyom was given the Lampard jersey
57:42 Barthez played for Spartak-92
1:03:48 Seryoga went to the final of the Russian Football Cup and screwed up 9Andrey NazarovKAREEV — how much Finns drink, life and hockey in Finland, Olympic champion at HSE
KAREEV – how much Finns drink, life and hockey in Finland, Olympic champion at HSE
Visiting the podcast “Cart, bro!” Andrey Kareev, finalist of the 2022 Finnish Championship, and now the goalkeeper of Salavat Yulaev.
We wrote this issue in May, even before Andrei signed with Ufa, keep that in mind – we are discussing what is happening there at the World Championships, where Kareev will play, and so on. Just enjoy the conversation.
Hosts:Sergey Shchenkov https://www.instagram.com/sergey_shchenkov/
Artem Batrak https://www.instagram.com/batrakartem93/
Nikita Petukhov https://t.me/thepuck0: 00 Joke and question from Seryoga (he is absent today)
2:20 Players of our school in different leagues
4:36 So what’s in Finland?
5:17 Finns are better than us
8:00 Kareev was initially scored 3-4-5 goals
9:24 How the Finnish championship works
11:58 Finland is a very small country
17:15 All teams in the Finnish league have their own technical sponsors
18:34 A bunch of logos on a T-shirt
19:46 One pause for the Eurotour
23:20 Andrey counts to five in Finnish
28:12 Food in Finland
32:29 Alcohol in Finland
35:40 Kareev about his development
40 :29 What can a goalkeeper do when substituting a
44:11 Bouncing off the front board and going out of the gate
46:58 When goalkeepers want to score
49:19 A lot of our people left for the Finnish championship. How are they?
54:04 How newcomers are welcomed in Finland
55:58 Anttila played in HSE
1:01:21 Finnish league – rather towards the youth league
1:04:19 In TPS Kareev played with Slafkovski
1:06:40 Vasilevsky and Shesterkin are very different. What is our school?TOLCHINSKY – Gagarin Cup, acquaintance with Toronto bosses, American sports
TOLCHINSKY – Gagarin Cup, meeting Toronto bosses, American sports
Visiting the Cart, Bro! podcast Playoff MVP 2021, Gagarin Cup winner, HC Avangard forward Sergei Tolchinsky. Presenters:
Sergey Shchenkov https://www.instagram.com/sergey_shchenkov/
Artem Batrak https://www.instagram.com/batrakartem93/
Nikita Petukhov https://t.me/thepuck0:00 What there in the championship of Belarus?
1:49 How commentators affect the feeling of hockey
3:00 Artem has seen goalkeepers score three times into empty nets
5:50 What is playoff defeat?
7:50 How Avangard lost to Magnitogorsk
11:38 Avangard and forwards
13:59 Bob Hartley’s attention to detail
15:20 Wooden refereeing in Russia
19:58 Sergey Fedorov brings CSKA closer
22 :36 Why is Korban Knight so good on the dot?
24:25 Arkhip Nekolenko about the defeat of Magnitogorsk
31:38 How to answer the question “Why did you lose?”
33:30 What can be done to reduce kickbacks in the KHL
34:32 Alexander Popov is a legend
38:07 Artem ended up in the press center at Magnitogorsk
40:15 Chewing gum in the club locker rooms
43:39 What Tolchinsky drinks during match time?
47:10 Seryoga is acquainted with Toronto general manager Kyle Dubas
48:22 American sports
52:32 Juniors are recognized in Canada
55:25 Tolchinsky shows correspondence with Toronto coach
57:00 Stole a stick? Give!
1:00:55 Who else did Seryoga play with?
1:04:19 The player was not known, but he revealed himself
1:09:00 In America, the attitude to sports is simplerWhen Ovechkin scores 700 goals and what do Washington think about it. We talk about the main thing in hockey
When Ovechkin scores 700 goals and what do Washington think about it.
Briefly:
0:10 Sasha Polivanov wanted to bet that Ovechkin wouldn’t score 40 in a season.
4:20 Is it worth writing every season that “Ovechkin won’t score this time”?
06:50 The whole Washington wants Ovechkin to get past the 700 goal mark.
10:10 Will Ovechkin move to the KHL?
14:18 The main news of the week – Morozov became the president of the KHL.
16:40 Morozov in the KHL = Tretyak in the FHR.
19:32 The KHL is turning into an invisible league.
21:34 The league doesn’t spin stars.
27:49 Maybe Chernyshenko is good?
34:10 What’s wrong with the KHL now?
37:55 Korshkov played in Toronto.
39:13 How the NHL spins its heroes.
42:48 Tampa is on fire again!The guy from KVN works at Avangard. We talked about the Major League, Omsk hockey and played bad jokes
A guy from KVN works in Avangard. We talked about the Major League, Omsk hockey and played bad jokes
Short:
0:15 Cart, bro, how are you?
1:00 Starting the podcast with a song.
4:35 Immediately about the main thing – Sergey Kolmagorov, the KVN team “Youth Team” (Omsk) talks about the Major League.
7:20 Why he didn’t become a wedding host.
8:05 Leonid Slutsky danced to the music of the KVN team from Omsk.
10:25 Serhiy spoke to the future president of Ukraine.
11:22 How the league of hockey jokes began and how it is made.
18:30 League of hockey jokes live.
22:35 How Omsk played in the national team at the Eurotour.
24:15 Igor Bobkov fails in the national team.
30:30 How does Omsk live without hockey?
36:20 Hockey pictures from Omsk at the beginning of the 2000s.
41:37 Discussing the news – in hockey, the institution of matches of the best against the best disappears.
44:07 Questions for the hockey team!11 friends of Ovechkin. Putting together a super team for a trip to the bar
11 friends of Ovechkin. Putting together a super team for a trip to the bar
2:39 New column – “Cart, bro, how are you?”
4:55 Where did the idea for the beer team come from?
8:10 Elchaninov recalls the legend of his youth.
11:19 Sasha continues the Omsk line in the podcast.
12:50 Paraskoon Peak is the hero of Detroit in the mid-nineties. But not Fedorov.
13:24 Red Dead Redemption II and dominoes.
16:25 Petukhov bets on the bearded man from San Jose.
19:41 Another Omsk surname (actually from Nizhny Novgorod).
22:55 Another Stanley Cup winner in our bar!
25:13 Hayt list of the podcast “Cart, bro”: who we definitely won’t invite to the bar.
29:40 Knock on the door – the hero of Bern 2009 enters.
31:54 Following him is the hero of Vancouver 2010.
34:50 Boston is the first team to be called to the bar.
35:50 The first non-hockey player in our company.
37:55 Another goalkeeper walks into the bar!
40:35 Another Vancouver 2010 hero.
43:12 The bar needs a man who has been in three championship locker rooms.
46:30 Ilya comes in with trump cards.
54:10 One change in our squad!
56:40 Bonus: recruiting coaching staff for the bar team.
1:03:40 Questions!
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Guys, make a podcast about Sergey Krivokrasov. He was briefly mentioned in a podcast about A. Ovechkin.
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SHIKSATDAROV – battles with Spartak, match against Jagr and Plekanets, Champions League final ekhimika” end of 2010- X. more
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KAREEV — how much Finns drink, life and hockey in Finland, Olympic champion at HSE
Visiting the podcast « cart, bro !” Andrey Kareev, finalist of the 2022 Finnish Championship, and now the goalkeeper of Salavat Yulaev. more
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Tolchinsky-Gagarin Cup, acquaintance with the Toronto bosses, American sport
Visiting the podcast “Cart, Bratan!” Playoff MVP 2021, Gagarin Cup winner, HC Avangard forward Sergei Tolchinsky. more
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a year ago
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What was it? BBC Radio
Frequently Asked Questions About Cart Bro!
Where can I find podcast stats for Cart Bro!?
Rephonic provides a wide range of data for two million podcasts so you can understand how popular each one is. See how many people listen to Cart Bro! and access YouTube viewership numbers, download stats, ranking charts, ratings and more.
Simply upgrade your account and use these figures to decide if the show is worth pitching as a guest or sponsor.
How do I find the number of podcast views for Cart Bro!?
There are two ways to find viewership numbers for podcasts on YouTube. First, you can search for the show on the channel and if it has an account, scroll through the videos to see how many views it gets per episode.
Rephonic also pulls the total number of views for each podcast we find a YouTube account for. You can access these figures by upgrading your account and looking at a show’s social media section.
How do I find listening figures for Cart Bro!?
Podcast streaming numbers or ‘plays’ are notoriously tricky to find. Fortunately, Rephonic provides estimated listener figures for Cart Bro! and two million other podcasts in our database.
To check these stats and get a feel for the show’s audience size, you’ll need to upgrade your account.
How many subscribers does Cart, bro! have?
To see how many followers or subscribers Cart, bro! has, simply upgrade your account. You’ll find a whole host of extra information to help you decide whether appearing as a sponsor or guest on this podcast is right for you or your business.
If it’s not, use the search tool to find other podcasts with subscriber numbers that match what you’re looking for.
How many listeners does Cart, bro! get?
Rephonic provides a full set of podcast information for two million podcasts, including the number of listeners. You can see some of this data for free. But you will need to upgrade your account to access premium data.
How many episodes of Cart Bro! are there?
Cart, bro! launched 4 years ago and published 25 episodes to date. You can find more information about this podcast including rankings, audience demographics and engagement in our podcast database.
How do I contact Cart Bro!?
Our systems regularly scour the web to find email addresses and social media links for this podcast. But in the unlikely event that you can’t find what you’re looking for, our concierge service lets you request our research team to source better contact information for you.
Where do you get podcast emails for Cart Bro! from?
Our systems scan a variety of public sources including the podcast’s official website, RSS feed, and email databases to provide you with a trustworthy source of podcast contact information.