Michael Jordan
Even the greatest basketball player of all time, Michael Jordan, relies on superstitions. He always wore his blue North Carolina shorts under his Bulls uniform for good luck. In order to cover his lucky pair, Jordan began wearing longer shorts, which inspired a trend in the NBA.
Serena & Venus Williams
Wade Boggs
If you want to know about superstitions in baseball, Wade Boggs is a perfect case study.
He is also known as the "Chicken Man’, because he would eat poultry before every game and was obsessively compulsive about his routine. He took exactly 150 ground balls during infield practice and had a fixation on time.
He is also known as the "Chicken Man’, because he would eat poultry before every game and was obsessively compulsive about his routine. He took exactly 150 ground balls during infield practice and had a fixation on time.
Before each at-bat, he would write the Hebrew word "Chai" (“Life”) into the dirt of the batter's box.
Between pitches, he had a habit if he was playing defence: he'd swipe the dirt in front of him with his left foot, tap his glove two or three times and adjust his cap. And those are just a few of dozens of Wade Boggs's superstitions.
Between pitches, he had a habit if he was playing defence: he'd swipe the dirt in front of him with his left foot, tap his glove two or three times and adjust his cap. And those are just a few of dozens of Wade Boggs's superstitions.
Jason Terry
Easily the most superstitious player in the NBA, Jason Terry's list of quirks includes eating chicken before games like Wade Boggs and wearing five pairs of socks while playing. However, the most bizarre habit occurs while he is sleeping. The night before every game, Terry goes to bed while wearing the shorts of the next day's opposing team.
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