Where Knowledge Junkies Get Their Fix
McAfee Secure sites help keep you safe from identity theft, credit card fraud, spyware, spam, viruses and online scams
Ethan Trex
The 10 Most Bizarre Athlete Superstitions
by Ethan Trex - March 6, 2008 - 3:14 PM

If any group has a reason to be superstitious, it’s professional athletes. Since their livelihoods rely on their abilities to consistently replicate physical motions, it’s hardly surprising that they often don’t want to change anything about their routines once they find success. However, some stars take these rituals beyond their logical extremes. Jumping over the baselines when taking the field in baseball? Pretty standard. Wearing the same cup from high school on through your pro career like Mark McGwire reportedly did? Now we’re getting a little more peculiar. Here are ten of our favorite truly absurd superstitions.

1. Kevin Rhomberg, Cleveland Indians

kevin_rhomberg.jpg
Rhomberg played just 41 games in parts of three seasons with the Tribe from 1982-84. But in that short span, the outfielder managed to assert himself as possibly the big leagues’ most superstitious player ever. Rhomberg’s most peculiar superstition was that if someone touched him, he had to touch that person back. Although this compulsion was not as much of a liability as it might have been in basketball or football, it still led to some odd situations: if Rhomberg was tagged out while running the bases, he’d wait until the defense was clearing the field at inning’s end to chase down the player who’d touched him.

Rhomberg also refused to make right turns while on the field, because baserunners are always turning left. So if a situation forced him to make a right turn, he’d go to his left and make a full circle to get moving in the correct direction.

2. Caron Butler, Washington Wizards


caron-butler.jpg
When most of us want a glass of something heavily caffeinated that fluoresces green, we can just reach for a Mountain Dew. Sadly for Washington Wizards’ All-Star small forward Caron Butler, he can’t do the Dew whenever he wants anymore. As Butler told Dan Steinberg of the fantastic D.C. Sports Bog, he would guzzle a two-liter bottle of the sugary soda before and during every game dating back to his All-American career at the University of Connecticut. Butler would throw down half the bottle before the game, then finish it off at halftime. That is, until the Wizards clamped down and forced him to switch to a more traditional sports drink, water.

3. Mike Bibby, Atlanta Hawks

mike-bibby.jpg
Like fellow NBA star LeBron James, Bibby has been known to nervously bite and chew his nails during games. When relegated to the bench for a breather during games with the Sacramento Kings, Bibby would obsessively pick at his nails until he stumbled across a better solution: using fingernail clippers on the bench. The clippers became his superstition, and whenever Bibby came to the bench for timeouts, someone would hand him a set so he could go to work on his nails. [Image courtesy of Wild-Bills.com.]

4. Jason Terry, Dallas Mavericks

jason-terry-shorts.jpg
Bibby and Terry, college teammates at Arizona, started another odd superstition while playing for the Wildcats. The restless pair slept in the uniform shorts the night before each Arizona game on the logic that it would make the game feel like it was starting sooner. When Terry broke into the NBA with the Atlanta Hawks, he decided to start wearing the shorts of the next day’s opponent, instead. This ritual is fairly tenuous, though, as it requires Terry to procure a pair of uniform shorts from each opposing NBA team. Although his network of connections with equipment managers and former teammates has helped him out, he had to wear Mavericks shorts before each game of the 2006 NBA Finals since he couldn’t find a pair of Heat trunks.

That’s not Terry’s only superstition, though; he wears knee-high socks as a tribute to his father, which seems normal. The catch is that Terry wears five pairs of them whenever he’s on the court; he claims the extra hosiery is more comfortable. Like former third baseman Wade Boggs, Terry also insists on eating chicken before each game, a practice he also says started with Bibby at Arizona, making the 1997 Wildcats the most superstitious team to ever win the NCAA title. [Image courtesy of SI.com.]

5. Moises Alou, New York Mets

moises-alou.jpg
Most baseball players wear batting gloves to absorb some of the shock of making contact with the ball and to improve their grip on the bat. A handful eschew gloves in favor of a barehanded approach, though, most famously outfielder Alou. Alou does have a system for avoiding calluses and hardening his skin: he urinates on his hands throughout the season. New York Yankees catcher Jorge Posada also employs this superstition to aid in his gloveless approach at the plate. The trick may be more gross than helpful, though: a 2004 article in Slate questioned the value of this superstition since urine contains urea, a key ingredient in moisturizers that actually soften the skin.

6. Bruce Gardiner, Ottawa Senators

bruce.jpg
Gardiner spent five years as a forward in the NHL, most notably with the Senators. His superstition was even more unsettling than Alou’s: before each game, Gardiner would dip the blade of his stick in the locker room toilet. Gardiner’s strange superstition started in his rookie reason in Ottawa in 1996. After going several games without a point, he asked veteran Tom Chorske for advice. Chorske told Gardiner he was treating his stick too well and needed to teach the wood to respect him by dunking it in the toilet.

Although Gardiner was initially skeptical, after his cold streak extended for a few more games, he took Chorske’s advice. He then got hot and started scoring, and he kept on hitting the bathroom before games. Gardiner eventually backed off of dunking his stick regularly, but he’d still go back to the tactic to end a slump. As he told NHL.com in 2007, “You tape it, you dunk it, and you don’t touch it. I’d do anything for a couple of goals.”

7. Ecuadorian National Soccer Team

Tzamarenda-Naychapi.jpg
Ecuador’s national team knew they needed help if they were to succeed at the 2006 World Cup in Germany. Even after practicing and preparing as well as they could, they were still looking for an edge. They found it in Tzamarenda Naychapi, a mystic who London’s The Guardian called a “witch doctor-cum-shaman-cum-priest-type-fella,” to help enlist the aide of supernatural spirits. Naychapi supposedly visited each of the twelve stadiums being used in the World Cup and chased away any lingering evil spirits and worked a little magic on the pitches and goals themselves. By all accounts the magic worked; although Ecuador is not a traditional soccer powerhouse they defeated Poland and Costa Rica in group play to advance to the Round of 16, where they lost to England 1-0 on a David Beckham goal.

8. Turk Wendell, Major League Baseball

wendell.jpg
The eccentric reliever pitched for four teams between 1993 and 2004 and posted some solid seasons in that span. However, he’s most remembered for his vast collection of bizarre superstitions. Among Wendell’s more notable quirks was his requirement that he chew four pieces of black licorice while pitching. At the end of each inning, he’d spit them out, return to the dugout, and brush his teeth, but only after taking a flying leap over the baseline. Wendell, an avid hunter, also took the mound wearing a necklace adorned with trophies from animals he had harvested, including mountain lion claws and the teeth of wild pigs and buffalo. When compared to these superstitions, Wendell’s other little oddities (drawing three crosses in the dirt on the mound, always throwing the rosin bag down as hard as he could, and insisting figures in his contract end in 99 as a tribute to his jersey number) don’t seem so strange.

9. NASCAR Drivers

NASCAR_Peanut.jpg
Drivers in the top stock-car circuit have their share of superstitions, including green cars being bad luck and a hesitance to carry $50 bills. Possibly the most inexplicable, though, is their adamant refusal to deal with peanuts in their hulls. Specifically, the hulls seem to bother drivers since shelled peanuts or nuts in candy bars are perfectly kosher for the track.

No one is quite sure from where this superstition springs, but it has almost certainly been around since NASCAR’s beginnings. One theory dates the tradition back to a 1937 race in Nashville in which peanut shells were sprinkled on the cars of five drivers, all of whom crashed during the race. Another possible backstory holds that one of Junior Johnson’s crew was eating peanuts when an engine blew, and the blame fell on the nuts themselves. Others claim that when racing was gaining popularity in the 1930s, mechanics would often find peanut shells from the nearby grandstands in the cylinders of engines that had failed. Whatever the origin, don’t take peanuts to the track with you. Any other kind of nut or legume is okay, but peanut shells will only cause misfortune. [Image courtesy of SavvyCenter.com]

10. John Henderson, Jacksonville Jaguars

Lining up across from Jaguars defensive tackle Henderson would be pretty terrifying under the best circumstances; the behemoth stands 6’7” and weighs 335 pounds. The former University of Tennessee star has an even more intimidating pregame superstition, though: he has assistant team trainer Joe Sheehan slap him open-handed across the face as hard as Sheehan possibly can. According to the Florida Times-Union, Henderson and Sheehan began the ritual during the 2003 season as a way to get Henderson amped up for the game by taking the day’s first hit in a controlled environment in the locker room. Apparently the strategy works, as Henderson has twice made the Pro Bowl since Sheehan started unloading on him. This video illustrates the superstition in all its glory with some NSFW language:


Ethan Trex grew up idolizing Vince Coleman, and he kind of still does. Ethan co-writes Straight Cash, Homey, the Internet’s undisputed top source for pictures of people in Ryan Leaf jerseys.

Comments (24)
  1. An entire list on athlete superstitions, and NOTHING on Patrick Roy or other goalies actually talking to their goal posts? What gives?

  2. The no peanuts/no green car superstition actually comes from the Indianapolis 500. So does no car running the number 13 for obvious reasons.

  3. Two stories that I have heard about Rhomberg, include guys that liked to “mess” with him. Both start out with someone touching him and running away before he could get to him. One where he slept on the floor outside of a hotel room to touch the Manager in the morning. And the other is where he met the departing team at the airport the next morning.

  4. Yeah, what about Patrick Roy? I was reading this whole thing just waiting to get to him!

    Hell, I knew hockey players who wore the same socks and underwear all season – unwashed!

  5. John Henderson is the biggest man I’ve ever seen. My high school played against his in the Tennessee state football championship and they beat us or I should say he beat us. He looked like a man playing against middle schoolers. Then when he came to UT, it was absolutely ridiculous how much bigger he got.

  6. What about that MLB pitcher called “The Bird” Fidrych who used to yell at the ball and “arrange” the mound dirt and do all sorts of odd things?
    He had a lot of “lucky” quirks!

  7. I can’t believe Patrick Roy isn’t on the list. He never skated or stepped on a red or blue line while on the ice. He would also greet both of his goal posts and encourage them to help him out during the game. That’s at least as crazy as drinking a 2 liter of Dew or getting slapped in the face.

  8. Sounds more like Kevin Rhomberg had OCD than just being superstitious.

  9. Sorry, but these are lame. I mean the urinating on the hands was pretty good, but surely you could find wackier superstitions than most of these.

  10. There should be an all Danny Ferry edition of this list. Supposedly he would write things on his legs and cover it up with his socks, take showers fully clothed, and wouldn’t leave the locker room until he highlighted a perfect passage in a book he was reading.

  11. Sheeeshhh…nothing about Wade Boggs? Per Wikipedia: He ate chicken before every game (Jim Rice once called Boggs “chicken man”), woke up at the same time every day, took exactly 150 ground balls in practice, took batting practice at 5:17 and ran sprints at 7:17. His route to and from his position in the field beat a path to the home dugout. He drew the Hebrew word “Chai”, meaning “life”, in the batter’s box before each at-bat, though he is not Jewish.

  12. Funny how the pyramid system of sports leaves those at the top so mystified by thier success that they resort to these absurd beliefs to justify thier good fortune.

  13. No Pedro Martinez and his lucky midget?

  14. Wrestler thekid65 used to wear his wifes panties in the ring

  15. As a clinical OCD guy myself, Rhombergs quirks sound more like true obsessive compulsive disorder than superstition. Touching someone back is might be more about making things an even number than a need to touch back. One touch is an odd number, a touch back is an even number. Most OCD’s HATE odd numbers, be it doorknob turns, steps to the car, touches or anytihng else….

  16. Here’s a better one. Sumo wrestlers never wash their ‘loincloth’, EVER. To wash it would be to wash the strength out of their victories.

  17. I’d have to say that Caron Butler’s need for Mountain Dew isn’t such a superstition. It’s likely all that caffeine was the extra kick he needed to perform so well.

  18. Brendan Ryan, who’s trying to crack the bigs with the St. Louis Cardinals, has a whole set of odd things he does, including biting his front shoulder when he’s at bat and wearing high socks when he’s starting, but low socks when he comes in off the bench.

    Al Hrabosky used to psyche himself up on the back of the mound by yelling at the ball/himself/whoever when he came in to relieve.

    Besides the chicken thing, Wade Boggs would reportedly only drink Miller Lite, upwards of 50 cans on a flight from say, NY to Seattle.

    Everybody knows about not talking to the pitcher during a perfect game, but during Bob Gibson’s starts, nobody on the team would talk to him, ever. Teammates who attempted to talk to him during a game were nearly always told off and rarely tried it a second time.

    Larry Walker was obsessed with the number “3.” He set his alarm for 33 minutes past the hour, took practice swings in multiples of three, wore No. 33, was married on Nov. 3 at 3:33 p.m., and bought tickets for 33 disadvantaged kids when he played in Montreal, to be seated in Section 333 at Olympic Stadium.

  19. Didn’t Wendell also hit a deer with his car…. at the car wash? Not superstitious per se but damned funny.

  20. What about the NHL goalie, can’t remember which one (glenn hall or terry sawchuck maybe) that would have to vomit before each game and wouldn’t play if he didn’t. That guy was weirder than anyone on here.

  21. Wade Boggs and his chicken didn’t make the list?

  22. Wade Boggs’ chicken-eating is mentioned right in #4 Jason Terry’s entry.

  23. How is it that nobody mentioned Nomar’s wrist, hand, bat, prestidigitation routine?

  24. Kai Ellis, Defensive Tackle for the Winnipeg Blue Bombers, eats a giant meal before a game, then throws up all over himself while playing. Opposing players are to disgusted to block him with chunks of food all over his face mask and jersey. This is a ritual that actually works.

Comment

commenting policy