Who sharted? The most embarrassing moments for Patriots, Eagles on way to Super Bowl 52

Joe Rodgers

Who sharted? The most embarrassing moments for Patriots, Eagles on way to Super Bowl 52 image

MINNEAPOLIS —  Justin Timberlake isn't the only one looking to move on from an embarrassing moment.

Ahead of Super Bowl 52 and Timberlake's return to the halftime show following the 2004 wardrobe malfunction with Janet Jackson, Omnisport talked with Terrell Owens and several Eagles and Patriots players about their most embarrassing moments on and off the field.

What they had to say was entertaining to say the least. 

Terrell Owens

"I don’t really like the meme everybody shares where I shed tears for my quarterback Tony Romo. I’m not a pretty crier, so that’s a little bit more embarrassing than anything."

Eagles tackle Halapoulivaati Vaitai

"I kinda farted during a play but it was more than a fart if you know what I mean. Luckily we were going into halftime so I was able to clean up real quick. I think it was the food I ate before the game. Yeah, that was embarrassing because it kinda smelt bad. That’s it other than peeing my pants, I did that back in high school — I had to go pee, but they wouldn’t let us." 

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Pats punter Ryan Allen

"Couple of months ago I was walking and I had a plastic bag full of groceries and I was walking across an insanely busy street in downtown Boston and the thing broke mid-intersection and everything went in every direction and not one person helped me, and there was like a group of 30 people around me and I was sitting there picking it up and I was getting honked at."

Eagles guard Chance Warmack

"Jumping offsides because they call your name and everybody is like, ‘Who is that guy?’ Then they talk about it for about two minutes — you don’t want it to go to commercial because then they talk about it for like four minutes."

Patriots tight end Jacob Hollister

"One time I walked into the girls bathroom at an airport and the place was packed, so that was pretty embarrassing so I sprinted out of there."

Eagles defensive end Derek Barnett

"I still have a big head, but when I was younger, my body was a lot smaller and my head was probably the same size. They used to call me ‘big head’ to all my friends, and they still make fun of me for my head being big."

Eagles defensive end Steven Means

"I was in like second grade and I was in school and had all my books and all my crayons in my hand and I slipped on the stairs and fell down the steps and it was in front of all my classmates. So it’s between that and at (track and field) Sectionals in Ohio I tripped over a hurdle and fell in front of everybody. All I hear is my dad in the background screaming, ‘Get up and finish!'"

Patriots receiver Cody Hollister

"One time I went through a whole team meeting with a thing of toilet paper hanging out my back, and I didn’t know it until one of my guys told me."

Eagles cornerback Rasul Douglas

"This when I was about 10 or 11, I was out skating with my friends and I wasn’t listening to the DJ and he was like ‘all the advanced skaters stay on the floor, everyone else exit.’ In New Jersey everyone goes to the skating rink and we all skate from like 6-9 p.m., but there is a 30-minute period where only the advanced skaters are on doing their tricks. So I didn’t hear the DJ … and he called me out over the speakers, ‘Excuse me that guy right there, can you please exit, you are not an advanced skater.’ My family talks about that all the time. They bring it up every  time I bring someone over."

Eagles punter Donnie Jones 

"It was in 2000, Nick Saban's first year at LSU. We were playing Ole Miss and I was not feeling well at the time — I had a high fever and had been sick the entire week. So the snap came on a punt and the ball hit me right in the shoulder pads, it went right through my hands. So I pick up the ball and try to punt it. As I go to kick it, this guy takes my shoulder pad from the back and pulls me so I’m falling back as my leg goes up and the ball goes straight up in the air, doesn’t even come close to crossing the line of scrimmage. One of our players catches it and runs and they catch him a yard short of the first down."

Joe Rodgers