ESPN, the World Leader in Sports, is a network without a topic during the global shutdown that has stopped everything from football to Formula One racing. So, this week, they return to their roots, with a program that recalls the western company's origins of Australian football rules, demolitions, and professional billiards.
“The Ocho,” which is usually a bizarre gaming platform that the company operates during the August games, goes up on Sunday. That means sports fans can watch the Stazy Robot Fighting League Competition, the 46th Annual Cherry Pit-Spitting Configion Competition from Eau Clair, Michigan, and the 2019 Dead Diving World Championship.
More links to our article here at Polgon.com, 2019 Gold Tee World Championship airs tomorrow at 4:30 p.m., followed by the 2018 Classic Tetris World Championship. The complete schedule is here, and if the "World Ax Thowsing League 2019 World Championship" refuses to leave this page, I don't know what to tell you. There is also a National Stone Skipping Competition at 9:30 a.m.
This takes me back to my childhood, there, back The Soul Rail on Channel 2, my dad was sending it to the tourist show Putt-Putt – hosted by Billy Packer – and he was doing it for me and my brother And you wouldn't know, ESPN's Putt Putts Championship at 7:30 a.m. Sunday!
"Ocho" takes its name from 2004 Soup, where the titular game enters “ESPN 8,” which is a network on the network to find a home in any esoteric game, be it marble, hamburger, or a ball of Maryland Terrapins.