Football?
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could it be swimming? you don't cross that finishing line you just touch it.
The gender of a person does not matter when it comes to finishing a race. Some women cross the finish line ahead of men because they are faster.
A serif is the small cross-line finishing the stroke of a letter in some fonts.
The Finishing Line was created in 1977.
The blue line, the red line, the goal line, the bench, the crease.... Etc forwards are human they can cross over most things. If I take your question literally your feet do forward crossovers... They can do it backwards too!
Along side at the same level (think of runners crossing a finishing line "breast to breast" they are abreast of each other and finish at the same time).
The cast of The Finishing Line - 2009 includes: Rupert Houseman
Winning a Trifecta pari-mutuel wager requires the selection of the first three runners to cross the finish line in a single race in the correct or exact order.
Yes you can throw as many passes as you want as long as you or the ball has not crossed the line of scrimmage, but once you or the ball has crossed that line, you may not forward lateral the ball to another player, the pass must be a backward lateral.
There are two methods of timing a marathon: Gun Time or Real Time or Official Time: The time from the sound of the starter's signal to the time the runner crosses the finish line. Real Time or Chip Time: The time it takes to go from crossing the starting line to crossing the finish line. Races will supply runners with a computer chip, programmed with the runner's personal and race information, that is attached to one of their shoes, usually a shoelace. Some chips come with velcro and are attached around the ankle. The chip records when you cross the starting line, which has a mat that activates the timing, and when you cross the finish line, which also has a mat to deactivate the timing. Most large marathons use chip time since it allows runners to line up at the start with folks that can run about the same pace. They won't have to worry about pushing through slower paced runners to get to the front or being pushed by faster paced runners.