Pat McAfee hilariously shaves an Ohio State fan’s hair live on ESPN after he missed in their $50,000 kicking contest before Michigan showdown
- An Ohio State fan said Pat McAfee could have shaved his hair if he missed his kick
- Although it was a good attempt, the fan’s field goal went wide of the posts
- DailyMail.com provides all the latest international sports news
Pat McAfee ruthlessly shaved an Ohio State fan’s head after he missed a field goal during the $50,000 kicking contest on ESPN’s College GameDay show.
In the weekly spot, McAfee challenges fans at the stadium from which they broadcast to try to score a field goal in exchange for a cash prize.
But before Saturday’s colossal game between Michigan and Ohio State, a fan vowed to pay a humiliating fine if he missed his kick.
McAfee, a former NFL punter and kickoff specialist with the Indianapolis Colts, pulled the Ohio State fan out of the crowd after he said he could shave his head if he missed.
When he announced he was from Ohio, he was immediately booed by Michigan locals.
An Ohio State fan said Pat McAfee could shave his head if he missed ESPN’s kicking game
The fan’s attempt was impressive, but narrowly missed the posts outside Michigan’s stadium
McAfee wasted no time by immediately grabbing a razor and shaving through the fan’s hair
When asked how long he let his hair grow, he replied “eight months” before agreeing that McAfee could shave down to the middle of his head.
The excited fan asked the crowd: ‘What do we think? Am I going to make this?’
Whereupon they all booed him and one replied, “No shot.”
Then he shouted: ‘It doesn’t matter what you think!’.
The fan then stepped up and came within inches of making the kick with a brilliant attempt, but ultimately missed.
But McAfee showed no mercy and immediately began shaving the man’s head to create a line down the center of the man’s head.
“No money and a terrible haircut,” McAfee said at the end of the segment.
Michigan quarterback JJ McCarthy arrives at Michigan Stadium before the Ohio State game
A spot in the Big Ten championship game and a path to the College Football Playoff will be on the line when second-ranked Buckeyes played third-ranked Wolverines on Saturday in the Big House.
It will also mark the end of an era one of the greatest rivalries in sports.
With the Big Ten is expanding to 18 schools and eliminating divisions next season, there is a chance the Wolverines and Buckeyes will play twice in the next few years as it will be possible for them to match up in the conference title game after competing in the regular season have faced each other.
Jim Harbaugh will not be on the sidelines with his team for the third Saturday in a row and will sit out the final game of a Big Ten suspension for presiding over a program that the conference says broke its sportsmanship policy with a sign-stealing scheme.
Offensive coordinator Sherrone Moore will fill in for Harbaugh, who also missed the first three games a school suspension for violating NCAA rules to face Ohio State coach Ryan Day.