This quarterback spent his final NFL season as a backup for the Patriots. In college, he earned the Heisman trophy as a Boston College Eagle:
(Doug Flutie)
This former Houston Rocket is both the owner of another of his former teams, the Shanghai Sharks, and the chairman of the Chinese Basketball Association:
(Yao Ming)
"Ask not what your country can do for you" is followed by these eight words:
("Ask what you can do for your country")
With 340,000 square feet of gaming, this is the largest casino in the United States:
(Foxwoods)
This broadcaster opens his telecasts, especially The Masters, with "Hello, Friends"; it was originally done to identify himself to his father, an Alzheimer's victim:
(Jim Nantz)
This QB was the 1st overall pick in the 1993 NFL draft. He led the Pats to Super Bowl XXXI. (Hint: He was Brady's direct predecessor):
(Drew Bledsoe)
This is the largest country that borders China:
(Russia)
"Blessed are the meek, for they shall" do this, said Jesus Christ:
(Inherit the Earth)
In 2015, this Connecticut-born pop and blues guitarist and singer formed the touring band Dead & Company with three members of the Grateful Dead:
(John Mayer)
Still getting work at age 81, this man was with ABC Sports for nearly 3 decades and more recently with NBC. "Do you believe in miracles? YES!" is his famous call from the 1980 Winter Olympics:
(Al Michaels)
A proponent of Fresh sandwiches (honest!), this former Patriot ('92-'98) is a Boston sports media fixture today:
(Scott Zolak)
When translated from English to Mandarin, the famous slogan of this company became, "Eat your fingers off":
(KFC)
Also written after a time of civil war, Pericle's 431 BCE funeral oration was used as the blueprint for this speech, more than 2,000 years later:
(Gettysburg Address)
Known as the father of American education, this famous dictionary compiler was born in what is today West Hartford:
(Noah Webster)
He served as play-by-play man for the Dodgers for 67 years, but his national call of the 1986 Buckner/Red Sox debacle was PAINFUL!:
(Vin Scully)
This QB took over for Tom Brady in 2008 after Tom was injured:
(Matt Cassel)
For the last time, you can't see this from near-Earth orbit:
(Great Wall)
Time's Man of the Year award and the youngest recipient ever to be awarded the Nobel Peace Prize were two of the immediate accolades for the orator of this August 28, 1963, speech:
("I Have A Dream")
Connecticut's largest factory is in Stratford and manufactures helicopters for this aircraft company:
(Sikorsky Aircraft)
His name is on your NFL video game series, probably because he never had a losing season as an NFL coach and won 16 Sports Emmy Awards as a broadcaster:
(John Madden)
The longest-tenured Pats QB, this man played SIXTEEN seasons for N.E. from 1975-1990:
(Steve Grogan)
Popular among marines for "to be enthusiastic," this Chinese-adapted phrase means "work together":
(Gung Ho)
"Atoms for Peace" was a 1953 speech to the United Nations by this world leader:
(Dwight D. Eisenhower)
He was the only U.S. president born in Connecticut:
(George W. Bush)
"You're a phony, and that thing on your head comes from the tail of a pony" is one of MANY playful barbs Muhammed Ali directed at this broadcaster. This sportscaster was on the first team to call Monday Night Football games:
(Howard Cosell)