When volunteering to be a part of a human obstacle, you have to anticipate the worst. That's why people making a wall in soccer cover their jungle buttons. And when used as a prop in a dunk contest, human obstacles should be wary of being the bowling pins to the dunker's bowling ball.Tyler Honeycutt won Turkish Dunk Contest, $2500 jumping over five players that measure 6-8 and 6-3. pic.twitter.com/miIAR3eBCn
— David Pick (@IAmDPick) January 15, 2017
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I'd maybe blame the loosely-packed human obstacles in the CBA instance (definitely not the dunker's fault)—Honeycutt's human obstacles, however, came in looking like a bunch of pros. Way to not get hurt, guys.