Monday, April 13, 2009

A View of Sports



I recently wrote of my lifetime love of sports but neglected to elucidate on my own view of what I consider to be true sports. I think my own evaluation of whether a pastime is a sport or just a game is based on whether or not there is a physical competition in play that comprises an athletic ability of some serious kind. The competition need not be restricted to competing against others but could be against oneself as in a timed event or an athletic ‘best.”

Within those parameters then I do not consider Golf a sport. It is a game. You try to hit the ball to a certain area and get it in a hole in the fewest amount of club swings. It can be played sufficiently well by anyone - - whether 90 yrs. old or a pre-teen. Jack Nicholson could still beat any average golfer. My grandson was a serious player at the age of 9 yrs. You can be fat (some pro golfers are) or tiny as some young women are who play with the pros. No athletic prowess is required.


Bowling is not a sport. It is a game. The fact that one may compete against others does not make it a sport. I was on a bowling team that included a man in his late 80s and he did very well. Children can bowl in competition.


The same criteria apply to games such as curling, pancake racing, dart board, pinball, horse shoes, chess and checkers. You may be a champion at any of these or the world’s best; however, you are not necessarily an athlete or participating in a sport.


By the same token I do count as sports the following: marathon running; track and field events; weight lifting; most Scottish Games events; bicycle racing; NASCAR racing; ping pong; volley ball; and, events that require athletic ability to be good at the sport. Some, such as professional wrestling, I consider sports even though they are merely exhibitions. Like tumbling and acrobatics it requires great athletic skill to perform. And I do consider hockey a sport although I sometimes wonder why the rules permit the violence of fist-fighting while other respectable sports severely punish such infractions. In basketball and even football such encounters require immediate rejection from the contest accompanied by monetary fines. But, there is no doubt that to play hockey professionally one must be very athletic. In the photo above is a classic example of a legend in that sport. Claude Lemieux, a New Jersey player who has returned to this sport at the age of 43 and was the participant in 3 Stanley Cup championships. He may not be pretty to look at but he is still a wonder to watch on the ice. Maybe they should wear boxing gloves instead of hockey gloves but - - - I am


Just Sayin’

3 comments:

  1. GREAT picture!!!!!! By the way, hockey gloves are padded just as much as boxing gloves. OH, and the hockey players ARE penalized for fighting, it's just that they pound the bejabbers out of the offending moron to show them they WON'T be messed with, and THEN they go do their time-out on the bench~ (during which, their team is 'down a man' so the other team has a good few minutes to TRY to score a goal against a team who is REALLY ticked off already at them!!)

    Question: Is Claude related to Mario Lemieux, who at the present time is a co-owner of my favorite team, the Penguins? (as well as one of their best all-time players~)

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  2. Although Mario is another great Hall-of-Fame player he is apparently no relative of Claude. Both were born near the same time. Claude has two sons by his first wife who both play hockey. He also has a younger brother, Jocylyn, who plays professionally. Incidentally, Claude has the same birth date as I (July 16)but is only half as old.
    Mario had a career that was troubled by injury and health issues. He is a recovering cancer patient (Hodgkins Lymphoma)and has had serious back problems. French Canadians are a tough breed.
    Five minutes in the penalty box is punishment? Months in the penalty box during a career of hooliganism didn't stop Claude. LOL

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  3. Mario was actually retired for medical reasons, then came out of retirement to play some more...

    One time, during his cancer era, he had just left the hospital from a treatment and went straight to the game (which was already underway), suited up, and went for it with everything he had: the Penguins won that game, need I even say?

    Mario is now getting Sidney Crosby lined up to be the next best in the entire history of NHL. Sidney is only 21 (a month younger than Meaghan), but is a multi-millionaire over again. He lives in the (Mario) Lemieux's house, can you even imagine what THEY do for fun???

    Oh, by the way, the Penguins have clinched a playoff berth for The Race to the Stanley Cup, they'll probably win it this year, after coming in 2nd place (2nd?? or 1st Runner up? I'm not sure what they call it in hockey) last year.

    Too neat for words~

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