Jim Valvano was a great man, coach, son, husband, and father. He was also a great speaker. His speech was structurally and emotionally perfect to me. I sat here and listened to it with more interest than any other speech in my entire life. He pushed his audience to the brink of every emotion in the book, while informing and persuading people of how life should be lived. This speech made a great impact on me and once I start telling people about it, I’m sure other people who have never heard it will feel the same way.…
A.) This poem is one of the most popular sports poems today because it teaches the good lesson of not to be to arrogant. B.) I think the poem does deserve this status because it teaches a good lesson to all athletes in the world.…
The Best Game Ever, by Mark Bowden, was a great book that talks about the 1958 NFL Championship game that helped transform the NFL into what it is today. It has exceeded all my expectations of the book and truly shows the impact this game had on the NFL. This was the first ever football game that was a national event, this was the first ever professional football teams viewed by millions. It would also be the first sudden death overtime game ever played in the NFL, Making the game that much more exciting. In 1958 Johnny Unitas, the Colt’s star quarterback and league’s Most Valuable Player award winner, was making $17,500 for the year, five years later Joe Namath would be earning $427,000 for the year, and this stat truly shows the impact this game had on the NFL. The game even had an impact on the author, he and every other kid in the world wanted Johnny Unitas’ high top cleats growing up, everyone wanted to be him. This was the beginning of athletes becoming celebrities in society. I was surprised to see that football wasn’t very popular back then, before this game football was a joke compared to our country’s pastime, baseball. Football is now easily the country’s most popular sport, organizations would grow to be more lucrative and be worth more than many small countries. I did expect the book to talk more about the actual game though, most of the book just talks about the teams and all the players on the team’s lives and what happened leading up to the game. Very little of the book is the actual game, there is also a good amount of the book talking about what happened to the players after the game, unfortunately, half of the players from that great 1958 Colt’s team are no longer around today. The players who are fortunate enough to still be alive today talk very fondly of the team and say it was the time of their lives. The author wrote the book to show others the transformation of the league and how it affected the nation, including himself. The…
play with. They used sticks for bats, and rocks for bases, and they made their…
Jim Brown was the best running back in his time of the NFL. He has won many awards for rushing.He was one of the first and most successful black men in the NFL in 1965. He was a great tackler.He was the greatest running back. He played lots of sports like basketball, lacrosse, and track. He went to Syracuse.His coach Collier gave; Jim Brown a chance to play when other coaches did not.Did you know, Jim Brown ranks 10th among NFL rushing yards leaders by total yards gained 12,312.…
One thing Finny was known for was his extraordinary natural talent. At Devon he dominated in every sport and game. His strength, agility, grace, and fluidity showed in any physical activity he participated in. Over the summer, Finny longed for an entertaining game to play. He picked up a medicine ball and declared we would be playing a new game about the war, “blitzball”. Although the game was extremely in favor of the defenders, Phineas managed to defeat the odds of the game of his own creation. I remember watching in amazement as Finny’s abilities shone. It was not just his amazing skill that made him a victor, it was also his winning spirit. Phineas showed unmeasured sportsmanship when playing with others; he even got a few awards for it. But the countless awards don’t encompass Finny’s love for sports. He was the embodiment of a champion.…
Through the passages,” Why We Run,” and “What Could Be Better Than A Touchdown,” it identifies the values between mental capability and physical power during any sports in general. Although, sports is most importantly accomplished based upon how our mental strength is used rather than physical prowess. Putting methods in action , the silver linings we see in the situations we face, and our determination to push ourselves is how our mental strength mostly has us achieve in sports.…
In “Hidden Intellectualism” composed by Gerald Graff, Graff argues how sports play a big part in the intellectual world because they contain components ranging from debates to evaluations, to intellectual systems. He states how sports made him a more intellectual being, and how schools should consider sports intellectual. Gerald Graff’s arguments that sports build intellectualism are ineffective because he lacks outside arguments, and backup to make his argument more credible.…
He was lucky enough to become a professional football player because of his hard work. His hard work continued to allow him to compete and taking 9th place in the World’s Strongest Man Competition. Weighing 315 pounds and not even training for this event showed Matuszak’s talent. Equally important was John’s biography Cruisin’ With the Tooz by Steve Delsohn, published in 1987. The biography is about John’s life story including his career, addiction, etc., which allowed others to see the type of man he was: professional football player, actor, humanitarian(glossary) and my 4th cousin. John Matuszak a Renaissance man?…
In the article he wrote, “The Sports Gene”, he argues that people who are successful are born with an innate talent, therefore, giving us minimal control over our lives. We are introduced to Donald Thomas, a very successful high jumper, who was able to reach the top at a very rapid speed as stated in the article, “Thomas advanced easily to the final, as did Stefan Holm” (Epstein). Thomas had not practiced the 10,000 hours that Gladwell argued in his article, but instead he had an Achilles’ tendon, which helped him. His innate ability was the key to success for Thomas and made him even more successful than other athletes, who trained some time in their lives. The other high jumper introduced was Stefan Holm, who unlike Thomas, reached the top with practice. As the article continues, Thomas is no longer able to keep rising to the top, but Holm on the other hand is. Thomas stayed in the same place unable to…
Jim Thorpe or also known as Wa-Tho-Huck to his family was football's first superstar. Jim Thorpe was a secret weapon on the Carlisle team. Jim Thorpe was great in track and field and baseball so he was pretty athletic. In those days they players played both offense and defense and so did Thorpe. Jim Thorpe played on the Carlisle one day against the powerful Harvard team. Harvard thought they could beat this team easily but because of Jim Thorpe, Carlisle secret weapon, Harvard was wrong (Buckley 6).…
What I knew was the fact he was a successful track and field athlete and he blossom during an era of segregation and discrimination. I also knew he was highly praised, publicized, and politicized amongst his peers due to the fact he excelled at his given sport of track and field. I choose this bibliography to learn more about Jesse Owens. His rises to success as well as his hardships throughout his lifetime. It was interesting to me because Jesse Owens was optimistic about changing the way American view African Americans by achieving his goals and working relentlessly to support his family and his…
In chapter 4 Out of Left Field, G. Abdel-Shehid and N. Kalman-Lamb discussed C.L.R James perception of sport. C.I.R. James wrote a book called “Beyond a Boundary” where he argued that magnificent athletic achievements have cultural value equal to the finest performance of the ballet or opera, although the concept of sport unfortunately never receive greater attention as art. As well, James explained that sport is not ideology used for the benefits of those in power, nor is it a distraction; however, the art of sport is a trait within every individual.…
Athletic trainers evaluate, advise, and treat athletes to assist recovery from injury, or maintain peak physical fitness (“29-9091 Athletic Trainers”). During the 5th century, Herodicus of Megara (aka father of sports medicine) was the first to combine sports with medicine. After World War I (1916) trainers played a bigger role, and began to work at the college level. A year later (1917) Dr. S.E. Bilik wrote “The Trainers Bible” (“History of Athletic Training”). Now athletic training is more advanced with its requirements and qualifications, working conditions and salary, it's days you spend listening and learning, and its future needs and developments.…
What is more, those sportsmen who excel in such sports bring name and fame to their country. They break records set by others and when they do so, the name of their country shines in the whole world.…