scholarly journals Staying Connected and Prepared for Collegiate Athletic Competitions During the COVID-19 Pandemic

2021 ◽  
Vol 3 ◽  
Author(s):  
Allie Reynolds ◽  
Alireza Hamidian Jahromi
2013 ◽  
Vol 57 (1) ◽  
pp. 12-21 ◽  
Author(s):  
José Luis Pérez Triviño

Abstract The cyborgization of sport has occupied a noticeable role in the fields of sport and medicine in recent years due to the fact that this issue calls into question the very foundations of contemporary sport. As a result, it gives rise to doubt about whether cyborg athletes should be able to take part in different athletic competitions, and if they are allowed, under what circumstances. After examining the impact of enhancing implants and prosthesis in sport, I have considered which objections can be raised to this particular sort of enhancement. In this regard, I think that several aspects have to be taken into account: 1. The possibility of producing severe harm to the athletes; 2. The effect it has on equality among athletes when the improvement grants an obvious advantage; 3. The dehumanization of sport, and 4. The aesthetic problem My position has been to temper the “moral panic” that some may feel given the progressive (and future) use of enhancing implants and prosthesis as used by (cyborg)athletes.


2009 ◽  
Vol 47 (1) ◽  
pp. 19-39 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kevin S. Fridy ◽  
Victor Brobbey

ABSTRACTThere is a common perception in Ghana that Accra Hearts of Oak is the soccer club of the National Democratic Congress, and Kumasi Asante Kotoko that of the New Patriotic Party. In this paper we explore the roots of these perceptions by examining the social history of these two clubs specifically, and the Ghanaian soccer league system in general, with an eye for the actors, practices and events that injected political airs into purportedly ‘apolitical’ athletic competitions. With this social history clearly defining the popularly perceived ‘us’ versus ‘them’ of the Hearts/Kotoko rivalry, we analyse on the basis of a modest survey some of the assumptions these widely held stereotypes rely upon. We find that ethnicity and location matter both in terms of predicting one's affinity for a given soccer club and partisan inclinations. These factors do not, however, completely dispel the relationship between sports and politics as spurious. Though not conclusive, there is enough evidence collected in the survey to suggest that one's preferred club, even when controlling for ethnicity and location, does have an effect on one's partisan leanings, or perhaps vice versa. This finding highlights the independent role that often-understudied cultural politics can play.


2019 ◽  
Vol 68 ◽  
pp. 99-117
Author(s):  
Christian Mann

At several occasions during his campaigns, Alexander the Great staged gymnic, hippic and musical competitions. Until now scholars have assumed that the king founded new festivals, but the ancient evidence makes it quite clear that it were singular, non-recurrent events. Competitions like that, for which I suggest the term “campaign agones”, are also known from other Greek armies. “Campaign agones” should be added to the well-known categories (competitions at recurrent festivals, funeral contests, gymnasium agones) as a distinct, although less important, category in the Greek agonistic world.


Author(s):  
Nick Fisher

A defining feature of archaic Greece was the explosion of athletic competitions at many levels up to the great Panhellenic games. Panhellenic victories brought prestige to the cities, who offered their victors considerable honours and material rewards. This chapter seeks to identify diverse connections, in different cities, between athletic training and competition and the regulation of membership in these developing communities. It suggests that in some places (Sparta, Cretan cities) athletic performance was used as part of complex socialization procedures and as a qualification for community membership via small-scale commensality associations. At Athens, athletic prowess was encouraged but not imposed, and citizenship was probably opened, through pseudo-kinship subgroups, to athletes along with other skilled immigrants; comparable practices may be suspected in other athletically ambitious cities (Corinth, Argos, and Aegina). In wealthy cities in Sicily and South Italy, desperate for Panhellenic success, athletic achievement inspired the positive recruitment of new citizens.


Author(s):  
Angela Gleason

It is widely accepted that the Middle Ages are where sports went to die. There is truth in this, but it is far from the whole story. Sports and pastimes were extremely local in the Middle Ages, making them harder for the historian to see. Compounding this, sources of the Middle Ages survive primarily in Latin, a language controlled by a ruling class that was generally unfriendly to popular expressions of entertainment. Sports in the Middle Ages, however, are neither scarce nor undiscoverable. A wide variety of popular medieval games, team sports, and athletic competitions are found in an equally wide variety of historical sources. Taken as a corpus—and including overlooked vernaculars such as Irish, English, and Norse—the sources reveal that societies of the Middle Ages had both a broad array and a deep engagement with sports. It is up to the modern historian to reveal them.


1906 ◽  
Vol 26 ◽  
pp. 4-22 ◽  
Author(s):  
E. Norman Gardiner

The combination of boxing and wrestling known as the pankration was a development of the primitive rough and tumble. To get his opponent down and by throttling, pummelling, biting, kicking, to reduce him to submission is the natural instinct of the savage or the child. But this rough and tumble is not suitable for an athletic competition: it is too dangerous and too undisciplined. To the early Greeks, athletics were the recreation of a warrior class, they were not the serious business of life or even a profession, and in an age of real warfare the warrior's life was too valuable to be endangered for sport. Moreover, without some form of law athletic competitions are impossible, and in the growth of law the simpler precedes the more complex Hence it was only natural that particular forms of fighting, such as boxing and wrestling, should be systematized first, and so made suitable for competitions before any attempt was made to reduce to law the more complicated rough and tumble of which they both formed parts. Wrestling and boxing were known to Homer, but not the pankration, and Greek tradition was following the natural order of evolution in assigning the introduction at Olympia of wrestling to the 18th, of boxing to the 23rd, and of the pankration to the 33rd Olympiad.


Author(s):  
Gary Smith ◽  
Jay Cordes

Patterns are inevitable and we should not be surprised by them. Streaks, clusters, and correlations are the norm, not the exception. In a large number of coin flips, there are likely to be coincidental clusters of heads and tails. In nationwide data on cancer, crime, or test scores, there are likely to be flukey clusters. When the data are separated into smaller geographic units like cities, the most extreme results are likely to be found in the smallest cities. In athletic competitions between well-matched teams, the outcome of a small number of games is almost meaningless. Our challenge is to overcome our inherited inclination to think that all patterns are meaningful; for example, thinking that clustering in large data sets or differences among small data sets must be something real that needs to be explained. Often, it is just meaningless happenstance.


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