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- Sep 14, 2011
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I harbor no illusions that "judged sports" won't overtake competitive sports at some future date. From the coverage I see, the fastest growing parts of the Olympics are those where winners and losers are decided by judges' criteria rather than more objective measures like how fast someone completed a given distance or how many times a ball went through a hoop. Don't get me wrong, participants in judged contests are every bit the athletes as those in competitive contests.This is, what Communism/socialism? If this happens, sports will be something that happened in the past. Sports is capitalism at its purest and best. Hard work and innovation, means payoff. No payoff, no desire to win. No sports. What is this guy thinking?
I can remember when the winner of the ski jumping "competition" wasn't necessarily the one that landed farthest down the hill because there was also an element of who looked the best accomplishing the jump. There was a time when jumpers using the now universal "V" ski formation lost "style" points (and thus competitions) to those who recorded shorter leaps but whose skis were parallel. I wonder if Dick Fosbury could have won the '68 Olympics had the high jump criteria included style points.
How many times have you heard Megan or Doris or whoever say that KML has the prettiest jump shot ever? How gorgeous where those two MoJeff moves against South Carolina where she started, hesitated, then blew past the defender? Or Kemba's ankle breaker against Pitt? Think there aren't people don't believe the sport would benefit by more of that sort of thing? It can be a small step to go from "the sport will benefit" to offering rewards, i.e., points for such behaviors. How will we know when those things happen? Someone will tell us, that's how.