A Daily Show tweet: Sailing teams lodge protest over Greece releasing the Kracken. #Olympics#FakeSpoiler
A Daily Show tweet: Sailing teams lodge protest over Greece releasing the Kracken. #Olympics#FakeSpoiler
Just read that Kristin Armstrong won the women's cycling time trial today. So happy for the 2-time gold medalist from Boise, my town. Woo hoo!
Rules for competitive swimming pool temps: For swimming in both standard competition and the Olympics, FINA mandates a water temperature of between 25 to 28 degrees C, or between 77 and 82 degrees F. For water polo in both standard competition and the Olympics, FINA mandates 26 degrees C, or 79 degrees F, plus or minus one degree. For synchronized swimming in both standard competition and the Olympics, the FINA regulation temperature is 27 degrees C, or 81 degrees F, plus or minus one degree. Finally, for diving in both standard competition and the Olympics, the FINA regulation temperature is not less than 26 degrees C, or 79 degrees F.
Read more: http://www.livestrong.com/article/48...#ixzz22LA48n2v
The pool at my school is kept at competition temperature at all times because we have swimming and diving teams, much to the dismay of just about everyone else, who find it a little chilly.
“In the hour of adversity, be not without hope; for crystal rain falls from black clouds.”.
I definitely see what you're saying, but for me, having your subs play when your best players are healthy and able to play ensures that your team won't perform its best, and even if mild, is still tanking in my book. That said, I do think there is a difference between tanking in order to keep your strength for the next match (what the Japanese did) and tanking in order to face a particular opponent in next round (or to avoid facing a particular opponent in next round), aka what all the disqualified badminton pairs did. I do think the latter is more blameworthy than the former.
This kind of strategic withholding will always exist in sports with a pool system. At least in soccer they have teams from different pools play their matches at the same time, to avoid people trying to guess who their eventual opponents might be and determine their gameplan accordingly.
Last edited by tchaikovsky_177; 08-02-2012 at 12:55 AM.
That is interesting... Had the Japanese beaten the South Africans they would have played France in the QF instead of Brazil (if I understand the system correctly.... the Swedes, winner of Japan's group are currently set to play France in the QF, so I guess Japan would have taken its spot instead.) Are they really that afraid of France? Hmmm. It would be mighty hard to prove![]()
Your program sucks and your partner just fell: lay down and play dead or think Feck this and do a Th3A at the end of the program: Aliona Savchenko: Definition of a competitor
Bottom line for me is, if they tanked just to save themselves the pain of travelling, I really have very few problems with it.
if they tanked to avoid facing US/France and have an "easier" opponent in Brazil, it would bother me much more.But we'll never know. And as far as ESPN is concerned (which Skipaway brought up), it probably isn't the most unbiased source
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Last edited by tchaikovsky_177; 08-02-2012 at 01:40 AM.
The flower bouquets for the medal ceremonies looked great with the gymnasts, but they seem sort of small for the swimmers.
"The Devil is joining in, and that's never a good sign." Phil Liggett
Gender Equality has nothing to do with it. The IOC was really sold the Brooklyn Bridge when they agreed to Women's Ice Hockey. There have really only ever been two competitive nations: the US and Canada. Most other countries don't have regular women's hockey leagues have very few professional female players, and it really is not a promoted sport. At the Vancouver Olympics we saw games with Canada and the US that ended in scores such as 28-1 , 19-1, etc. The closest country to give either one a run for their money was Canada vs. Switzerland, which was 10-1, apparently the Canadians were told to hold back a little bit.
Baseball and Softball OTOH actually had a much bigger geographic spread. Baseball for example , is very popular in Japan, South Korea, The Dominican Republic, Canada, etc. Some of our more prominent recent major league players in the US have come from Japan and DR. Japan was the OGM in Beijing IIRC.
Last edited by escaflowne9282; 08-02-2012 at 05:13 AM.
Really? Badminton is quite widely played here too. Just because something isn't popular in the US doesn't mean it isn't popular elsewhere and vice versa.
Which was a bit of an upset as far as I recall. Doesn't change the fact that neither baseball nor softball are as geographically diverse as either badminton or table tennis to name just two sports.
To think that fun is simple fun, while earnest things are earnest, proves all too plain that neither one thou truthfully discernest.