Kepler
Si certus es dubita
Wait, you know another fencer?
I said he was nice. Not smart.
Wait, you know another fencer?
Pac-12 going conference-only for fall sports.
Meaning Stanford will no longer get to open the season with a thrilling match-up against William & Mary to which I was going to bring a "James II Was Better" sign.
It's funny that the things a person can do for a lifetime, like tennis, golf, swimming, etc..., are always the first sports cut at every level of school.
In the United States it appeared first in private schools and then in YMCA and in the preaching of evangelists such as Dwight L. Moody.[SUP][23][/SUP] Scholar Iren Annus linked the growth of Muscular Christianity in the United States to broader societal changes which were occurring throughout the country, including the emancipation of women and the influx of immigrants who worked blue-collar jobs while white Anglo-Saxon Protestant men became increasingly white-collar. These factors contributed to increasing anxiety over masculinity among white males in the United States.[SUP][24][/SUP] Parodied by Sinclair Lewis in Elmer Gantry (though he had praised Oberlin College YMCA for its "positive earnest muscular Christianity") and out of step with theologians such as Reinhold Niebuhr, its influence declined in American mainline Protestantism.
At the same time, it made a significant impact on Evangelicalism in the United States, and was promoted by organizations as the Fellowship of Christian Athletes, Athletes in Action, and the Promise Keepers.[SUP][25][/SUP] Theodore Roosevelt was one of the most prominent adherents of Muscular Christianity in the United States.[SUP][26][/SUP] Roosevelt believed that, “There is only a very circumscribed sphere of usefulness for the timid good man”, a sentiment echoed by many at the time. Followers of Muscular Christianity ultimately found that the only solution to this was to connect faith to the physicality of the body.[SUP][27][/SUP]
An example sometimes given for US Muscular Christianity was the Men and Religion Forward Movement, organized by Fred Smith, a YMCA leader, in 1910. The movement held a mix of muscular, revivalistic and social gospel sensibilities, with work directed to evangelism, bible study, boys' work, mission, and social service. The organization hosted large revivals and campaigns throughout the US. Some 1.5 million men attended 7,000 events.[SUP][28][/SUP][SUP][29][/SUP]
The spread of Muscular Christianity led to many changes within the Catholic Church. The services were changed to cater more towards men and priests were required to be of a certain “manly” stature.[SUP][citation needed][/SUP] Priests who looked like this were thought to draw in more men like them. Protestant ministers in England and America argued that men were not truly Christians unless they were Muscular Christians.
Well if more people went to watch those sports...
How would you fund them then? It isnt like you can just run sports for free. Without the revenue sports the non-revs cant exist.
I understand the difficulty in funding youth sports, as we have them now, and I don't know enough about it to give you a constructive answer. And I understand this is purely anecdotal and from other cultures, but we've had foreign exchange students in our home who were far more active in things like running, biking, tennis, and other outdoor, life long skills but who had little or no experience with school sponsored spectator sports. Again, they were from places like Sweden, Turkey, and Brazil, and I know that does not compare well with the education/sports balance we have here. I was extremely active in HS sports, and my kids were as well, and I can see the benefit. But the emphasis seems to be in the wrong place, and Americans seem to grow quickly into overweight, inactive spectators.
Who spend big money on sports.
The ACC will play an 11-game season.
This will be 10 conference games and one non-con. Notre Dame will play the full schedule and will be eligible for the title game.
I'm sure the other Power-5 conferences are happy that someone made a move and they can continue printing TV money....
One question that will be interesting to see what happens- if a region still has outbreak problems, and that pops up in college football locally- what will the rest of the country do? Or even the conference? Will Miami or Wisconsin be shunned from their conferences, or will the conference shut down?
The TV contracts should be pretty bulky, given the number of eyes that they will have- there will be millions more potential eyes since they won't be at stadiums.
The SEC move is kind of unexpected- I thought they would follow the ACC with the longer schedule, including the NC game. But that's the smartest move if they actually intend to play. IMHO, the next step is to cancel the rest of the season if not the in-conference only schedule.
Still, I'm quite curious what they plan on doing if a region or a team forces games to be canceled.
I just read all these headlines "Big Ten announces they will..." or "ACC will..." and think
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