T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
361.1 | It's as plain as the nose on our face | DECLNE::REESE | ToreDown,I'mAlmostLevelW/theGround | Fri Mar 24 1995 13:14 | 4 |
| Binder,
Jennifer Capriati also comes to mind.
|
361.2 | | SMURF::BINDER | vitam gustare | Fri Mar 24 1995 13:14 | 2 |
| Not to rathole the discussion quite this early, but who is Jennifer
Capriati?
|
361.3 | | GRANPA::MWANNEMACHER | NRA member in good standing | Fri Mar 24 1995 13:17 | 3 |
|
Tennis player.
|
361.4 | | MPGS::MARKEY | Specialists in Horizontal Decorum | Fri Mar 24 1995 13:17 | 9 |
|
Jennifer Capriati:
A young pro tennis star. I think she was winning major tournaments
in her mid-teens. Isn't she also the one who had some falling out
with the law relating to shop-lifting, and later had drug problems
as well?
-b
|
361.5 | | POLAR::RICHARDSON | KFC and tandem potty tricks | Fri Mar 24 1995 13:19 | 6 |
| A good argu(e)ment for obtaining a good education and a degree under an
athletic scholarship is, what if you get injured or lose your good
health? What will you do then? Putting all your eggs in one basket is
always very risky.
Glenn
|
361.6 | | SMURF::BINDER | vitam gustare | Fri Mar 24 1995 13:20 | 2 |
| The risk of injury was cited by Nyad as the reason for these
$50-million contracts.
|
361.7 | | POLAR::RICHARDSON | KFC and tandem potty tricks | Fri Mar 24 1995 13:22 | 2 |
| So, they are guaranteed to receive this money, (ir)regardless of
capacity?
|
361.8 | Pro choice for pros.... | PERFOM::LICEA_KANE | when it's comin' from the left | Fri Mar 24 1995 13:23 | 17 |
| What kind of bunch of paternalistic crap is this?
What kind of people can say with a straight face that someone who is
18 is not an adult?
Ding-dong.
You are 18. You are an adult. Act like it, or suffer the consequences.
Unbelievable. A nation where people want to execute 12 year olds,
but who don't believe that 18 year olds are adults. Unbelievable.
(All this has *nothing* *NOTHING* to do with minors in sport.)
-mr. bill
|
361.9 | | MPGS::MARKEY | Specialists in Horizontal Decorum | Fri Mar 24 1995 13:25 | 14 |
|
As to the question at hand:
Despite the fact that the schools have people who attend only
to prepare for careers as professional athletes, the schools
make a great deal of money, which benefits everyone, including
the other students. I really don't think it's a terrible thing
to have students who may not meet the highest academic standards,
contribute in other ways.
And generally, they are too immature to make a go of it in
"the real world" anyway.
-b
|
361.10 | | POLAR::RICHARDSON | KFC and tandem potty tricks | Fri Mar 24 1995 13:31 | 2 |
| A lot of athletes are also very good students. It centers around self
discipline.
|
361.11 | | OOTOOL::CHELSEA | Mostly harmless. | Fri Mar 24 1995 13:31 | 4 |
| Re: .9
I don't see why they should go through the farce of calling them
students, then.
|
361.12 | | SMURF::BINDER | vitam gustare | Fri Mar 24 1995 13:32 | 8 |
| .8
Ding dong.
If you were fully adult at 18, the law would acknowledge that by
lowering the drinking age to 18. In fact, the drinking age was RAISED
back to 21 after it became painfully obvious that 18- and 19-year-olds
could NOT be trusted to behave in an adult manner.
|
361.13 | | MPGS::MARKEY | Specialists in Horizontal Decorum | Fri Mar 24 1995 13:35 | 9 |
| >I don't see why they should go through the farce of calling them
>students, then.
Well, they are students in a sense, it's just that their
"major" is basketball, baseball, etc... I can go to
college and learn to be an engineer, why shouldn't someone
go to college to learn to be a pro athlete?
-b
|
361.14 | | WECARE::GRIFFIN | John Griffin ZKO1-3/B31 381-1159 | Fri Mar 24 1995 13:38 | 5 |
| I'd like to see all big-money sports totally removed from higher
education.
|
361.15 | Damn straight I was an adult. What were you, a child? | PERFOM::LICEA_KANE | when it's comin' from the left | Fri Mar 24 1995 13:43 | 14 |
| re: .12
| If you were fully adult at 18....
| [ranting about drinking age deleted]
I was fully adult at 18.
Relying on the support of rabid reactionary republicans who held highway
funds hostage to force the states to raise the drinking age is very weak
indeed.
A clue. When I was 18, the drinking age in my state was 18.
-mr. bill
|
361.16 | | POLAR::RICHARDSON | KFC and tandem potty tricks | Fri Mar 24 1995 13:47 | 4 |
| That would be impossible in the U.S. but would it make anything better?
Incidently, there is no big money sports in higher education in Canada.
We have good universities despite this fact.
|
361.17 | | HELIX::MAIEWSKI | | Fri Mar 24 1995 13:47 | 4 |
| If you are old enough to fight for your country and old enough to vote, then
you are old enough to play in the NBA.
George
|
361.18 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Fri Mar 24 1995 13:47 | 7 |
| Ding dong.
If you were fully adult at 30, the law would acknowledge that by
lowering the age at which you can be President to 30. The age at
which you can be President should be RAISED to 85 because it's
painfully obvious that every President ranging in age from Kennedy
to Reagan could NOT be trusted to behave in an adult manner.
|
361.19 | | PENUTS::DDESMAISONS | no, i'm aluminuming 'um, mum | Fri Mar 24 1995 13:48 | 13 |
|
>> Well, they are students in a sense, it's just that their
>> "major" is basketball, baseball, etc...
so they should perhaps offer courses.
Dribbling 101
The Art of the Free Throw
Spiking: When is it appropriate?
Who's on first?: The Perpetual Conundrum
things like that.
|
361.20 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Fri Mar 24 1995 13:49 | 1 |
| I'd support Dribbling 101 as long as it was open to non-majors.
|
361.21 | | SWAM2::SMITH_MA | | Fri Mar 24 1995 13:58 | 9 |
| Student is not synonomous with adult.
People go to school at all ages.
I agree that age should not be a factor in determining someone's, er,
thrustability...however, it is a major problem in our school system
that athletic students get ushered through curriculum that they have
trouble with by the schools themselves to keep them playing and keep
the money flowing. That is the biggest crime I see in this issue.
|
361.22 | | MPGS::MARKEY | Specialists in Horizontal Decorum | Fri Mar 24 1995 14:00 | 19 |
|
> so they should perhaps offer courses.
> Dribbling 101
> The Art of the Free Throw
> Spiking: When is it appropriate?
> Who's on first?: The Perpetual Conundrum
> things like that.
Actually, the have things like this... sort of. One of the
schools I went to had a "physical education" major... their
"labs" consisted of spending their time working out,
playing sports, and (I especially like this part) learning
how to wash themselves. Yes, personal hygiene was one of
the courses they had to take... too bad they didn't offer
this course to the computer science majors... :-) :-)
-b
|
361.23 | Wiser, perhaps ? | GAAS::BRAUCHER | | Fri Mar 24 1995 14:04 | 5 |
|
Mike Tyson is about to be released from jail. The young lady, who
appears none the worse for wear by a recent photo, is now rich.
bb
|
361.24 | | WECARE::GRIFFIN | John Griffin ZKO1-3/B31 381-1159 | Fri Mar 24 1995 14:05 | 2 |
| I heard on the news that Tyson will now face a civil suit.
|
361.25 | | NEMAIL::BULLOCK | | Fri Mar 24 1995 14:07 | 23 |
|
A number of underclassmen who've left college early and have gone
into the NBA say that one of the major obstacles that they found
out was that their bodies had not matured enough to take the
"pounding".
Take Shawn Kemp for instance (forward Seattle Supersonics),..after
his sophmore year he entered the NBA,.....very physically
developed at nineteen,....he thought his body was "falling apart"
half way through the season.
In most instances,....there's a major difference physically between
a "late teen" and someone in their late twenties.
Of course there are exceptions,......Shaquille O'Neal,.....
....Chris Webber.......
.....those "big dollars" also help in forgetting about the abuse.
Ed
|
361.26 | Yup, it wuz razed... | GAAS::BRAUCHER | | Fri Mar 24 1995 14:22 | 8 |
|
I recall meeting a couple who were 19, and had been going to
bars for over a year, and were "illegalized" as the drinking
age was upped to 21. They got really sloshed the week before.
Didn't happen to me - too old.
bb
|
361.27 | | SWAM2::SMITH_MA | | Fri Mar 24 1995 14:24 | 3 |
| >.....those "big dollars" also help in forgetting about the abuse.
yuck.
|
361.28 | | SOLVIT::KRAWIECKI | Yap! Yap! Yap! Yap! Yap! Yap! Yap! | Fri Mar 24 1995 14:38 | 26 |
|
At 18, one may classified as an adult, but that does not mean he/she
has the maturity to make any sort of "adult" decisions.
Some people mature faster than others. Is it still statistically true
that girls mature faster than boys?
My son is 21 (chronologically), but about 16 otherwise... no big deal.
He knows it, I know it and so does the rest of the world. He is
maturing quickly though in today's "adult" world.
As to the initial story in .0...
Most athletes are "discovered" early on in their lives. They are then
groomed, coddled, protected... whatever throughout their whole lives.
They are taught to think that they are somehow different/better than
the common masses, and react accordingly to where
laws/rules/regulations... just about anything doesn't pertain to them.
They are a product of our times, and our problem. Sometimes we have
to solve it the hard way...
First off, stop the treatment as noted above from an early age.
Secondly, cut the cancer out asap.. even though it may hurt...
Greed is an evil...
|
361.29 | To me it's a classic example | DECLNE::REESE | ToreDown,I'mAlmostLevelW/theGround | Fri Mar 24 1995 14:41 | 19 |
| I mentioned Jennifer Capriati because she was pushed through the
tennis world very hard by her parents. She was playing the
biggest names in pro tennis by the time she was 14/15 years of
age.
An article I read on her said she had been pleading with her
parents for quite a long time to allow her to attend high school
with her friends and just be a "normal" teenager for awhile.
Apparently her pleas feel on deaf ears; last year she starting
rebelling in a major league way. She's now had several brushes
with the law, cocaine, heroin and other drugs found in a motel
room that was raided by the police where Capriati partied with
some friends.
The girl is a very gifted tennis player; she wanted some down
time to enjoy life as a teenager. She was burned out, her parents
wouldn't listen; now there are doubts she'll make it back into
tennis. Who knows, perhaps Jennifer will be happier without
tennis.
|
361.30 | ....just ask Nancy Kerrigan. | NEMAIL::BULLOCK | | Fri Mar 24 1995 14:59 | 13 |
|
The so called individual sports,.....tennis,..figure skating,..
....gymnastics,...etc.,...take kids away from their peers at
an extremely early age,....resulting in poor interpersonal skills
and an abundance of other problems. At least with team sports,
kids aren't isolated or "taken away" to live within a small
circle of mainly adults.
Ed
|
361.31 | | MAIL2::CRANE | | Fri Mar 24 1995 15:03 | 3 |
| If not everyone is mature enough at 18 should we allow them to vote? I
know, I know, if your old enough to fight your old enough to vote. I`m
not sure that I beleive that in a lot of case`s though.
|
361.32 | | POLAR::RICHARDSON | KFC and tandem potty tricks | Fri Mar 24 1995 15:08 | 1 |
| cases.
|
361.33 | | HELIX::MAIEWSKI | | Fri Mar 24 1995 15:11 | 18 |
| RE <<< Note 361.31 by MAIL2::CRANE >>>
> If not everyone is mature enough at 18 should we allow them to vote? I
> know, I know, if your old enough to fight your old enough to vote. I`m
> not sure that I beleive that in a lot of case`s though.
Well the slogan "if your old enough to fight you are old enough to vote"
doesn't necessarily mean that if you are mature enough to fight you are mature
enough to vote.
That slogan came about because during the Vietnam war kids felt that if your
country was going to draft you and force you to fight in a war then you should
have some voice in deciding whether or not that war should take place.
I say let'em vote. Look at the clowns the adults elect to office, can the
kids really do any worse?
George
|
361.34 | | NEMAIL::BULLOCK | | Fri Mar 24 1995 15:11 | 9 |
|
re .27
Would you not take the money?
Ed
|
361.35 | | SWAM2::SMITH_MA | | Fri Mar 24 1995 15:24 | 3 |
| Money would not make me forget about abuse. Nor would it excuse or
justify abuse. If the condition of the money meant that I would have
to forget, excuse or justify, then no, I would not take the money.
|
361.36 | | CONSLT::MCBRIDE | aspiring peasant | Fri Mar 24 1995 15:30 | 10 |
| The abuse is from the grueling workout scheduels and playing with
others that are larger, stronger, faster, meaner etc. It is not
corporal punishment though that happens also in some rookie hazing
events. It is physically exacting for the younger players to keep up let
alone compete with some/many/most of the veterans. This is how
they become seasoned and better themselves. It's also their job.
Like the saying goes, if you're going to run with the big dogs, you
gotta get off the porch.
Brian
|
361.37 | | CSC32::J_OPPELT | Whatever happened to ADDATA? | Fri Mar 24 1995 15:35 | 36 |
| <<< Note 361.5 by POLAR::RICHARDSON "KFC and tandem potty tricks" >>>
> A good argu(e)ment for obtaining a good education and a degree under an
> athletic scholarship is, what if you get injured or lose your good
> health? What will you do then? Putting all your eggs in one basket is
> always very risky.
Many of the athletes who are good enough to turn pro before
graduation are good enough to get a hefty signing bonus too.
A million dollars just to sign. Play for just one year and get
another million or more, and who needs a livelihood to pay the
bills after that? They are set for life (financially) just
like that.
Now, maybe you are asking, "What will they do with their LIVES
at that point...".
Well, if their career-ending injuries were not so debilitating
that they would still be able to use their education (had they
had one) then why couldn't they use their post-injury life to
finish the education that they abandoned to turn pro early?
We've come full circle.
It is my belief that a person who is physically capable of (and
qualified for) turning pro should be allowed to do so. Playing
the sport is not the same as being in adult situations. Whatever
constraints the student-athlete had from being absorbed into the
adult world as a student can still be applied to him/her as a
pro. Let the parent/guardian manage it.
The problems with the bad-apple athletes who are used as examples
in these arguments did not come from their eventual pro-status.
They were long-festering problems that most times existed
throughout their upbringing. Turning pro was just the popping
of the pimple.
|
361.38 | | POBOX::BATTIS | Contract Studmuffin | Fri Mar 24 1995 15:36 | 8 |
|
Marla
Ed was refering to the "physical" abuse of the body one takes in pro
sports. ie. the poundings from football, rebounding in basketball etc.
I'm not sure to what extent you meant by abuse.
Mark
|
361.39 | | POLAR::RICHARDSON | saving my baloney | Fri Mar 24 1995 15:42 | 2 |
| Well, I would imagine that if an education was important to you, you
would complete university before going pro.
|
361.40 | | CSC32::J_OPPELT | Whatever happened to ADDATA? | Fri Mar 24 1995 15:53 | 10 |
| To most pro-bound student athletes, college is merely the next
stepping stone. For them, education is not a priority.
Still, there are plenty of examples of pro-quality athletes who
chose to finish their educations before turning pro. Education
*WAS* important to them.
And there are plenty of examples of athletes who turned pro
early and then finished their degree during or after their pro
career.
|
361.41 | ? | NEMAIL::BULLOCK | | Fri Mar 24 1995 16:15 | 10 |
|
re .35
Hello.
Ed
|
361.42 | I I I I I | POLAR::WILSONC | | Sat Mar 25 1995 07:02 | 4 |
| b b bo bo bo boo boom
chris
|
361.43 | 8^) | POWDML::LAUER | Little Chamber of Fuzzy Faces | Sat Mar 25 1995 08:28 | 2 |
|
<-- go back to sleep.
|
361.44 | | SUBPAC::SADIN | One if by LAN, two if by C | Sat Mar 25 1995 09:21 | 5 |
|
'allo mz_deb...top of the morning to ya....
|
361.45 | Oksana | SWAM2::GOLDMAN_MA | Walking Incubator, Use Caution | Mon Mar 27 1995 15:24 | 22 |
| Personal observation - I think that Oksana Biaul is another example of
a fine athlete with amazing potential, thrust into the "big time"
before she was really ready. Her youth and her balletic grace have often
lead judges (including at the '94 Olympics) to overlook her many
not-quite tripled triple jumps and her two-footed landings.
Since the Olympics, Oksana has (like so many others) gone
temporarily-professional, raising money for her next Olympic bid.
Unfortunately, while her grace and dance skills are improving with age,
her stamina and technical excellence have been decreasing this season.
While she used to include 7-8 jumps in every program, she now does only
2-3, and at least one is an intentional double jump, and she still only
rarely lands the triples as real triples.
Sports commentary heard from 2 different sources says that the skating
world feels that Oksana was pushed *much* too hard to join the pro-tour
and compete after knee surgery last fall. Many feel that she may never
fully recover because of this. At 16, her body is still developing,
requiring much more time to rest and re-train the repaired knee than
she was allowed by her coach and her financial needs/desires.
M.
|
361.46 | | HELIX::MAIEWSKI | | Mon Mar 27 1995 15:39 | 28 |
| RE <<< Note 361.45 by SWAM2::GOLDMAN_MA "Walking Incubator, Use Caution" >>>
> Since the Olympics, Oksana has (like so many others) gone
> temporarily-professional, raising money for her next Olympic bid.
> Unfortunately, while her grace and dance skills are improving with age,
> her stamina and technical excellence have been decreasing this season.
Well, she's coming off a knee operation that she had last summer. I'd wait
a bit before deciding if she's all washed up.
> While she used to include 7-8 jumps in every program, she now does only
> 2-3, and at least one is an intentional double jump, and she still only
> rarely lands the triples as real triples.
The standards in "professional" figure skating are much easier than the
standards in "amateur" figure skating. It is very common for skaters that
turn pro to skate easier programs in pro competitions.
> Sports commentary heard from 2 different sources says that the skating
> world feels that Oksana was pushed *much* too hard to join the pro-tour
> and compete after knee surgery last fall. Many feel that she may never
> fully recover because of this.
In that case joining the pros was a good move because it is so much easier
than amateur skating. Had she tried to say at the amateur level, then she would
have had to push much harder.
George
|
361.47 | She looks so frail | DECLNE::REESE | ToreDown,I'mAlmostLevelW/theGround | Mon Mar 27 1995 16:43 | 18 |
| I think both M & George make valid points. I remember her at
competition in Japan (World); she definitely wasn't up to par and
it seems like that competition was just a few weeks after her knee
surgery. I can't imagine even putting on a pair of skates, much
less completing jumps on that knee.
Oksana may feel she doesn't have any choice; her mother is dead and
her father may be too (I know it was just Oksana and her mother for
many years before the mother took ill and passed away). Victor
Petrenko's MIL is her coach; she also acts as a guardian. I believe
Petrenko was paying for lessons and ice time in the early days; I can
imagine she'd like to build up a nest-egg now.
It's a Catch-22; if she does *irreperable* harm to the knee she may
find herself unable to compete professionally, much less at the
Olympic level.
|
361.48 | <<rathole continued>> | SWAM2::GOLDMAN_MA | Walking Incubator, Use Caution | Mon Mar 27 1995 17:11 | 19 |
| Oksana is, indeed, an orphan. Dad died or "ran out" either before she
was born or, at least, when she was very, very small. And, of course,
the Ukraine no longer has any money to provide support for athletes.
Until she went pro, Viktor Petrenko and his coach (Galina
something-unpronounceable), were providing Oksana's support.
re: .46 -- *I'm* making an observation that has also been made by
several sports commentators, reliable ones who have always been
extremely pro-Oksana, including Scott Hamilton and Dick Button, both of
whom practically worship the ice she skates on. It is practically
unheard of for someone to return to competitive ice (pro or otherwise)
less than 5 weeks after major surgery. In addition, while pro-skating
is generally considered to *require* expressiveness and choreography,
rather than lots of jumps, Oksana is competing with ladies who
are providing those 7 triples *and* the artistry, like Kristi
Yamaguchi, Nancy Kerrigan, Denise Bielman, and more.
M.
|
361.49 | Let em Play if they are good enough! | BIGQ::LINDO | | Tue Mar 28 1995 10:00 | 6 |
|
.25
I believe that Shawn Kemp was drafted straight out of high school and
never played college basketball.
|
361.50 | | NEMAIL::BULLOCK | | Tue Mar 28 1995 10:42 | 11 |
|
.49
Shawn Kemp played basketball for two years at Trinity Junior
College in Indiana.
Ed
|
361.51 | | DELNI::FORGET | | Tue Mar 28 1995 11:04 | 12 |
|
in this day and age, it's all about money. It's the me generation.
One of the NBA's slogans is Stay in School!!!! Why don't they practice
what they preach and draft only seniors or have them sign a wavier
saying they will go back during the off season to finish up.
Shaq did go back on his own. What bothers me is that new atheles going
into pro sports are paid very well and the older ones will never catch
up. Image Larry Bird or Magic Johnson or what Wilt would get now.
|
361.52 | | BIGQ::LINDO | | Wed Mar 29 1995 09:36 | 3 |
| -.50
I stand corrected. I did not know that Kemp played Juco ball!
|