Gulch Opinion: Professional Sports yea/nay?
Does the old saying "all work and no play makes Johnny a dull boy" have any cache in the Gulch?
I'm going to go out on a limb and doubt that anyone is going to have a problem with amateur sports in the Gulch, but what about professional sports? I'm a big college football fan and I enjoy baseball (including the MLB - just without the PED's) and college basketball (just not the NBA), but I'm curious as to what Gulchers do for recreation. Your thoughts?
I'm going to go out on a limb and doubt that anyone is going to have a problem with amateur sports in the Gulch, but what about professional sports? I'm a big college football fan and I enjoy baseball (including the MLB - just without the PED's) and college basketball (just not the NBA), but I'm curious as to what Gulchers do for recreation. Your thoughts?
I'm with you; let the market decide. IMO, in a truly free society, there would be a market and no need for special government rules protecting the enterprise. I would also expect that, in such a society, there would be heavier emphasis on INDIVIDUAL sports, such as golf or tennis, and less emphasis on team sports. [ed. wording]
I took up formal boxing training in my adult life (as opposed to just getting hit in my youth) and have grown to really love the sport. Amateur boxing is really special to me. And, my firsthand involvement has played a role in keeping myself somewhat fit. Amateur boxing is rife with kids who have nothing, but often possess good character and bravery. You can't B.S. your way through rounds in the ring. You're on your own and you've got to face your fears and fight.
Lots of fun and the worst injuries were the occasional bruise from getting shield-bashed or the inevitable (and illegal) head shot.
Sir WIlliam Schuyler
Both were fun, had a few injuries in SCA none in Battle Guard.
Professional Sports, do not care about them personally. So long as there are people who want them and will pay for them let it ride the course and provide the good and service people want to buy.
After I as a drafted Marine with Parris Island behind me in 1969, I received advance training so anyone with the MOS of a clerk, cook or anyone in the rear with the gear could pick up about any weapon and efficiently use it in case of an emergency. (This is the most fun I had in the USMC).
Who knows? Even what the USA is becoming may some day want to rub out the perceived effrontery of a shrugging Gulch.
That was nice.
I wasn't expecting that.
and the recent treatment of our vets shows how
that goes. -- j
I grew up in a rabid "sports city" and attended an equally rabid university where sports were very much emphasized (and provided a lot of money for the school). There was a time when I would get very depressed if "my team" lost. After maturing a little (i.e., reading Atlas etc.) I put it more in perspective. It's no longer a big deal, just something to watch.
Now, like you, I watch very occasionally, except I will admit to watching more if "my teams" are in the playoffs, but if they lose, ah well.
If you succeed - if you win the game - you are awarded the prize of backpacking 250 to 400 pounds of meat out of the wilderness to your truck. The compensation is some of the best eating available on the planet, but you sure earn it.
Elk hunting is a strange species of insanity.
Professional sports leave me cold...the salaries are disgusting and the attitudes of the players are
Pretty reprehensible.
I walk my dog a lot!
I am not a good watcher, but I agree that if there are enough people who support pro sports - then there 'should' be pro sports. Within the Gulch, whose prerogative would it be to say Nay?
Jan (aka Eichling)
What I have realized about myself is I have slowly evolved from team sports (maybe because I'm 59) to a love for golf, scuba and biking. All three very personal and very.... very quiet.
my stomach -- why hit people as a sport? . it's bad
enough that it happens in anger. . just my opinion. -- j
to my small sampling, it helps in life. . just look at
BHO's body language, for example -- he relishes
his six-one height and acts imperious, lording over
people, looking down his nose at them ... helped him.
sorry. . John Wayne and Charlton Heston are the
examples I should have cited. -- j
six-three . . . In Like Flynn is famous for more than
his height! -- j
Jan
As far as fans' own activity level, though, that's their business individually, and it's not the place of government or anyone else to nag them about it.
I think I like the college game mostly because it reminds me of my college years and since all four of our kids went to the same undergraduate school, games often become a family gathering.
As for games played myself, I'm a Life Master in the ACBL, and I'm into various card and board games. I also moderate the 18xx (train games) list on Yahoo.
tv/sound system. . we also watch nascar races. . I watch
with them sometimes. . but, usually, I'm fussing
around with some gizmo or other trying to invent
Galt's motor. -- j