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"Race is still extremely important when you think about athletics," says David Wiggins, editor of Sport in America, in response to claims that NYC Marathon winner Meb Keflezighi’s victory is not an American victory. To read the full article, click here. Editor of Sport in America quoted in The New York Times
In the nineteenth century, gender roles, cheating, and proper etiquette were greatly influenced by the game of croquet. Nineteenth- century American periodicals and croquet manuals emphasized the sport’s placidity, as opposed to male working-class sports such as football, baseball, and rowing, which often seemed infected with the time-discipline or rationality of the workaday world. Thus, one recent historian of the sport decisively concluded, “In the 1860s, in a family and female sport ...
Louis’s well-documented whupping of Jim Crow provided a public outlet for diverse expressions of black struggle across the socioeconomic and political spectrum. Houston singer Joe Pullman’s recording, entitled “Joe Louis is the Man,” was the first song to honor Louis’s toppling of Carnera. As a rallying point for black communities across the nation, the figure of Louis served to unite the ethereal realm of diasporic politics with the everyday troubles of African Americans.
The commitment Muhammed Ali had to his Muslim religion brought him strength and confidence that was not normally found in black athletes of his time. Elijah Muhammad might have preached black separatism, railed against the evils of commercialized sport, and viewed boxing with disdain, but he had recognized the value of having Ali as a member of the Nation of Islam. Refusing to join forces with Louis Farrakhan and other blacks who remained loyal to Nation of Islam policy, Ali adhered to the ...
On one hand, the Super Bowl’s portrayal in mainstream U.S. news media as the leading international sporting event seems to combat post-cold war fragmentation by emphasizing increasing global unity, via a world-wide, shared Super Bowl experience. For more empirical evidence of the relative global insignificance of American football in general and of the Super Bowl in particular we turn to another manifestation of the post-modern spirit that has transformed the Super Bowl into a carnival of ...
Author David Shields discusses the roles of competition in sport in the first section of this two part interview. David Light Shields, PhD, is an affiliate associate professor at the University of Missouri-St. Louis and author of True Competition: A Guide to Pursuing Excellence in Sport and Society. Is there evidence showing that athletes can actually increase their performance when engaging in true competition?
Author David Shields continues his engaging discussion of true competition and its application in today’s society. David Light Shields, PhD, is an affiliate associate professor at the University of Missouri-St. Louis and author of True Competition: A Guide to Pursuing Excellence in Sport and Society. How does true competition apply to other aspects of society, beyond the sport environment?
David Stern became the fourth commissioner of the NBA in 1984, a golden age for the league with its “Showtime” Lakers, led by Magic Johnson; archrivals Larry Bird and the Boston Celtics; and star rookies Charles Barkley, John Stockton, Hakeem Olajuwon, and Michael Jordan. David Stern celebrated his silver anniversary as NBA commissioner in 2009—although his association with the NBA started way back in 1966, when, as a newly minted Columbia University lawyer, he began providing outside ...
These include Claude Bouchard, author of Physical Activity and Health, Costas Karageorghis and Peter Terry, joint authors of Inside Sport Psychology, Vicky Goosey-Tolfrey, author of Wheelchair Sport, Dan Gould, author of Foundations of Sport and Exercise Psychology, Sophia Jowett and David Lavallee, joint authors of Social Psychology in Sport, Mike Gleeson, author of Sport Nutrition and Greg Whyte, author of Practical ECG for Exercise Science and Sports Medicine. Thursday 19th JulyGertrude ...
Researchers David Shields and Brenda Bredemeier explore why competition seems to lead good people to act in bad ways and share their findings in the upcoming True Competition: A Guide to Pursuing Excellence in Sport and Society (Human Kinetics, February 2009). For more information on True Competition or other sport psychology, coaching and sport management books, contact Human Kinetics at 800-747-4457 or visit www.HumanKinetics.com. Shields is founder and executive director of ...