website statistics
Jump to content

International Olympic Committee News


George_D
 Share

Recommended Posts

5 minutes ago, phelps said:

 

Karate (and all Martial Arts) and Shooting? yes, definitely...

 

and also Artistic Gymnastics, Eventing (even if that dressage part should be removed and replaced with something else closer to a sport discipline) and Diving (in AG and Diving the real problems are only the biased and/or corrupted judges)...

 

most of the other disciplines you've just mentioned, no...some of them might have something really close to sport events (Surfing and Skateboarding, for instance), but others surely don't have anything to share with sport competitions (among those no-no: all forms of dancing, artistic swimming, dressage, bmx freestyle, rhythmic gymnastics and all the pure "mind games")...

 

that's just my opinion, of course...and I respect all those who have a different one, even if and when I don't agree...;)

Okay now I’m really curious, why is Shooting a sport? And what is your definition of a sport?

 

Also, worth nothing Martial Arts, not Martial Sports. 
 

Why aren’t (in your opinion) Surfing, Skateboarding, Artistic Swimming sports?

 

I’m not trying to be combative, I’m genuinely curious.

“Sport has the power to change the world. It has the power to inspire. Sport can create hope where once there was only despair” - Nelson Mandela

Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 hour ago, Olympian1010 said:

Shooting was included because it contains almost no discernible physical activity. Karate was included because of it’s scoring system (points have to awarded by judges who look for proper artistic form). If that list contains sports, what is the difference between those sports and dancing? Many of those sports are cultural as well.  

 

about shooting you're wrong...try to shoot 60/100 shots in 60/75 mins without a proper physical training (at least a partial one, including the shooting arm muscles, everything related to breathing and, for those who shoot from a standing position, also the back muscles)...

 

after 5 mins you're going to start hitting the roof instead of the target in front of you because your arm just won't keep straight anymore...:evil:;)

 

however, I understand why most people who never tried to spend an hour or so at the shooting range have that deceptive opinion about the skills required by competitive shooting...

 

Karate is about Kumite...Kata (the "forms") is just a small part of it...

 

and in any case, also Kata is judged not because of personal taste, but according a strict code of execution (like artistic gymnastics)...the various routines do even have a proper name to make them recognizable in advance (so the judges already know what they're looking at and what they are looking for in any exercise)...

 

p.s. meanwhile Kumite perfectly fits one of the 3 main points of Olympic Sports (Citius = Faster), as points are awarded when you execute a proper technique faster than your opponent (not only, there are a lot of versions where the contact between fighters is full, not even semi- or controlled like in the WKF kind of Kumite)...

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Quote

Okay now I’m really curious, why is Shooting a sport? And what is your definition of a sport?

 

Also, worth nothing Martial Arts, not Martial Sports. 
 

Why aren’t (in your opinion) Surfing, Skateboarding, Artistic Swimming sports?

 

I’m not trying to be combative, I’m genuinely curious.

 

basically, the score must come from one of the 3 main perspectives of the Olympic motto (Altius = Higher, Citius = Faster, Fortius = Stronger), at least in a metaphorical way...

 

to make it clear...all disciplines involving man vs man competition, the fight against the clock or any other objective form of measurement (Shooting = precision) are sports...

 

those whose winners are only based on personal judgement with no explicit strict coding of execution of the execises can't be considered as sports (that's why diving and artistic gymnastics are and artistic swimming and rhythmic gymnastics aren't)...

 

for "pure" mind games, it's mainly about the absolute lack of physical activity...

 

and I'm pretty sure that my opinion is also heavily biased because of my personal taste...that's why I wrote that's just my opinion and I don't pretend to be "the Truth" at all...;)

Edited by phelps
Link to comment
Share on other sites

4 minutes ago, phelps said:

 

about shooting you're wrong...try to shoot 60/100 shots in 60/75 mins without a proper physical training (at least a partial one, including the shooting arm muscles, everything related to breathing and, for those who shoot from a standing position, also the back muscles)...

 

after 5 mins you're going to start hitting the roof instead of the target in front of you because your arm just won't keep straight anymore...:evil:;)

 

however, I understand why most people who never tried to spend an hour or so at the shooting range have that deceptive opinion about the skills required by competitive shooting...

 

Karate is about Kumite...Kata (the "forms") is just a small part of it...

 

and in any case, also Kata is judged not because of personal taste, but according a strict code of execution (like artistic gymnastics)...the various routines do even have a proper name to make them recognizable in advance (so the judges already know what they're looking at and what they are looking for in any exercise)...

 

p.s. meanwhile Kumite perfectly fits one of the 3 main points of Olympic Sports (Citius = Faster), as points are awarded when you execute a proper technique faster than your opponent (not only, there are a lot of versions where the contact between fighters is full, not even semi- or controlled like in the WKF kind of Kumite)...

I didn’t mean to indicate that shooters aren’t athletic, but I do think that e-sports players have to be just as athletic. You’d be surprised to know how much of them do athletic training (in fact most would recommend it to be better at e-sports). 
 

The thing with martial arts, is that most of them were invented to be art forms and combat techniques. Most of the early masters didn’t believe in using them for sport and competition. 
 

It’s worth nothing that the Olympics were originally supposed to be a celebration of art and sport (much like the Jeux De Francophonie). I think the IOC is moving back towards this original vision. If it were up to me, Chess, Dancing, and other sports of the like would have been on the program long ago. However, I do not also like judging art, so it’s a big inner battle for me. 

“Sport has the power to change the world. It has the power to inspire. Sport can create hope where once there was only despair” - Nelson Mandela

Link to comment
Share on other sites

2 minutes ago, Olympian1010 said:

Okay now I’m really curious, why is Shooting a sport? And what is your definition of a sport?

For me any activity is a sport. But the question is about "competitive sport" - you can count the time of a runner, the distance of the jumper, the number of shoots into the target and so on... It's all objective. When it comes to judging the style, it's all subjective thus there cannot be a justice aka it shouldn't be any competition because it's not fair.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

3 minutes ago, Vojthas said:

For me any activity is a sport. But the question is about "competitive sport" - you can count the time of a runner, the distance of the jumper, the number of shoots into the target and so on... It's all objective. When it comes to judging the style, it's all subjective thus there cannot be a justice aka it shouldn't be any competition because it's not fair.

This is why I think we should to computer judged execution for artistic sports. It should be between 50-75% of the score, with difficulty (judged by a pre determined code of points) being 20-50%, and then artistic impression being 0-25% of the score.

“Sport has the power to change the world. It has the power to inspire. Sport can create hope where once there was only despair” - Nelson Mandela

Link to comment
Share on other sites

3 minutes ago, Olympian1010 said:

This is why I think we should to computer judged execution for artistic sports. It should be between 50-75% of the score, with difficulty (judged by a pre determined code of points) being 20-50%, and then artistic impression being 0-25% of the score.

It doesn't change a thing - one judge gives 10 because he is from the same nation as the athlete, while the other gives 9,5 because he took bribes from his rival. How can we believe the result is fair? The athletes loses by 0,01. Is it fair? It's a sick kind of competition.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

32 minutes ago, Vojthas said:

It doesn't change a thing - one judge gives 10 because he is from the same nation as the athlete, while the other gives 9,5 because he took bribes from his rival. How can we believe the result is fair? The athletes loses by 0,01. Is it fair? It's a sick kind of competition.

Clearly you don’t understand what I’m saying. Computer judges execution. Difficulty is judged by a pre-determined code of points. Artistic score is small, and really only used as a tiebreaker.

“Sport has the power to change the world. It has the power to inspire. Sport can create hope where once there was only despair” - Nelson Mandela

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Even nature just doesn't want Indonesia to host the Olympics...

 

The roads surrounding the National Sport Complex are flooded, a great way to start 2020

 

https://twitter.com/merdekadotcom/status/1212168565408681986?s=19

 

As of now the water is up to my ankle :wacko:

Link to comment
Share on other sites

36 minutes ago, Griff88 said:

Even nature just doesn't want Indonesia to host the Olympics...

 

The roads surrounding the National Sport Complex are flooded, a great way to start 2020

 

https://twitter.com/merdekadotcom/status/1212168565408681986?s=19

 

As of now the water is up to my ankle :wacko:

Time for that new capital :p

“Sport has the power to change the world. It has the power to inspire. Sport can create hope where once there was only despair” - Nelson Mandela

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
 Share

  • Latest Posts around Totallympics

    • Qualified for the junior Grand Prix Final   Men: 1.  Jacob Sanchez 2.  Rio Nakata 3.  Sena Takahashi 4.  Yanhao Li 5.  Minkyu Seo 6.  Lukas Vaclavik    Final Standings   Women: 1.  Mao Shimada 2.  Ami Nakai 3.  Kaoruko Wada 4.  Yuseong Kim 5.  Yihan Wang 6.  Stefania Gladki   Final Standings   Pairs: 1.  Jiaxuan Zhang / Yihang Huang 2.  Jazmine Desrochers / Kieran Thrasher 3.  Olivia Flores / Luke Wang 4.  Romane Telemaque / Lucas Coulon 5.  Julia Quattrocchi / Simon Desmarais 6.  Sae Shimizu / Lucas Tsuyoshi Honda   Final Standings   Ice Dance: 1.  Noemi Maria Tali / Noah Lafornara 2.  Iryna Pidgaina / Artem Koval 3.  Celina Fradji / Jean-Hans Fourneaux 4.  Katarina Wolfkostin / Dimitry Tsarevski 5.  Darya Grimm / Michail Savitskiy 6.  Elliana Peal / Ethan Peal   Final Standings   Junior Grand Prix events have been completed since quite a while, but since the final will be held together with the Grand Prix Final, I'm listing the qualifiers now. 
    • Cup of China - Results   Men: 1.  Shun Sato - 278.48 2.  Mikhail Shaidorov - 276.17 3.  Adam Siao Him Fa - 252.53   Results Short Program Results Short Program Scores Free Skating Results Free Skating Scores   Women: 1.  Amber Glenn - 215.54 2.  Mone Chiba - 211.91 3.  Chaeyeon Kim - 208.47   Results Short Program Results Short Program Scores Free Skating Results Free Skating Scores   Pairs: 1.  Sara Conti / Niccolo Macii - 211.05 2.  Minerva Fabienne Hase / Nikita Volodin - 209.36 3.  Lia Pereira / Trennt Michaud - 188.74   Results Short Program Results Short Program Scores Free Skating Results Free Skating Scores   Ice Dance: 1.  Charlene Guignard / Marco Fabbri - 209.13 2.  Marjorie Lajoie / Zachary Lagha - 205.16 3.  Christina Carreira / Anthony Ponomarenko - 198.18   Results Rhythm Dance Results Rhythm Dance Scores Free Dance Results Free Dance Scores
    • Argentina also has ski centers on the Tierra del Fuego but that doesn't mean it will immediately become a powerhouse in this sport 
    • Speak for yourself. Why should we give up our one great talent of the younger generation when we have no one else? Maybe from the same reason that the USA didn't give up Schiffrin to another country when she had 17-18...
    • A very ignorant statement.   Of course the UK is not exactly known for its winter sport but there are some ski resorts mainly in Scotland, like the Cairngorms or the Nevis Range.
    • But in women's epee another defeat by Ukraine. We are slowly developing a complex about this country, because we are constantly losing to them in sabre too. Sabre has always been Ukrainian, epee for a draw or our slight advantage but a failed in women`s foil, which is already a shocking novelty  
    • What comeback for the italian men's foil team in the finals vs the USA  Bianchi won 9-3 against Massialas in the last bout 
    • Not often your prayers  get answered so quickly!  
    • Boxing cangaroo instead of regular boxing.
    • Since it's the home Olympics I think there is a chance to have 50-60 million. It won't be Superbowl numbers, but it could very well be around a Presidential debate level. 
×
×
  • Create New...