Sports in the USA
Introduction 1
Introduction 3
Introduction 3
A SPORTS-LOVING NATION_ 4
MEDIA COVERAGE_ 5
PRIVATE AND INSTITUTIONALIZED
ACTIVITIES_ 5
AMERICAN SPORTS_ 6
VIOLENCE AND SPORTS_ 7
COMMERCIAL ASPECTS_ 7
PROFESSIONAL SPORTS_ 9
COLLEGE SPORTS_ 9
STUDENT ATHLETES AND ACADEMIC
PERFORMANCE_ 10
WINNING_ 11
Sports: Colleges and Universities 11
Kinds of sports: 13
BASEBALL_ 13
BASKETBALL_ 16
Sources 20
Introduction
Americans pay much
attention to physical fitness. Many sports and sporting activities are popular
in the USA. People participate in swimming, skating, squash and badminton,
tennis, marathons, track-and-field, bowing, archery, skiing, skating etc. But
the five major American sports are hockey, volleyball, baseball, football and
basketball. Basketball and volleyball have been invented in America.
There is a large choice of sports in America. This can be explained by the size
and variety of the country. Another reason of the popularity of sports is the
people’s love of competition of any kind. One more reason is that Americans use
sports activities for teaching socials values, such as teamwork and
sportsmanship. All this explains why Americans have traditionally done well in
many kinds of sports.
Every high school offers its students many sports, such as wrestling, rowing,
tennis and golf. There are no separate “universities” for sports in the USA.
Students of any higher educational establishment are trained in different kinds
of sports. Many colleges and universities are famous for their sports clubs.
There are sports facilities at every school.
Some americans like active games, and others like quite games. I think that
quite games, as golf and crocket, intend for rich elite people. Most popular
games in the USA is hockey, american football, baseball, basketball. Popular
among americans are NHL games. In NHL games play our compatriots: Feudorov,
Yashin, Bure brothers. They are ones of the best players in NHL.
American football is like a rugby with kicks. Every
player can beat another one. I think american football is one of the rudest
games in the world.
Baseball is played with wooden bat and hard ball. It's
called "typical" american game.
Basketball is one of the most spectators game in the
USA. It's my favourite game too.
Some unusual kinds of sports originated in America.
They are windsurfing, skate-boarding and tradition. Triathlon includes
swimming, bicycling racing and long-distances-running. Now these are becoming
more and more popular in Europe.
Sports is a part of life of an average American.
A SPORTS-LOVING
NATION
Whether they are fans or players, the
millions of Americans who participate in sports are usually passionate about
their games. There is more to being a baseball fan than buying season tickets
to the home team's games. A real fan not only can recite each player's batting
average, but also competes with other fans to prove who knows the answers to
the most obscure and trivial questions about the sport. That's dedication.
Dedication short of madness is also what inspired hundreds of thousands of
football fans to fill Denver's stadium in dangerously freezing temperatures,
not to watch an exciting game but just to demonstrate team support in a
pre-Superbowl pep rally, days before the actual contest. And it is with passion
that Americans pursue the latest fitness fad, convinced that staying fit
requires much more than regular exercise and balanced meals. For anyone who
claims a real desire to stay healthy, fitness has become a science of
quantification, involving weighing, measuring, moni-toring, graph charting, and
computer printouts". These are the tools for knowing all about pulse and
heart rates, calorie intake, fat cell per muscle cell ratios, and almost
anything else that shows the results of a" workout.
MEDIA COVERAGE
The immense popularity, of sports in
America is indicated by the number of pages and headlines the average daily
newspaper devotes to local and national sports. The emphasis on sports is
evident in local evening news telecasts, too Every evening fox five to seven
minutes of the half-hour local newe show, the station's sports analyst, whose
territory is exclusively sports, reports on local, regional, and national sports
events.
Television has made sports available to
all. For those who cannot afford tickets or travel to expensive play-offs like
baseball's World Series or football's final Superbowl, a flick of the
television dial provides close-up viewing that beats front row seats. Although
estimates vary, the major networks average about 500 hours each of sports
programming a year. Recently, the emergence of several cable channels that
specialize in sports gives viewers even more options. The foremost of these
channels, ESPN, runs sports shows at least 22 hours a day and is now received
by 37 million American homes, or nearly half of the 86 million homes with
television sets.
PRIVATE AND
INSTITUTIONALIZED ACTIVITIES
Opportunities for keeping fit and playing
sports are numerous. Jogging is extremely popular, perhaps because it is the
cheapest and most accessible sport. Aerobic exercise and training with
weight-lifting machines are two activities which more and more men and women
are pursuing. Books, videos, and fitness-conscious movie stars that play up the
glamour of fitness have heightened enthusiasm for these exercises and have
promoted the muscular, healthy body as the American beauty ideal. Most
communities have recreational parks with tennis and basketball courts, a
football or soccer field, and outdoor grills for picnics. These parks generally
charge no fees for the use of these facilities. Some large corporations,
hospitals, and churches have indoor gymnasiums and organize informal team
sports. For those who can afford membership fees, there is the exclusive
country club and its more modern version, the health and fitness center.
Members of these clubs have access to all kinds of indoor and outdoor sports;
swimming, volleyball, golf, racquetball, handball, tennis, and basketball; Most
dubs also offer instruction in various, sports and exercise methods.
Schools and colleges have
institutionalized team sports for young people. Teams and competitions are
highly organized and competitive and generally receive substantial local
publicity. High schools and colleges commonly have a school team for each of
these sports: football, basketball, baseball, tennis, wrestling, gymnastics,
and track, and sometimes for soccer, swimming, hockey, volleyball, fencing, and
golf. Practices and games are generally held on the school premises after
classes are over. High schools and colleges recognize outstanding athletic
achievement with trophies, awards, and scholarships, and student athletes
receive strong community support.
AMERICAN SPORTS
Football, baseball, and basketball, the
most popular sports in America, originated in the United States and are largely
unknown or only minor pastimes outside North America. The football season
starts in early autumn and is followed by basketball, an indoor winter sport,
and then baseball, played in spring and slimmer. Besides these top three
sports, ice hockey, boxing, golf, car racing, horse racing, and tennis have
been popular for decades and attract large audiences.
VIOLENCE AND
SPORTS
Although many spectator sports,
particularly pro football, ice hockey, and boxing, are aggressive and sometimes
bloody, American spectators are notably less violent than are sports crowds in
other countries. Fighting, bottle throwing, and rioting, common elsewhere, are
not the rule among American fans. Baseball and football games are family
affairs, and cheerleaders command the remarkably non-violent crowd to root in
chorus for their teams.
COMMERCIAL
ASPECTS
For many
people, sports are big business. The major television networks
contract with
professional sports leagues for the rights to broadcast their
games. The
guaranteed mass viewing of major sports events means advertisers
will pay
networks a lot of money to sponsor the program with announcements
for their
products. Advertisers for beer, cars, and men's products are glad of
the
opportunity to push their goods to the predominantly male audience of
the big
professional sports. Commercial businesses enjoy the publicity which
brings
in sales. The networks are glad to fill up program hours and attract
audiences
who might perhaps become regular viewers of-other programs
produced
by those networks, and the major sports leagues enjoy the millions
of dollars the
networks pay for the broad-casting rights contracts. Many sports
get
half of their revenues from the networks. National Football League (NFL)
teams, for
example, get about 65 percent of their revenues from television. The
networks' 1986
contract with the NFL provided" each-of the 2g teams in the
league with an
average of $14 million a year. -
"Just as
in any business, investments are made and assets are exchanged. Team owners
usually sign up individual players for lucrative long-term contracts. Star
quarterback Joe Namalh was invited to play for the New York Jets, one of the
NFL teams, for $425,000 in 1965. Coveted baseball player Kirk Gibson recently
signed a three-year contract with the Detroit Tigers for $4.1 million. More
often in the past than now, team owners traded players back and forth as items
for barter.
Any business'
operator hopes to get a good deal. However, the network sports industries have
not been faring well lately. They have experienced financial setbacks mainly
caused by the oversaturation of sports programming on networks and compering
cable channels. Networks claim they are now losing money on once-lucrative
telecasts. Ironically, the slump in business is occurring at a time when sports
shows are drawing larger audiences than in recent years. Part of the problem is
that advertising costs got too high, and the industries mat traditionally Duy
ads beer ana car companies are not paying the high prices. Networks, dependent
on advertising for revenue, are hoping that the market will change before they
have to make drastic reductions ir sports programming.
PROFESSIONAL
SPORTS
The commercial
aspects of American professional sports can make or break an athlete's career.
Young, talented athletes make it to the top because they are exceptionally
talented, but not in every case because they are the best. In women's tennis,
for example, an aspiring young tennis star must not only possess a winning
serve and backhand, she must also get corporate agents on her side. Without
agents who line up sponsors and publicity, a player has a very difficult time
moving from amateur to professional sports. To get the endorsement of corporate
advertising sponsors, a talented young tennis player has a much better chance
for success if she is also attractive. Sales-conscious tennis sportswear companies
pay large sums of money to tennis pros who promote their products. Many top
players earn more money a year in product-endorsement fees than in prize money.
Competition and success in sports, then, is not only a matter of game skill,
but marketability as well.
COLLEGE SPORTS
College sports
lost its amateurism years ago. Teams and events are institutionalized and
contribute to college publicity and revenue. Sports bring in money to colleges
from ticket sales and television rights, so colleges like having winning teams.
The better the team, the greater the ticket sales and television coverage, and
the more money the college can channel back into athletics and other programs.
Football and basketball are the most lucrative college sports because they
attract the most fans. Other college sports, particularly women's sports, are
often neglected and ignored by spectators, the news media, and athletic
directors who often disregard-women's sports budgets and funnel money for
equipment and facilities into the sports that pay. On the other hand, top
college teams get a lot of attention. In 1986, the Division 1 college football
programs had a budget of nearly $1 billion, while entertaining millions
of spectators and television viewers.
STUDENT
ATHLETES AND ACADEMIC PERFORMANCE
To recruit
student athletes for a winning team, many colleges are willing to go to great
lengths, providing full academic scholarships, to athletes, and sometimes
putting the college's academic reputatiori at risk. The tacit understanding
shared by college admissions directors as well as the potential sports stars
they admit is that athletes do not enroll in college to learn, but to play
sports and perhaps use intercollegiate sports as a springboard for a
professional career. The situation often embarrasses college administrators,
who are caught between educational ideals and commercial realities, and
infuriates other students, who resent the preferential treatment given to
athletes. Of late, some universities, such as the University of Michigan, have
initiated support programs to improve academic performance and graduation rates
of athletes.
WINNING
Increasing
commercialization of college sports is part of a larger trend. American sports
are becoming more competitive and more profit-oriented. As a result, playing to
win is emphasized more than playing for fun. This is true from the professional
level all the way down to the level of children's Little League sports"
teams, where young players are encourag'ed by such "slogans as "A
quitter never wins; a winner never quits," and "never be willing to
be second best." The obsession with winning causes some people to wonder
whether sports in America should be such serious business.
Sports:
Colleges and Universities
The athletic programs of American
colleges and universities have come
in for a great deal of criticism
but there does not seem to be
a chance to alter the system.
information and comments on the problems.
First, the United States is the only nation
in the world, so far as I know, which demands that its schools like Harvard,
Ohio State and Claremont assume responsibility for providing the public with
sports entertainment. Ours is a unique system which has no historical sanction
or application elsewhere. It would be unthinkable for the University of
Bologna, a most ancient and honorable school, to provide scholarships to
illiterate soccer players so that they could entertain the other cities of
northern Italy, and it would be equally preposterous for either the Sorbonne or
Oxford to do so in their countries. Our system is an American phenomenon, a
historical accident which developed from the exciting football games played by
Yale and Harvard and to a lesser extent Princeton and certain other schools during
the closing years of the nineteenth century. If we had had at that time
professional teams which provided public football entertainment, we might not
have placed the burden on our schools. But we had no professional teams, so our
schools were handed the job.
Second, if an ideal American educational system were being
launched afresh, few would want to saddle it with the responsibility for public
sports entertainment. I certainly would not. But since, by a quirk of history,
it is so saddled, the tradition has become ingrained and I see not the remotest
chance of altering it. I therefore approve of continuing it, so long as certain
safeguards are installed. Categorically, I believe that our schools must
continue to offer sports entertainment, even though comparable institutions
throughout the rest of the world are excused from doing so.
Third, I see nothing wrong in having a college or a university
provide training for the young man or woman who wants to devote his adult life
to sports. My reasoning is twofold: 1) American society has ordained that
sports shall be a major aspect of our
national life, with major attention, major financial support and
major coverage in the media. How possibly can a major aspect of life be ignored
by our schools? 2) If it is permissible to train young musicians and actors in
our universities, and endow munificent departments to do so, why is it not
equally legitimate to train young athletes, and endow them with a stadium?
Fourth, because our schools have volunteered to serve as unpaid
training grounds for future professionals, and because some of the lucky
schools with good sports reputations can earn a good deal of money from the
semi-professional football and basketball teams they operate, the temptation to
recruit young men skilled at games but totally unfitted for academic work is
overpowering. We must seriously ask if such behavior is legitimate for an
academic institution. There are honorable answers, and I know some of them, but
if we do not face this matter forthrightly, we are going to run into troubla.
Kinds
of sports:
BASEBALL
Baseball is a
nine-a-side game played with bat, ball, and glove, mainly in the U.S.A. Teams
consist of a pitcher and catcher, called the battery, first, second, and third
basemen, and shortstop, called the infield, and right, centre, and left
fielders, called the outfield. Substitute players may enter the game at any
time, but once a player is removed he cannot return.
The standard
ball has a cork-and-rubber centre wound with woollen yarn and covered with
horse-hide. It weighs from 5 to 5 1/4 oz. (148 g.) and is from 9 to 9 1/2 in.
(approx. 23 cm.) in circumference. ... The bat is a smooth, round, tapered
piece of hard wood not more than 2 3/4 in. (approx. 7 cm.) in diameter at its
thickest part and no more than 42 in. (1.07 m.) long.
Originally,
fielders played barehanded, but gloves have been developed over the years.
First basemen wear a special large mitt, and catchers use a large,
heavily-padded mitt as well as a chest protector, shin guards, and a metal
mask. Catchers
were at first
unprotected. Consequently,- they stood back at a distance from home plate and
caught pitched balls on the bounce, but the introduction of the large, round,
well-padded mitt or "pillow glove" and the face mask enabled them to
move up close behind the plate and catch pitched balls on the fly. Players wear
shoes with steel cleats and, while batting and running the bases, they use
protective plastic helmets.
The game is
played on a field containing four bases placed at the angles of a 90-ft (27.4
m.) square (often called a diamond): home plate and, in counter-clockwise
order, first, second, and third base. Two foul lines form the boundaries of
fair territory. Starting at home, these lines extend past first and third base
the entire length of the field, which is often enclosed by a fence at its
farthest limits.
The object of
each team is to score more runs than the other. A run is scored whenever a
player circles all the bases and reaches home without being put out The game is
divided into innings, in
each of which
the teams alternate at bat and in the field. A team is allowed three outs in
each halfinning at bat, and must then take up defensive positions in the field
while the other team has its turn to try to score. Ordinarily, a game consists
of nine innings; in the event of a tie, extra innings are played until one team
outscores the other in the same number of innings.
The players
take turns batting from home plate in regular rotation. The opposing pitcher
throws the ball to his catcher from a slab (called the "rubber") on
the pitcher's mound, a slightly raised area of the field directly between home
and second base. ... Bases are canvas bags fastened to metal pegs set in the
ground.
The batter
tries to reach base safely after hitting the pitched ball into fair territory.
A hit that enables him to reach first base is called a "single," a
two-base hit is a "double," a three-base hit a "triple,"
and a four-base hit a "home-run." A fair ball hit over an outfield
fence is automatically a home run. A batter is also awarded his base if the
pitcher delivers four pitches which, in the umpire's judgement, do not pass
through the "strike zone" - that is, over home plate between the
batter's armpits and knees; or if he is hit by a pitched ball; or if the
opposing catcher interferes when he swings the bat. To prevent the batter from
hitting safely, baseball pitchers deliver the ball with great speed and
accuracy and vary its speed and trajectory. Success in batting, therefore, requires
courage and a high degree of skill.
After a player
reaches base safely, his progress towards home depends largely on his team
mates' hitting the ball in such a way that he can advance. ...
Players may be
put out in various ways. A batter is out when the pitcher gets three 'strikes'
on him. A strike is a pitch that crosses the plate in the strike zone, or any
pitch that is struck at and missed or is hit into foul territory. After
two strikes, however, foul balls do not count except when a batter bunts - lets
the ball meet the bat instead of swinging at it - and the ball rolls foul. A
batter is also out if he hits the ball in the air anywhere in fair or foul
territory and it is caught by an opponent before it touches the ground. He is
out if he hits the ball on the ground and a fielder catches and throws it to a
player at first base, or catches it and touches that base, before the batter
(now become a base runner) gets there.
A base runner
may be put out if, while off base, he is tagged by an opposing player with the
hand or glove holding the ball, or if he is forced to leave his base to make
room for another runner and fails to reach the next base before an opposing
player tags him or the base; or if he is hit by a team mate's batted ball
before it has touched or passed a fielder.
An
umpire-in-chief "calls" balls and strikes from his position directly
behind the catcher at home plate, and one or more base umpires determine
whether runners are safe or out at the other three bases.
BASKETBALL
The History of
basketball, a game that started with 18 men in a YMCA gymnasium in Springfield,
Mass., has grown into a game that more than 300 million people play worldwide.
The man who created this instantly successful sport was Dr. James Naismith.
Under orders from Dr.
Luther Gulick, head of Physical Education at the School for Christian Workers.
Naismith had 14 days to create an indoor game that would provide an
"athletic distraction" for a rowdy class through the brutal New
England winter.
Naismith's invention
didn't come easily. Getting close to the deadline, he struggled to keep the
class' faith. His first intention was to bring outdoor games indoors, i.e.,
soccer and lacrosse. These games proved too physical and cumbersome.
At his wits' end, Naismith
recalled a childhood game that required players to use finesse and accuracy to
become successful. After brainstorming this new idea, Naismith developed
basketball's original 13 rules and consequently, the game of basketball.
As basketball's popularity
grew, Naismith neither sought publicity nor engaged in self-promotion. He was
first and foremost a physical educator who embraced recreational sport but
shied away from the glory of competitive athletics.
Naismith was an intense
student, collecting four degrees in the diverse fields of Philosophy, Religion,
Physical Education and Medicine. Although he never had the opportunity to see
the game become the astonishing spectacle it is today, Naismith's biggest
thrill came when he was sponsored by the National Association of Basketball
Coaches (NABC) to witness basketball become an Olympic sport at the 1936 Games
held in Berlin.
Naismith became famous for
creating the game of basketball, a stroke of genius that never brought him fame
or fortune during his lifetime, but enormous recognition following his passing
in 1939.
For his historic
invention, Naismith's name adorns the world's only Basketball Hall of Fame, a
tribute that forever makes James Naismith synonymous with basketball.
Abner Doubleday, who
didn't invent baseball, is probably a more widely recognized name than
Naismith, who did invent basketball. And even those who know about him continue
to learn more about the man who invented a sport designed for offseason
physical exercise, which began with his own 13 basic rules, but which has grown
to become a game not for a specific culture or nation or ethnic group, but for
an entire planet to share and enjoy.
Naismith is the only coach
in University of Kansas men's basketball history to own a losing record.
Naismith was 55-60 from 1898 to 1907, which mattered little to him only in that
one of his most famous quotes was that basketball was never meant to be
coached, anyway, only to be played.
The new game was explained
by 13 basic rules and was played with a soccer ball, peach baskets and nine to
a side. There have been major changes to the game since that first contest,
which is believed to have been played Dec. 21, 1891.
But perhaps what is most
amazing about Naismith's creation, other than the fact that few sports that are
purposely invented actually stand the test of time, is that the essence of
basketball-throwing a ball into an elevated goal-has remained the focus from
day one.
Today, Naismith would be
universally recognized as a genius, a Bill Gates of sport. And in all
likelihood, the opportunity would exist for him to become a multi-millionaire.
But if Naismith was The
Basketball Man, he was not The Money Man, and life in 1891 was far different
than in 1991 or 2001.
But if Naismith's
invention did not lead to profit, it did lead to huge popularity for
basketball. Even in the final years of the 19th century, with communication and
transportation that was primitive by today's standards, the game's growth was
palpable, immediate and widespread.
James Naismith had changed
the face of sport, not so much for the 19th century, but the 20th, and it is
now clear, the 21st. All in an effort to keep unruly students at bay.
Sources
America in Close up
http://www.yahoo.com