Anyone else

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Bicycle Bill
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Re: Anyone else

Post by Bicycle Bill »

I'll add to your list:

Sailing
Dressage events
BMX cycling
Mountain biking
Trampoline
Badminton
Table Tennis

And while we're at it, let's look ahead to the Winter Games and give Freestyle Skiing and Snowboarding the heave-ho, and make the figure skaters have to perform compulsory figures like before.  Otherwise it just becomes a competition to see who can choreograph the most impressive free-skate performance.
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Yes, I suppose I could agree with you ... but then we'd both be wrong, wouldn't we?

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Lord Jim
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Re: Anyone else

Post by Lord Jim »

I remember playing "hand ball" as a kid...

It was kind of a poor man's Squash...

There were no teams or nets; we played it one-on-one up against the brick wall of the local elementary school with a tennis ball...

Using our hands like one might use a tennis or squash racquet...

This "Handball" Olympic team thing, where they bounce an undersized ball around like they're playing basketball, and then throw it into an undersized net like they're playing some version of soccer is completely new to me...
And handball was first played at the Olympic in 1936 and added as a permanent sport in 1972. The US hasn't qualified to play since 1996.
You've got to be kidding me...

I've watched the Olympics every year since 1972, and this is the first time I've ever even heard of this damn thing...

I'm thinking that may be a function of how comprehensive the TV coverage is now...

Back in the 60s and 70s and 80s when most of us around here were younger...

When NBC had the television rights to the Olympics, they only had one channel; NBC...

So the only stuff you would see was the big stuff; the major Track and Field, the swimming, the gymnastics, the boxing, etc...

But now NBC owns something like nine cable channels, and that means it's got a lot of air time to fill with its Olympic Coverage...(after having paid the money for the US broadcast rights, they're going to milk every penny)

So now we're learning about "hand ball"...

Just like in the last Winter Olympics we learned about "curling"....

Until the US network with the Olympics rights had nine different channels going on, who the hell had ever heard of that?
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Bicycle Bill
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Re: Anyone else

Post by Bicycle Bill »

Lord Jim wrote:Just like in the last Winter Olympics we learned about "curling"....

Until the US network with the Olympics rights had nine different channels going on, who the hell had ever heard of that?
Well, of course, it depends on where you live.  I had even tried it a couple of times, as my community had a moderately active curling club up until about ten or fifteen years ago when they weren't able to keep up the maintenance and costs of their own building and rink, so they merged and now share a building and ice with another club about 20 miles north of us.
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-"BB"-
Yes, I suppose I could agree with you ... but then we'd both be wrong, wouldn't we?

Jarlaxle
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Re: Anyone else

Post by Jarlaxle »

I knew about handball; sometimes it was played in gym class, though I don't recall playing it.
Treat Gaza like Carthage.

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Lord Jim
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Re: Anyone else

Post by Lord Jim »

Rio 2016 Olympic Games: Day one - Campbell sisters, Mack Horton win swimming gold, as it happened

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Australian athletes have had a successful day and finish it on top of the medal tally with two gold medals and a bronze, while our teams have given Australia a solid start and a Syrian athlete has alredy left her mark.

Bronte Campbell, Cate Campbell, Emma McKeon and Brittany Elmslie won gold in women's 4x100m freestyle relay final
Melbourne's Mack Horton won his 400m freestyle
The men's archery team picked up Australia's first medal in Rio with a bronze
The Matildas drew with Germany in women's soccer, while the Boomers and Opals got off to a solid start
You can see the full schedule for today here:

https://www.google.com/search?q=tv+sche ... ull%2C0%5D
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Lord Jim
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Re: Anyone else

Post by Lord Jim »

Sad sign of the times:
Team Refugees Gets Standing Ovation At Olympics Opening Ceremony

The first team of refugee athletes in the games’ history marched behind the Olympic flag.

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Team Refugees, the Olympic Games’ first ever team of refugee athletes, received a standing ovation on Friday night when they entered the stadium during the games’ opening ceremony in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.

The 10 athletes of Team Refugees were the second-to-last Olympic team to walk into Rio’s Maracanã Stadium as part of the time-honored parade of nations. (As is tradition, the host country, Brazil, was the final team to march out.)

Team Refugees walked behind the Olympic flag, since conflict has driven them from their home countries. Rose Nathike Lokonyen, a runner from South Sudan, led the team, carrying the flag.

As the athletes paraded, smiling and waving, the crowd in the stadium gave them a roaring cheer and stood up to applaud them.

United Nations Secretary General Ban-Ki Moon was among the audience members who could be seen applauding enthusiastically in the stands.

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Earlier in the evening, U.S. President Barack Obama tweeted a supportive message to Team Refugees:
President Obama

@POTUS

Tonight, the first-ever #TeamRefugees will also stand before the world and prove that you can succeed no matter where you're from.
4:22 PM - 5 Aug 2016
Samantha Power, the U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations, said in a video message posted to social media that in addition to rooting for Team USA, Americans should also cheer on Team Refugees this year. [Yeah, Obama should definitely be supportive of Team Refugees, since his policies of inaction helped to create so damn many of them.]
“These are athletes who have trained their whole lives to compete in the Olympics and they’d like nothing more than to compete under their own flags, but unfortunately instead of being able to do that they have been displaced from their homes,” Power says in the video, in which she sports a Team Refugees T-shirt.

This is the first year the Olympics will feature a team of refugee athletes. As Power noted, the world is currently in the grips of the worst refugee crisis since World War II, with 65 million people fleeing their homes.

Team Refugees consists of five runners originally from South Sudan; one runner originally from Ethiopia; two judokas originally from the Democratic Republic of Congo and two swimmers originally from Syria. All of them now live outside their home countries.

At least one team member owes her life to her athletic skills. Yusra Mardini, 18, a swimmer from Damascus, Syria, now living in Germany, helped save herself, her sister and a group of 18 other Syrian refugees. The refugees were on a dinghy from Turkey to Greece when the engine died; Mardini and her sister, who is also a swimmer, pulled the boat to the Greek island of Lesbos over the course of three and a half hours. Like many Syrian refugees, they had been trying to make it to Greece from Turkey so they could continue onward to wealthier European nations.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/tea ... bad215af5f

I wish these guys all the best, I'd be very happy to see everyone of them win a medal. But there should never be a need for something called "Team Refugees".... :cry:


Little Yursa got off to a good start:
Team Refugee athlete Yusra Mardini wins her 100m butterfly heat

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Yusra Mardini, 18, is competing at her first Olympic Games, just like many of her competitors.

But unlike some of the athletes she’s up against, Mardini is also on a brand-new team on the Olympic stage, the Team Refugee Athletes. Mardini fled Syria with her sister; part of their journey included pushing their flooding, overcrowded dinghy through the Mediterranean Sea as the strongest swimmers on board.

The Syrian swimming star, who competed at the 2012 Short Course World Championships, eventually made it to Germany. Her training facility was originally built to host the 1936 Olympics in Berlin.

“Since arriving in Berlin, I have been humbled by the warm welcome I’ve received from the swimming community and everyone associated with the Olympic Games,” Mardini said through a VISA press release, one of the team’s sponsors. “It means so much to me to have a partner that accepts me, includes me, and provides me with the same opportunities as other athletes competing in Rio.”

Mardini and nine other Team Refugee Olympic athletes entered the Opening Ceremony on Friday night as the last delegation before the host nation; normally, if a swimmer or other athlete is competing the day after the Opening Ceremony, they will not march (see: Michael Phelps for the past four Games).

Instead, Mardini marched with her newfound teammates, joined in Olympic unity under the “refugee” umbrella.

Then, Saturday morning, she raced to one minute, 9.21 seconds in the 100m butterfly. She added about a second to her entry time, listed at 1:08.51. She didn’t swim fast enough to advance to the semifinal Saturday night (Sarah Sjostrom of Sweden advanced in first place with a time of 56.26 seconds).

It didn’t matter: She won her preliminary heat, made up of swimmers from Grenada, Yemen, Rwanda and Qatar.

And her Olympic schedule isn’t over; Mardini is entered in the 100m freestyle, where the preliminary heats begin on Wednesday. She’s even looked beyond the Rio Games, telling the Associated Press, “I hope for more in Tokyo,” the next Olympic Games in 2020.[It would be very nice if next time she were able to march under the flag of a democratic Syria, free of ISIS and free of the butchering war criminal Assad...]
http://www.nbcolympics.com/news/team-re ... 6-olympics
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Guinevere
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Re: Anyone else

Post by Guinevere »

Yusra Madini is amazing, and I'm rooting for her all the way. I hope she also helps put a face on the Syrian refugees, that these people are not undercover villains, sent by Isis, but real people struggling to find a safe and peaceful life.

I watched the women's 4x100 relay last night. The Aussie were huge favorites, but the US ladies did a great job of keeping it close until the last leg of the relay. It was a terrific swim for them, too, and they ended up with the silver medal. Our Canadian friends took home a surprise bronze, beating out the strong Dutch and Swedish teams.

Ladies cycling road race today- 140K on the same course as the men yesterday. It was like watching NASCAR out there, with all the spills on the cobbles and the tight curves on the descents. And after 165K, the men's race came down to a three-man sprint. Hopefully the ladies will be as good, if not better!
“I ask no favor for my sex. All I ask of our brethren is that they take their feet off our necks.” ~ Ruth Bader Ginsburg, paraphrasing Sarah Moore Grimké

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Lord Jim
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Re: Anyone else

Post by Lord Jim »

Yusra Madini is amazing, and I'm rooting for her all the way. I hope she also helps put a face on the Syrian refugees, that these people are not undercover villains, sent by Isis, but real people struggling to find a safe and peaceful life.
She's a very appealing, likeable and charismatic young lady, (and also of course a heroine)... I'm sure that PR firms are tripping all over each other to sign her up. However she does in the competition, she's going to emerge as one of the stars of these Olympics. She's certain to get lots of public exposure and interviews, probably endorsement deals and maybe a book deal about her experiences as well.

She certainly has earned all of the good fortune that is now sure to come her way.
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RayThom
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Anyone Else

Post by RayThom »

I bet these athletes are all adept at sprinting... and hiding. The IOC should make this an event, and winners -- and losers -- get a safe country to call their own.
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“In a world whose absurdity appears to be so impenetrable, we simply must reach a greater degree of understanding among us, a greater sincerity.” 

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Lord Jim
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Re: Anyone else

Post by Lord Jim »

Woo Hoo!

With back to back scores, the US women's rugby team is now up 12-5 over Australia...

This would be a HUGE upset if we manage to win; the Aussie team is ranked number one in the world...


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ETA:

Oh damn, the Aussies managed to make it a tie right at the end...

Still not a bad achievement considering the quality of the opposition....
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MajGenl.Meade
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Re: Anyone else

Post by MajGenl.Meade »

The Donald has an idea for a new Olympic event:

Refugee Wall Climb

Each refugee is given access to millions of bricks and mortar. They must build the wall from one side of the stadium to the other to the height of 27' 8" exactly (no measuring instruments provided)

Then, they must climb over the wall while military competitors from their former countries wait on the other side jeering at them and armed with baseballs to knock them off the top.

It combines three exciting events: climbing, America's favorite past-time and also baseball.
For Christianity, by identifying truth with faith, must teach-and, properly understood, does teach-that any interference with the truth is immoral. A Christian with faith has nothing to fear from the facts

rubato
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Re: Anyone else

Post by rubato »

Great story about an amazing dressage champion:

http://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2016/ ... s-dressage

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I've gone to dressage competitions and at the higher levels it is just a totally stunning melding of rider and horse. More like dance than anything else. My wife has ridden dressage off an on over the years.


yrs,
rubato

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MajGenl.Meade
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Re: Anyone else

Post by MajGenl.Meade »

What a rugby sevens gold medal game that was! Australia dominated NZ.
For Christianity, by identifying truth with faith, must teach-and, properly understood, does teach-that any interference with the truth is immoral. A Christian with faith has nothing to fear from the facts

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Gob
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Re: Anyone else

Post by Gob »

I read on the BBC website that the UK just won a medal for "synchronised diving".

"Synchronised diving" FFS!

That's up there with "horse dancing" in the list of "why the fuck are these olympic sports"?
“If you trust in yourself, and believe in your dreams, and follow your star. . . you'll still get beaten by people who spent their time working hard and learning things and weren't so lazy.”

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Joe Guy
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Re: Anyone else

Post by Joe Guy »

I'm not watching so I missed this event. It's the jambe cassée competition...

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Long Run
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Re: Anyone else

Post by Long Run »

Gob wrote:I read on the BBC website that the UK just won a medal for "synchronised diving".

"Synchronised diving" FFS!

That's up there with "horse dancing" in the list of "why the fuck are these olympic sports"?
From the guy who likes to watch paint dry (aka cricket, chirp, chirp). If you get past your bias, synchro diving is just like regular diving, except instead of having one person alone doing impossible maneuvers with minimal entry splash, two divers do the same impossible maneuvers next to each other and try to be as synched up as possible. For many, it is more compelling for spectators, especially those watching the television, which is why it is being promoted big time.

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Gob
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Re: Anyone else

Post by Gob »

Long Run wrote:For many, it is more compelling for spectators, especially those watching the television, which is why it is being promoted big time.
For many, it's like watching paint dry.

If it were about who could make the biggest splash, I'd be interested. ;-)
“If you trust in yourself, and believe in your dreams, and follow your star. . . you'll still get beaten by people who spent their time working hard and learning things and weren't so lazy.”

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Long Run
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Re: Anyone else

Post by Long Run »

I think we would both do well at that!

No Greater Fool
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Re: Anyone else

Post by No Greater Fool »

Sumo wrestlers would clean both your clocks. :D

oldr_n_wsr
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Re: Anyone else

Post by oldr_n_wsr »

air rifle. (not even areal gun!)
It's not a gun, it's a rifle.
And one of these can and will do some damage.
The Sheridan Blue Streak.
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The prefered air rifle of my youth. It could put a .20 pellet through both side of a galvanized garbage pail at 10yds.
It helped me have more than a few rabbit dinners.

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