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Thursday, 11 April 2024

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Wow! Thanks for pointing Sinner out. I'm looking forward to watching him. Also, I don't think you meant to say that Caitlin Clarke's career "just ended". Her college career has just ended, but she is about to turn pro and I bet a lot more people will be watching the WNBA now because of her.

[Fixed now, thanks Steve. --Mike]

Sports stadium first aid station-

Theory busted... wasted a few minutes watching that tennis video wondering what's so special about this new kid and any of the shots? Seems exactly the same as any other match highlight video I've ever seen during daily sports news segment. Luckily the pool video was just two balls long, because the same. It's mildly interesting thinking about how I'd try to replicate, but certainly doesn't seem out of the ordinary for a pro.

Boring will always be boring no matter how remarkable it might be to an insider.

I spent most of my early life in a certain sport and I continued to watch the major events on TV only as long as I personally knew the people involved. As in, it was interesting seeing someone come in second in the olympics that I beat in competition some 10 years previously. These days I might bother to watch only if I happen to see some truly remarkable highlight equivalent to your Bolt example. And I totally understand why anything else is boring to a large majority of people.

One of my first cousins is a famous retired footballer, now a pundit on UK TV who’s loved and loathed, in equal measure, for being a tell-it-like-it-is contrarian. I could have gone to matches for free when he was playing for the dominant team in the premier league, but I only ever had a passing interest in football, at best, so I never attended a single match.

But there's good reason for American Football not having the global reach of Taylor Swift. Its reputation for being dull and bafflingly over long is one they can't shake off


Tennis and Pool are individual, non-team sports. Sure, there's 'doubles' - but who really enjoys watching that?

You'll win, or lose, on your own racquet or cue.

But team sports, like Football (let's call it English/European Football shall we?) add the organic dynamic of all the others in the team. And winning involves so much more that's out of the hands of even the star players.

Maybe you're a lone wolf kinda guy Mike?

I am so glad that you don’t swim.

You may become more familiar with cricket over the summer. The USA and West Indies are jointly hosting the world T20 championships. T20 is the short form of cricket where games last a few hours, rather than the 1 or 5 days in the longer format.

College.freestyle wrestling and F1 racing for me.
Love both sports.
Tennis, you can't make any noise when in the crowd, worse than golf.
A sure nap for me is turning on a football game.

A lot of great athletes in many sports. Appreciate them but seldom watch.

Coincidentally, I was surprised to learn the other day that pro cricket has come to the US. Major League Cricket launched its pandemic-delayed inaugural season last year. Highlights from the championship match is on Youtube:

https://youtu.be/XWHEz0QlAP4?si=_cDc60SGIRASoEUq

I didn't understand much of what happened, but there were some impressive-looking hits, plays and googlies, and by the end of the video I even felt like I had a rudimentary grasp of the scoring system. The league is still building. I wish them luck. I agree with Mike--the more the merrier where sports are concerned.

Yes, Jannick Sinner is a phenom, apparently developing into a dominant player at a rapid pace. He seems to have teamed up with coach Darren Cahill at just the right juncture. (Cahill coached Lleyton Hewitt, Andre Agassi and Simona Halep to their best seasons and number one rankings. Simona is back, by the way, having successfully appealed a widely criticized four-year suspension for accidental doping that prevented her from competing for 18 months.)

I kind of grew up around Tennis, my father liked that and soccer, but soccer wasn't on US TV at all often at the time, so I saw a lot more tennis. (Saw some pro soccer in person in England and Switzerland, though.)

Yikes, Sinner is clearly impossible :-) . The precision or accuracy, even when doing very aggressive changes of angle or changes of power, are way beyond what I'm used to seeing. And his record suggests that that selection of incredible shots is only somewhat above his usual.

I've somewhat lost interest in watching tennis since Roger Federer retired. Last year's Wimbledon drew me back in with the second emergence of Carlos Alcaraz, but he's sort of looking somewhat like a flash of lightening, like Procol Harum's Whiter Shade Of Pale.

But Sinner! Watching him hit a defensive squash shot for a clean winner was something special. Roger used that shot routinely, but I don't ever recall seeing him hit that shot for a winner, let alone a clean winner.

Personally I would prefer to see a well made photo of mannequin and the accompanying writeup that goes along with it, over sports talk on a photo blog any day.

It's odd that a photographer doesn't like the real football. I think "the beautiful game" is the most photogenic of team sports. There's been at least two art movies made about it: Zidane: A 21st Century Portrait; and Fußball wie noch nie (1970).

Thanks for the warning on Sinner, maybe it is, at last, the end of the Federer-Nadal-Djokovic era.

Re: Cricket. Don't worry too much, and watch this Bluey episode. https://www.theguardian.com/culture/2023/jun/15/blueys-cricket-episode-why-did-it-leave-australians-in-tears-and-americans-puzzled.

Cricket and baseball are basically the same, in the way that football and football (and football) are basically all the same. Don't sweat the details, enjoy the company, and soak it in. You can't explain a sport any more than a language. Sure, you can learn about the rules, but the true way to understand is immersion.

For my part, I prefer cyclocross, which amounts to racing road bikes in mud and sand, with occasional wooden barriers just in case mud and sand weren't enough.

I'm not sure how popularity is measured, but it's hard to believe that cricket would be the 2nd most popular when its World Cup has less than 20 countries participating (and only about 10 countries can be said to be serious contenders). I can't call a sport popular if it's only seriously played/watched in about 10 countries. I'd bet India (+Pakistan) accounts for about half the fan base. So perhaps in sheer numbers it might somehow be ranked as 2nd most "popular," but it might be more accurate simply to say that it's the most popular sport in India.

I knew that I had truly become an Australian (my adopted home) when - after several decades- I not only listened to the commentary of entire 5 day cricket ‘test match’ on the radio (driving from Victoria to far North Queensland) but followed exactly what was going on AND enjoyed it. It only took me the first 15 years or so to learn the rules …

Mike,

Thanks for the tip. As an ex-semi competitive tennis player, I'm marveling at this kids soft hands, his insane range, and his ability to disguise some really nasty spin shots. As opposed to many players who just hit super hard, he has an incredibly deft touch. A pleasure to watch!

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