PC Board OT Thread Take 4 [No Politics]

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Re: PC Board OT Thread Take 4 [No Politics] 

Post#1281 » by sp6r=underrated » Tue Mar 29, 2022 2:29 am

Doctor MJ wrote:
sp6r=underrated wrote:Tennis is similar to hockey. Whenever I watch it I think, I should watch this more, this is an awesome sport, and then go 6 months without watching. I don't know much about Osaka but I find the ongoing story fascinating as it tells a lot about the modern athletes relations to fans and media.

Question for tennis fans: Is she treated different than the other mostly white tennis players?
Questions for everyone:
What do you think the media/fan reaction would be if a male athlete acted like Osaka?
What do you think the media/fan reaction would be if a white athlete acted like Osaka?


So, I think the first thing is this:

Osaka gets way more attention than she would otherwise get if she looked different. Call it the Tiger Woods phenomenon. Literally impossible for a white golfer to get as much attention as Tiger got. Why? Because golfers are White, and he's not. For a converse example: Consider Larry Bird who has regularly seen his collectibles go for more than Magic Johnson. Why? Because basketball players are Black, and he's not. Or Jeremy Lin for that matter. (And of course the Williams sisters in tennis.)

When you're a spearhead. It matters to people. Osaka is biracial with a country of origin that hasn't ever produced a dominant player before.

Then there's the attractiveness angle. If I say the name "Anna Kournikova" y'all will know. Why? Not because she was good at tennis - she never won a single professional tournament as a singles player, not Grand Slam tournaments here, she never won even a minor tournament. You know her because she was beautiful. Osaka is beautiful too.

This along with her appearing to emerge as the next great female tennis player after a decade plus without any new great female tennis player emerging, caused her to become a phenomenon.

And what we're seeing is someone who very clearly has major anxiety issues - clear from Day 1 - getting more attention than almost everyone else in the world. It's a recipe for something to go sideways.

I do think the tennis media can be overly "gotcha", and can do so with patronizing, exploitive sexism...but this isn't happening because they are all monsters. It's happening because Osaka just doesn't have the personality to be happy like this...and least for now, but time is ticking.

And tennis is such a mental game - so much harder mentally than a game like basketball. Why didn't Monica Seles go back and dominate the world after she got stabbed? Not because she wasn't physically able, it was the mental strength she never recaptured. She was known as someone with absolute laser focus who growing up as a prospect often didn't even pay attention to the score (Chris Evert was similar). After the attack, it was like she could never stop thinking about all that was around her.

And even beyond that, it's so, so common for great tennis prospects to never reach that top echelon. You can scout the body much easier than the head. An incredible physical talent may have so much success against his/her age group that he/she has little reason to doubt their capabilities. And then you get to the pros, and if you have any mental vulnerability, you're going to hit a wall it's no given you'll be able to climb over.

Feel free to ask if you have any other questions. Tennis is my dad's favorite sport so I grew up with it even more than I grew up with any particular team sport.


Thanks for the reply.

1. Was she considered a Lebron James level prospect? By that I mean, did people in the tennis community, expect her to be a dominant force since childhood?
2. I looked her bio up on wiki. She's won 7 titles and 4 Grand Slams. How dominant was Osaka stretch of play? As someone who doesn't know much, it seems like female tennis players ***rack*** up titles?

3. I remember following Hingis during her brief peak, and as you mentioned one factor was I thought she was beautiful, her performance during that time period seems similar. As far as I can tell, no one thought Hingis was going to end up a GOAT tennis player.

Did Hingis burnout for any specific reasons or was she too small for Serena era tennis?

4. Why are male tennis players so old now? When I was a kid tennis was a young man's game. Intuitively it makes sense it favors the young due to the demands of the game. But now it seems like the same guys who won years ago are still on top.
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Re: PC Board OT Thread Take 4 [No Politics] 

Post#1282 » by eminence » Tue Mar 29, 2022 2:57 am

Hingis had some pretty serious injuries and surgeries and never came back to the level she was at earlier.
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Re: PC Board OT Thread Take 4 [No Politics] 

Post#1283 » by HeartBreakKid » Tue Mar 29, 2022 3:14 am

sp6r=underrated wrote:
Doctor MJ wrote:
sp6r=underrated wrote:Tennis is similar to hockey. Whenever I watch it I think, I should watch this more, this is an awesome sport, and then go 6 months without watching. I don't know much about Osaka but I find the ongoing story fascinating as it tells a lot about the modern athletes relations to fans and media.

Question for tennis fans: Is she treated different than the other mostly white tennis players?
Questions for everyone:
What do you think the media/fan reaction would be if a male athlete acted like Osaka?
What do you think the media/fan reaction would be if a white athlete acted like Osaka?


So, I think the first thing is this:

Osaka gets way more attention than she would otherwise get if she looked different. Call it the Tiger Woods phenomenon. Literally impossible for a white golfer to get as much attention as Tiger got. Why? Because golfers are White, and he's not. For a converse example: Consider Larry Bird who has regularly seen his collectibles go for more than Magic Johnson. Why? Because basketball players are Black, and he's not. Or Jeremy Lin for that matter. (And of course the Williams sisters in tennis.)

When you're a spearhead. It matters to people. Osaka is biracial with a country of origin that hasn't ever produced a dominant player before.

Then there's the attractiveness angle. If I say the name "Anna Kournikova" y'all will know. Why? Not because she was good at tennis - she never won a single professional tournament as a singles player, not Grand Slam tournaments here, she never won even a minor tournament. You know her because she was beautiful. Osaka is beautiful too.

This along with her appearing to emerge as the next great female tennis player after a decade plus without any new great female tennis player emerging, caused her to become a phenomenon.

And what we're seeing is someone who very clearly has major anxiety issues - clear from Day 1 - getting more attention than almost everyone else in the world. It's a recipe for something to go sideways.

I do think the tennis media can be overly "gotcha", and can do so with patronizing, exploitive sexism...but this isn't happening because they are all monsters. It's happening because Osaka just doesn't have the personality to be happy like this...and least for now, but time is ticking.

And tennis is such a mental game - so much harder mentally than a game like basketball. Why didn't Monica Seles go back and dominate the world after she got stabbed? Not because she wasn't physically able, it was the mental strength she never recaptured. She was known as someone with absolute laser focus who growing up as a prospect often didn't even pay attention to the score (Chris Evert was similar). After the attack, it was like she could never stop thinking about all that was around her.

And even beyond that, it's so, so common for great tennis prospects to never reach that top echelon. You can scout the body much easier than the head. An incredible physical talent may have so much success against his/her age group that he/she has little reason to doubt their capabilities. And then you get to the pros, and if you have any mental vulnerability, you're going to hit a wall it's no given you'll be able to climb over.

Feel free to ask if you have any other questions. Tennis is my dad's favorite sport so I grew up with it even more than I grew up with any particular team sport.


Thanks for the reply.

1. Was she considered a Lebron James level prospect? By that I mean, did people in the tennis community, expect her to be a dominant force since childhood?
2. I looked her bio up on wiki. She's won 7 titles and 4 Grand Slams. How dominant was Osaka stretch of play? As someone who doesn't know much, it seems like female tennis players ***rack*** up titles?

3. I remember following Hingis during her brief peak, and as you mentioned one factor was I thought she was beautiful, her performance during that time period seems similar. As far as I can tell, no one thought Hingis was going to end up a GOAT tennis player.

Did Hingis burnout for any specific reasons or was she too small for Serena era tennis?

4. Why are male tennis players so old now? When I was a kid tennis was a young man's game. Intuitively it makes sense it favors the young due to the demands of the game. But now it seems like the same guys who won years ago are still on top.


4 singles grand slams at 24 doesn't seem out of the ordinary for arguably the best player in the world. Novak and Nadal are both around 35 and have 5x that amount.
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Re: PC Board OT Thread Take 4 [No Politics] 

Post#1284 » by 70sFan » Wed Mar 30, 2022 8:27 pm

Today I found the article from the end of last year about NBA efforts to create a massive digital archive that contains all the possible games from all NBA seasons. You can read the article here:

https://www.wsj.com/articles/nba-video-records-bunker-11639632052

In the article, it is said that the NBA already created online platform for reaching out footage you'd like to see. I tried to find it today and I actually found their site:

https://archive.nba.com/

Unfortunately, we can't have the access to this site for now. I think we have to make an effort to show NBA that we care about such stuff. If you have any NBA fans among your friends, I would like you to share this information.
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Re: PC Board OT Thread Take 4 [No Politics] 

Post#1285 » by Dr Positivity » Thu Mar 31, 2022 12:38 am

sp6r=underrated wrote:4. Why are male tennis players so old now? When I was a kid tennis was a young man's game. Intuitively it makes sense it favors the young due to the demands of the game. But now it seems like the same guys who won years ago are still on top.


They're by far the 3 best players of all time so the gap between them and the competition was able to sustain getting older
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Re: PC Board OT Thread Take 4 [No Politics] 

Post#1286 » by Jaivl » Thu Mar 31, 2022 6:02 am

Dr Positivity wrote:
sp6r=underrated wrote:4. Why are male tennis players so old now? When I was a kid tennis was a young man's game. Intuitively it makes sense it favors the young due to the demands of the game. But now it seems like the same guys who won years ago are still on top.


They're by far the 3 best players of all time so the gap between them and the competition was able to sustain getting older

Wait for Alcaraz 8-)
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Re: PC Board OT Thread Take 4 [No Politics] 

Post#1287 » by Doctor MJ » Thu Mar 31, 2022 10:47 pm

sp6r=underrated wrote:
Doctor MJ wrote:
sp6r=underrated wrote:Tennis is similar to hockey. Whenever I watch it I think, I should watch this more, this is an awesome sport, and then go 6 months without watching. I don't know much about Osaka but I find the ongoing story fascinating as it tells a lot about the modern athletes relations to fans and media.

Question for tennis fans: Is she treated different than the other mostly white tennis players?
Questions for everyone:
What do you think the media/fan reaction would be if a male athlete acted like Osaka?
What do you think the media/fan reaction would be if a white athlete acted like Osaka?


So, I think the first thing is this:

Osaka gets way more attention than she would otherwise get if she looked different. Call it the Tiger Woods phenomenon. Literally impossible for a white golfer to get as much attention as Tiger got. Why? Because golfers are White, and he's not. For a converse example: Consider Larry Bird who has regularly seen his collectibles go for more than Magic Johnson. Why? Because basketball players are Black, and he's not. Or Jeremy Lin for that matter. (And of course the Williams sisters in tennis.)

When you're a spearhead. It matters to people. Osaka is biracial with a country of origin that hasn't ever produced a dominant player before.

Then there's the attractiveness angle. If I say the name "Anna Kournikova" y'all will know. Why? Not because she was good at tennis - she never won a single professional tournament as a singles player, not Grand Slam tournaments here, she never won even a minor tournament. You know her because she was beautiful. Osaka is beautiful too.

This along with her appearing to emerge as the next great female tennis player after a decade plus without any new great female tennis player emerging, caused her to become a phenomenon.

And what we're seeing is someone who very clearly has major anxiety issues - clear from Day 1 - getting more attention than almost everyone else in the world. It's a recipe for something to go sideways.

I do think the tennis media can be overly "gotcha", and can do so with patronizing, exploitive sexism...but this isn't happening because they are all monsters. It's happening because Osaka just doesn't have the personality to be happy like this...and least for now, but time is ticking.

And tennis is such a mental game - so much harder mentally than a game like basketball. Why didn't Monica Seles go back and dominate the world after she got stabbed? Not because she wasn't physically able, it was the mental strength she never recaptured. She was known as someone with absolute laser focus who growing up as a prospect often didn't even pay attention to the score (Chris Evert was similar). After the attack, it was like she could never stop thinking about all that was around her.

And even beyond that, it's so, so common for great tennis prospects to never reach that top echelon. You can scout the body much easier than the head. An incredible physical talent may have so much success against his/her age group that he/she has little reason to doubt their capabilities. And then you get to the pros, and if you have any mental vulnerability, you're going to hit a wall it's no given you'll be able to climb over.

Feel free to ask if you have any other questions. Tennis is my dad's favorite sport so I grew up with it even more than I grew up with any particular team sport.


Thanks for the reply.

1. Was she considered a Lebron James level prospect? By that I mean, did people in the tennis community, expect her to be a dominant force since childhood?
2. I looked her bio up on wiki. She's won 7 titles and 4 Grand Slams. How dominant was Osaka stretch of play? As someone who doesn't know much, it seems like female tennis players ***rack*** up titles?

3. I remember following Hingis during her brief peak, and as you mentioned one factor was I thought she was beautiful, her performance during that time period seems similar. As far as I can tell, no one thought Hingis was going to end up a GOAT tennis player.

Did Hingis burnout for any specific reasons or was she too small for Serena era tennis?

4. Why are male tennis players so old now? When I was a kid tennis was a young man's game. Intuitively it makes sense it favors the young due to the demands of the game. But now it seems like the same guys who won years ago are still on top.


I don't think LeBron level prospects actually exist in tennis. Other knowledgeable people may disagree, but I'd say that it's far harder to predict because tennis is so much more about fine motor skills and mental toughness than basketball is. We can talk about the top prospects in the world at any given time, but the tennis world treats all of them with skepticism until they start looking dominant at the pro level.

In fact, if you're looking for a male tennis prospect not much younger than LeBron who coming up had some naive folks saying "He's going to destroy everyone when he comes of age", may I present Donald Young who in 2005 became the youngest male Junior #1 in history. As a pro, he peaked at 38.

I think people would be inclined nowadays to talk as if the Williams sisters were sure things, but there have been so, so many similar prospects who just never really did that much in the pros.

2. Don't female tennis players rack up titles? They sure used to. Basically up through the Steffi Graf era the most dominant women were always more dominant than the most dominant men. Since then, all the women have been spotty. Serena Williams stands head and shoulders over all of these more recent generations, but the reality is that if she had the kind of consistent dominance that earlier generations did combined with the longevity she's proven capable of having, she could have racked up 30+ grand slams easily. Instead, when all is said and done, it's possible (but not likely) that both Nadal & Djokovic will end up with more while losing out on 20 to Federer.

What I'd say about Osaka (born 1997), is that she's already shown the most dominant player of anyone we've seen in women's tennis born after 1982, and while that's not as dominant as we maybe think the top woman should have been able to achieve, it's no hyperbole to say that there's literally no one around in the pros who seems likely to ever be more dominant than Osaka was.

That can change quickly of course, but we've been waiting and waiting and waiting and Osaka was the best we got. And incidentally, the next name on that list until recently would have been Ashleigh Barty, who at age 25 just retired.

The cupboard is incredibly bare.

3. Hingis. Actually, Hingis was way more dominant in her early run - who at 17 was in the process of getting to 5 straight grand slam finals and winning 4 of them. Hingis was one of the all-time great prodigies, and drastically ahead of the Williams sisters at the same age.

But with her there was always a concern over her lack of power, and this type of concern is a recurring theme in tennis. We've had various #1's like Hingis, Lleyton Hewitt, and Caroline Wozniaki, who reach the top at a young age but there's a general feeling that they may get surpassed by a superior physical specimen who comes into his/her own, and and the fears proved quite right - though it's important to note that that means people think every superior physical specimen is going to surpass the inferiors. Most of those specimens never come close to reaching the top, it's just that if one of them does, they reach the highest highs.

Back to Osaka: She's a power player, and power players are the superior specimens. If she could just keep up her peak level of player - which she's demonstrated over two sustained stretches already - there's every reason to think she could dominate the world.

Re: Hingis: burnout, too small for era. Well, there's a long going on here. I do believe her first retirement was about burnout. She was dealing with injuries, but also with being hopelessly outgunned by the Williams sisters, and while there was good reason to believe she could still earn a lot of money as a tennis player, she was also getting paid a lot as a celebrity. Then she came back for a couple years only to receive a 2-year ban for a positive cocaine test. She'd stay away from the game then for a half decade and when she came back it was just to play doubles (where she won 4 more majors beginning 13 years after her last).

4. We have top male tennis players who are old because the top players have been able to stay on top like never before, as is happening in a variety of sports. I would attribute this to training and technology, with the additional note in tennis that guys like Fed/Nadal/Djokovic can afford all sorts of things that less rich players cannot.

We know that the LeBrons and the Bradys of the world have a major edge over most of their peers, and that's in team sports where you have a billion-dollar business looking to spend a lot of money to get you in the best shape. Imagine how bad the difference can be in a sport where you're truly on your own?

It will be very interesting to see how things look when this generation finally shuffles off in to the sunset. We may actually see a future where the most successful players regularly end up with their greatest dominance in their 30s even though all the lesser players hit their apex at a much younger age.
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Re: PC Board OT Thread Take 4 [No Politics] 

Post#1288 » by sp6r=underrated » Mon Apr 4, 2022 5:30 am

Doctor MJ wrote:
sp6r=underrated wrote:
Doctor MJ wrote:
So, I think the first thing is this:

Osaka gets way more attention than she would otherwise get if she looked different. Call it the Tiger Woods phenomenon. Literally impossible for a white golfer to get as much attention as Tiger got. Why? Because golfers are White, and he's not. For a converse example: Consider Larry Bird who has regularly seen his collectibles go for more than Magic Johnson. Why? Because basketball players are Black, and he's not. Or Jeremy Lin for that matter. (And of course the Williams sisters in tennis.)

When you're a spearhead. It matters to people. Osaka is biracial with a country of origin that hasn't ever produced a dominant player before.

Then there's the attractiveness angle. If I say the name "Anna Kournikova" y'all will know. Why? Not because she was good at tennis - she never won a single professional tournament as a singles player, not Grand Slam tournaments here, she never won even a minor tournament. You know her because she was beautiful. Osaka is beautiful too.

This along with her appearing to emerge as the next great female tennis player after a decade plus without any new great female tennis player emerging, caused her to become a phenomenon.

And what we're seeing is someone who very clearly has major anxiety issues - clear from Day 1 - getting more attention than almost everyone else in the world. It's a recipe for something to go sideways.

I do think the tennis media can be overly "gotcha", and can do so with patronizing, exploitive sexism...but this isn't happening because they are all monsters. It's happening because Osaka just doesn't have the personality to be happy like this...and least for now, but time is ticking.

And tennis is such a mental game - so much harder mentally than a game like basketball. Why didn't Monica Seles go back and dominate the world after she got stabbed? Not because she wasn't physically able, it was the mental strength she never recaptured. She was known as someone with absolute laser focus who growing up as a prospect often didn't even pay attention to the score (Chris Evert was similar). After the attack, it was like she could never stop thinking about all that was around her.

And even beyond that, it's so, so common for great tennis prospects to never reach that top echelon. You can scout the body much easier than the head. An incredible physical talent may have so much success against his/her age group that he/she has little reason to doubt their capabilities. And then you get to the pros, and if you have any mental vulnerability, you're going to hit a wall it's no given you'll be able to climb over.

Feel free to ask if you have any other questions. Tennis is my dad's favorite sport so I grew up with it even more than I grew up with any particular team sport.


Thanks for the reply.

1. Was she considered a Lebron James level prospect? By that I mean, did people in the tennis community, expect her to be a dominant force since childhood?
2. I looked her bio up on wiki. She's won 7 titles and 4 Grand Slams. How dominant was Osaka stretch of play? As someone who doesn't know much, it seems like female tennis players ***rack*** up titles?

3. I remember following Hingis during her brief peak, and as you mentioned one factor was I thought she was beautiful, her performance during that time period seems similar. As far as I can tell, no one thought Hingis was going to end up a GOAT tennis player.

Did Hingis burnout for any specific reasons or was she too small for Serena era tennis?

4. Why are male tennis players so old now? When I was a kid tennis was a young man's game. Intuitively it makes sense it favors the young due to the demands of the game. But now it seems like the same guys who won years ago are still on top.


I don't think LeBron level prospects actually exist in tennis. Other knowledgeable people may disagree, but I'd say that it's far harder to predict because tennis is so much more about fine motor skills and mental toughness than basketball is. We can talk about the top prospects in the world at any given time, but the tennis world treats all of them with skepticism until they start looking dominant at the pro level.

In fact, if you're looking for a male tennis prospect not much younger than LeBron who coming up had some naive folks saying "He's going to destroy everyone when he comes of age", may I present Donald Young who in 2005 became the youngest male Junior #1 in history. As a pro, he peaked at 38.

I think people would be inclined nowadays to talk as if the Williams sisters were sure things, but there have been so, so many similar prospects who just never really did that much in the pros.

2. Don't female tennis players rack up titles? They sure used to. Basically up through the Steffi Graf era the most dominant women were always more dominant than the most dominant men. Since then, all the women have been spotty. Serena Williams stands head and shoulders over all of these more recent generations, but the reality is that if she had the kind of consistent dominance that earlier generations did combined with the longevity she's proven capable of having, she could have racked up 30+ grand slams easily. Instead, when all is said and done, it's possible (but not likely) that both Nadal & Djokovic will end up with more while losing out on 20 to Federer.

What I'd say about Osaka (born 1997), is that she's already shown the most dominant player of anyone we've seen in women's tennis born after 1982, and while that's not as dominant as we maybe think the top woman should have been able to achieve, it's no hyperbole to say that there's literally no one around in the pros who seems likely to ever be more dominant than Osaka was.

That can change quickly of course, but we've been waiting and waiting and waiting and Osaka was the best we got. And incidentally, the next name on that list until recently would have been Ashleigh Barty, who at age 25 just retired.

The cupboard is incredibly bare.

3. Hingis. Actually, Hingis was way more dominant in her early run - who at 17 was in the process of getting to 5 straight grand slam finals and winning 4 of them. Hingis was one of the all-time great prodigies, and drastically ahead of the Williams sisters at the same age.

But with her there was always a concern over her lack of power, and this type of concern is a recurring theme in tennis. We've had various #1's like Hingis, Lleyton Hewitt, and Caroline Wozniaki, who reach the top at a young age but there's a general feeling that they may get surpassed by a superior physical specimen who comes into his/her own, and and the fears proved quite right - though it's important to note that that means people think every superior physical specimen is going to surpass the inferiors. Most of those specimens never come close to reaching the top, it's just that if one of them does, they reach the highest highs.

Back to Osaka: She's a power player, and power players are the superior specimens. If she could just keep up her peak level of player - which she's demonstrated over two sustained stretches already - there's every reason to think she could dominate the world.

Re: Hingis: burnout, too small for era. Well, there's a long going on here. I do believe her first retirement was about burnout. She was dealing with injuries, but also with being hopelessly outgunned by the Williams sisters, and while there was good reason to believe she could still earn a lot of money as a tennis player, she was also getting paid a lot as a celebrity. Then she came back for a couple years only to receive a 2-year ban for a positive cocaine test. She'd stay away from the game then for a half decade and when she came back it was just to play doubles (where she won 4 more majors beginning 13 years after her last).

4. We have top male tennis players who are old because the top players have been able to stay on top like never before, as is happening in a variety of sports. I would attribute this to training and technology, with the additional note in tennis that guys like Fed/Nadal/Djokovic can afford all sorts of things that less rich players cannot.

We know that the LeBrons and the Bradys of the world have a major edge over most of their peers, and that's in team sports where you have a billion-dollar business looking to spend a lot of money to get you in the best shape. Imagine how bad the difference can be in a sport where you're truly on your own?

It will be very interesting to see how things look when this generation finally shuffles off in to the sunset. We may actually see a future where the most successful players regularly end up with their greatest dominance in their 30s even though all the lesser players hit their apex at a much younger age.


Is there any truth to the rumor I heard that match fixing still occurs in tennis?
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Re: PC Board OT Thread Take 4 [No Politics] 

Post#1289 » by Dr Positivity » Mon Apr 11, 2022 4:46 pm

I really like golf as a TV sport... even in a blowout like this years Masters I enjoyed a lot of it. I will always love the majors set-up it and tennis have.
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Re: PC Board OT Thread Take 4 [No Politics] 

Post#1290 » by Goudelock » Mon Apr 11, 2022 6:49 pm

Devin Booker wrote:Bro.
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Re: PC Board OT Thread Take 4 [No Politics] 

Post#1291 » by MyUniBroDavis » Wed Apr 13, 2022 2:12 pm



“On the night of November 8, hundreds of students gathered in front on Paterno's home in support of the beleaguered coach. Paterno thanked the crowd and said, "The kids who were victims or whatever they want to say, I think we all ought to say a prayer for them. It's a tough life when people do certain things to you."

(After being fired)

“ That night, several thousand Penn State students chanting Paterno's name rioted in the streets, hurling rocks, tearing down street signs, and overturning a news van.”


Oof
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Re: PC Board OT Thread Take 4 [No Politics] 

Post#1292 » by Texas Chuck » Thu Apr 14, 2022 2:54 am

so there is a new Dirk book out. Well a new English language version, its been out in German for awhile now. It's called The Great Nowitzki by Thomas Pletzinger and while obviously not everyone loves Dirk the way I love Dirk, I would still highly recommend this book. It is not your traditional basketball biography at all.

Get a really in depth look at the Holger relationship too and how it got started. Does any other NBA player have anything like a Holger figure btw? Such a unique part of the whole Dirk story.
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Re: PC Board OT Thread Take 4 [No Politics] 

Post#1293 » by sp6r=underrated » Fri Apr 15, 2022 4:09 pm

Why are people surprised Paterno turned a blind eye? Willful ignorance is a job requirement for successful college coaches at major basketball/football programs.

Major football/basketball college programs generate significant revenues. The major conferences have national tv deals. Their conference championship games and conference tournaments are major events. Bowl games and the tournament are events on par with the World Series and NBA Finals. Coaches get 7 figures, assistants, athletic directors and other make six figure salaries. This is not amateur sports and the people involved, save one group, are treated as professionals.

The people responsible for the revenues are the players. They don't get paid and are classified as amateurs. Coaches work everyday with the players. They get to know them on a personal level and I'm sure are fond of many of them. Also coaches are well above average in intelligence. Contrary to attitudes of some smarter than-thou fans, coaching is a cognitively demanding job. Almost all coaches know on some level the players are getting ripped off. Yet as a class they all manage to fine ways to ignore it since the current system is to their benefit. 5 of the 20 highest paid coaches in American sports serve in the college ranks.

https://www.forbes.com/sites/kurtbadenhausen/2019/12/05/the-20-highest-paid-coaches-in-american-sports/

People who are capable of ignoring that exploitation are much more likely to be able to ignore other forms of abuse.
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Re: PC Board OT Thread Take 4 [No Politics] 

Post#1294 » by Texas Chuck » Fri Apr 15, 2022 4:54 pm

Players can get paid now btw.

And I don't think that many people are surprised by any of it. Obviously you have some in Pennsylvania who just aren't going to be open to the idea that their hero could have done that, but I think the vast majority understands. I mean we had a college basketball coach trying to cover up the fact that one of his players murdered another one of his players and the assistant who refused to go along and stay silent got blackballed from coaching while the head coach covering it up continued to get work.

Winning is all most schools care about regardless of lip service. Even Art Briles just got hired again, though in that one case there was enough outrage where he walked away from it.
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Re: PC Board OT Thread Take 4 [No Politics] 

Post#1295 » by Clyde Frazier » Wed Apr 20, 2022 7:43 pm

Texas Chuck wrote:so there is a new Dirk book out. Well a new English language version, its been out in German for awhile now. It's called The Great Nowitzki by Thomas Pletzinger and while obviously not everyone loves Dirk the way I love Dirk, I would still highly recommend this book. It is not your traditional basketball biography at all.

Get a really in depth look at the Holger relationship too and how it got started. Does any other NBA player have anything like a Holger figure btw? Such a unique part of the whole Dirk story.


The book wasn't on my radar, thanks! I have to say that quote from dirk recently about regretting playing the last few years is sticking with me. I almost feel selfish for enjoying how long he stuck around. His weak mobility should've been a bigger indicator to some of us than it was at the time. In my head it was more just "old man dirk! the shot is the last thing to go so he can still be effective." And now he's suffering the consequences :(
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Re: PC Board OT Thread Take 4 [No Politics] 

Post#1296 » by Doctor MJ » Wed Apr 20, 2022 8:36 pm

sp6r=underrated wrote:Is there any truth to the rumor I heard that match fixing still occurs in tennis?


Just noticed this.

My feeling is that tennis is in the same boat as all sports to some degree. I haven't heard of any issues in the past few years, but wherever the potential money to be made from gambling dwarfs the money to be made by the participants, you have to expect that people will try to bribe the participants and you must be vigilant against it.

So note, what this means is that this isn't going to be an issue at Wimbledon, but if could be an issue at some minor tournament you've never heard of, or at the amateur level.
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Re: PC Board OT Thread Take 4 [No Politics] 

Post#1297 » by sp6r=underrated » Wed Apr 20, 2022 9:09 pm

Doctor MJ wrote:
sp6r=underrated wrote:Is there any truth to the rumor I heard that match fixing still occurs in tennis?


Just noticed this.

My feeling is that tennis is in the same boat as all sports to some degree. I haven't heard of any issues in the past few years, but wherever the potential money to be made from gambling dwarfs the money to be made by the participants, you have to expect that people will try to bribe the participants and you must be vigilant against it.

So note, what this means is that this isn't going to be an issue at Wimbledon, but if could be an issue at some minor tournament you've never heard of, or at the amateur level.


What world ranking do you need to be at in tennis to make a career of it(100k assume career for purposes of this question)?
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Re: PC Board OT Thread Take 4 [No Politics] 

Post#1298 » by Doctor MJ » Wed Apr 20, 2022 10:02 pm

sp6r=underrated wrote:
Doctor MJ wrote:
sp6r=underrated wrote:Is there any truth to the rumor I heard that match fixing still occurs in tennis?


Just noticed this.

My feeling is that tennis is in the same boat as all sports to some degree. I haven't heard of any issues in the past few years, but wherever the potential money to be made from gambling dwarfs the money to be made by the participants, you have to expect that people will try to bribe the participants and you must be vigilant against it.

So note, what this means is that this isn't going to be an issue at Wimbledon, but if could be an issue at some minor tournament you've never heard of, or at the amateur level.


What world ranking do you need to be at in tennis to make a career of it(100k assume career for purposes of this question)?


According to this site about 200 men and 200 women in 2021. Keep in mind that the sport is still recovering from Covid, and 2019 was likely the peak. That site also seems to say the #100 man earned about 400K last year, while I know that the #100 man in 2019 earned north of 600K.

In general, I'd expect there to be a sharp fall off in the 100s and that basically if you're not someone who can expect to at least get deep into qualifying for the majors (where there are 128 get spots in an actual tournament), and you're not riding high on endorsement/hype/investors/family, you're probably not going to be able to keep globetrotting indefinitely.
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Re: PC Board OT Thread Take 4 [No Politics] 

Post#1299 » by HeartBreakKid » Thu Apr 21, 2022 12:29 am

Top 200 you're making about 100k, albeit Tennis players pay for many of their own expenses unless they're on top of the rankings, so 100k they're not really saving anything.

Top 250ish you make decent money in terms of raw numbers, but if they travel too much for their job they probably need to tutor/coach in their off time, which I imagine most Tennis players do.

If they come from a country where the cost of living is not high (which is common because tennis is very international) then that's another story.

Generally speaking it's smart to live in places that are not mega expensive if you're a pro athlete.
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Re: PC Board OT Thread Take 4 [No Politics] 

Post#1300 » by Colbinii » Fri Apr 22, 2022 12:59 am

I'm only 29 but nothing makes me feel older than when a group of teenagers call me Sir when asking if I want to play 21.

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