Professional and college football has been on the last couple weeks and I have been repeatedly frustrated with these athletes having to come off the field because of muscle cramps.
Growing up we all experience muscle cramps at some point in time. And after we got the cramps we all learned that if we hydrate consistently for 24-48 hours before we perform any exhaustive physical activity that we will be fine. With this I can not believe how many big time college football players and professional football players have been hurting their team by having to come out of the game because of muscle cramps. It is inexcusable to me that these players are not able to just drink water for 48 hours prior to competition. Not only is it not hard to do, but it will help improve these athletes performance by not suffering fatigue as easliy because of dehydration.
The question then is who's ultimately responsible for making sure that these guys are doing all that they can to be in optiamal shape for their games? Obviously the players share any accountability dolled out to anyone else but is it also the job of the team trainers? The coachs? Someone inside of these programs either needs to educate these guys on how to stay hydrated or needs to make sure that these guys are taking in fluids every two hours starting 48 hours before competition to prevent dehydration and help increase these athletes performance.
Why the NFL and NBA Lockouts Can't Happen
Monday, September 13, 2010
Why the NFL and NBA Lockouts Can't Happen
I will start out by saying this.......I am tired.
I am tired of hearing about how the owners of teams in these leagues are losing money while not opeing up their books to prove it. I am tired of hearing the players complain about how they are being unfairly treated by the owners when these guys are getting paid MILLIONS of dollars to play a GAME. I realize that in the grand scheme of things both sides in both leagues have a little substance to back up their stances but both groups need to realize the how much they have to lose if they let a lockout occur.
Take the NBA, Game 7 of this years NBA Finals between the Celtics and the Lakers was the most watched NBA Finals game since 1998. This momentum was carried into the offseason with much attention being paid to the free agent class which was heralded as the best ever and culminated by what we all know as "The Decision" featuring LeBron.
With the NBA's popularity spiking, the owners and players cannot afford to voluntarily stop this. The fans will not forgive them. The fans should not forgive them if they choose to do this. When the MLB season was stopped short 1994 it took a single season home-run chase by Mark McGwire and Sammy Sosa in 1998 to start to repair the damage that had been done and some even say that MLB still hasn't fully recovered from the damage that was done by the stoppage.
With the NFL, the potential damage to could be done is even more extreme because of the current state of their league. The NFL is the absolute powerhouse among professional leagues in the United States. The NFL's estimated annual income is around $8 billion. I will say it again....$8 BILLION. I realize the owners are wanting to add on two regular season games while at the same time lowering players salaries to try to cover supposedly lowering ticket revenues, but the answer to the problem is not a lockout. If the owners think they are losing money now they should try operating an organization with no games to bring in money and angry sponsors who will then be trying to take their advertising dollars elsewhere.
The bottom line is that these lockouts can't happen. This would be bad for the owners, the players, the league's, the sports, and most of all...the fans.
I am tired of hearing about how the owners of teams in these leagues are losing money while not opeing up their books to prove it. I am tired of hearing the players complain about how they are being unfairly treated by the owners when these guys are getting paid MILLIONS of dollars to play a GAME. I realize that in the grand scheme of things both sides in both leagues have a little substance to back up their stances but both groups need to realize the how much they have to lose if they let a lockout occur.
Take the NBA, Game 7 of this years NBA Finals between the Celtics and the Lakers was the most watched NBA Finals game since 1998. This momentum was carried into the offseason with much attention being paid to the free agent class which was heralded as the best ever and culminated by what we all know as "The Decision" featuring LeBron.
With the NBA's popularity spiking, the owners and players cannot afford to voluntarily stop this. The fans will not forgive them. The fans should not forgive them if they choose to do this. When the MLB season was stopped short 1994 it took a single season home-run chase by Mark McGwire and Sammy Sosa in 1998 to start to repair the damage that had been done and some even say that MLB still hasn't fully recovered from the damage that was done by the stoppage.
With the NFL, the potential damage to could be done is even more extreme because of the current state of their league. The NFL is the absolute powerhouse among professional leagues in the United States. The NFL's estimated annual income is around $8 billion. I will say it again....$8 BILLION. I realize the owners are wanting to add on two regular season games while at the same time lowering players salaries to try to cover supposedly lowering ticket revenues, but the answer to the problem is not a lockout. If the owners think they are losing money now they should try operating an organization with no games to bring in money and angry sponsors who will then be trying to take their advertising dollars elsewhere.
The bottom line is that these lockouts can't happen. This would be bad for the owners, the players, the league's, the sports, and most of all...the fans.
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