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#31
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On 16 Nov 2005 21:08:12 -0800, "Henry Hefner"
wrote: Ken Fortenberry wrote: Bass_Mr. wrote: ... Corporate America must feel that bass fishing is a sport,or there wouldn't be millions of dollars of sponsorship being poured into it. ... If corporate America felt they could market and sell tiddlywinks they would sponsor tiddlywinks competitions. But that wouldn't make tiddlywinks a sport. It's just semantics, Warren asked me flat out if I consider tournament bass fishing a sport. I do not. But if you think it is, that's fine with me. -- Ken Fortenberry As long as we're arguing semantics, baseball and football can't be sports, 'cause they're GAMES. That's why a participant is called a PLAYER, because a GAME is something you PLAY. Kinda like tiddlywinks. ![]() Henry Uff-DA!! Jim |
#32
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![]() "Bass_Mr." wrote in message ink.net... snipKen Fortenberry wrote: Bass fishing is no more a "physical activity" than tossing darts, or bowling ... It is very clear that you have never gotten out of bed at 2am,driven a couple of hours (or more),stood on the bow of a bass boat in a 20+ mph wind,controlled that boat in a safe and efficient manner,fished your guts out for 8 hours or more on a diet of crackers and water,competing against people of all skill levels and expertise,then packed it all up and drove all the way back.That is just a taste of what amateur bass club fishermen do.At the pro level you can multiply that tenfold. That doesn't make it a sport or its participants athletes. Maybe it's tiring and grueling, but so is a construction worker's day. And I guarantee that worker would rather be engaged in the torture described above. And I assume one could do it on a better diet than water and crackers. Corporate America must feel that bass fishing is a sport,or there wouldn't be millions of dollars of sponsorship being poured into it. When ESPN airs a "trout fishing competition" are they doing it because it is a sport or because they just like seeing men wade around in rubber pants? I urge you again to go into your fly fishing group and tell that crowd they aren't involved in a sport.I guarantee you a lot of them would have their rubber britches in a wad! ESPN airs eating contests and spelling bees. No insults intended here, but I wonder why so many tournament fishermen get defensive about this subject. Do they need to legitimize their activity with the "I'm an athlete" claim? Plus, don't forget, tournaments at the highest levels of competition can be (and are) won by senior citizens, smokers and 300-pounders. |
#33
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Marty wrote:
That doesn't make it a sport or its participants athletes. No insults intended here, but I wonder why so many tournament fishermen get defensive about this subject. Do they need to legitimize their activity with the "I'm an athlete" claim? Nothing to do with tournaments and competition at all. When the magazine was named SPORTS AFIELD some time around the turn of the previous century, they weren't talking about fishing tournaments. Just the traditional outdoor sports. IE, fishing and hunting. SPORT and ATHLETIC COMPETITION are two entirely different things. As an angler, I am a sportsman, not an athlete. When I was young and agile enough to play basketball I was involved in athletics and athletic competition. I probably stayed involved too long after my skills and body deteriorated, and I wasn't really competitive any more, but that's another subject entirely. For a long while, I was heavily involved in fishing competition, and while I was competing in a sport, it was not an athletic endeavor at all. Not sure when athletic competition usurped the word sport from it's rightful place describing the traditional outdoor activities (blood sports, if you will), but for athletics to claim the word as its own and not allow the true sports to claim it is simply wrong. |
#34
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I never mentioned the word "athlete" in my post.I was pointing out that
competitive fishing was more of a grueling "sport" than just a "physical activity". I agree that eating contests and spelling bees are not sports.Fishing is a sport whether your dunking worms with the kids,or at the competitive level,or wading a stream. I have never bought any fishing equipment in any store that wasn't designated "sporting goods" or specialized in "sporting goods". "Marty" wrote in message ... "Bass_Mr." wrote in message ink.net... snipKen Fortenberry wrote: Bass fishing is no more a "physical activity" than tossing darts, or bowling ... It is very clear that you have never gotten out of bed at 2am,driven a couple of hours (or more),stood on the bow of a bass boat in a 20+ mph wind,controlled that boat in a safe and efficient manner,fished your guts out for 8 hours or more on a diet of crackers and water,competing against people of all skill levels and expertise,then packed it all up and drove all the way back.That is just a taste of what amateur bass club fishermen do.At the pro level you can multiply that tenfold. That doesn't make it a sport or its participants athletes. Maybe it's tiring and grueling, but so is a construction worker's day. And I guarantee that worker would rather be engaged in the torture described above. And I assume one could do it on a better diet than water and crackers. Corporate America must feel that bass fishing is a sport,or there wouldn't be millions of dollars of sponsorship being poured into it. When ESPN airs a "trout fishing competition" are they doing it because it is a sport or because they just like seeing men wade around in rubber pants? I urge you again to go into your fly fishing group and tell that crowd they aren't involved in a sport.I guarantee you a lot of them would have their rubber britches in a wad! ESPN airs eating contests and spelling bees. No insults intended here, but I wonder why so many tournament fishermen get defensive about this subject. Do they need to legitimize their activity with the "I'm an athlete" claim? Plus, don't forget, tournaments at the highest levels of competition can be (and are) won by senior citizens, smokers and 300-pounders. |
#35
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I'll agree, it can be construed as a sport and that you didn't use
"athlete." "Bass_Mr." wrote in message nk.net... I never mentioned the word "athlete" in my post.I was pointing out that competitive fishing was more of a grueling "sport" than just a "physical activity". I agree that eating contests and spelling bees are not sports.Fishing is a sport whether your dunking worms with the kids,or at the competitive level,or wading a stream. I have never bought any fishing equipment in any store that wasn't designated "sporting goods" or specialized in "sporting goods". "Marty" wrote in message ... "Bass_Mr." wrote in message ink.net... snipKen Fortenberry wrote: Bass fishing is no more a "physical activity" than tossing darts, or bowling ... It is very clear that you have never gotten out of bed at 2am,driven a couple of hours (or more),stood on the bow of a bass boat in a 20+ mph wind,controlled that boat in a safe and efficient manner,fished your guts out for 8 hours or more on a diet of crackers and water,competing against people of all skill levels and expertise,then packed it all up and drove all the way back.That is just a taste of what amateur bass club fishermen do.At the pro level you can multiply that tenfold. That doesn't make it a sport or its participants athletes. Maybe it's tiring and grueling, but so is a construction worker's day. And I guarantee that worker would rather be engaged in the torture described above. And I assume one could do it on a better diet than water and crackers. Corporate America must feel that bass fishing is a sport,or there wouldn't be millions of dollars of sponsorship being poured into it. When ESPN airs a "trout fishing competition" are they doing it because it is a sport or because they just like seeing men wade around in rubber pants? I urge you again to go into your fly fishing group and tell that crowd they aren't involved in a sport.I guarantee you a lot of them would have their rubber britches in a wad! ESPN airs eating contests and spelling bees. No insults intended here, but I wonder why so many tournament fishermen get defensive about this subject. Do they need to legitimize their activity with the "I'm an athlete" claim? Plus, don't forget, tournaments at the highest levels of competition can be (and are) won by senior citizens, smokers and 300-pounders. |
#36
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![]() RichZ wrote: Marty wrote: That doesn't make it a sport or its participants athletes. No insults intended here, but I wonder why so many tournament fishermenget defensive about this subject. Do they need to legitimize their activitywith the "I'm an athlete" claim? Nothing to do with tournaments and competition at all. When the magazine was named SPORTS AFIELD some time around the turn of the previous century, they weren't talking about fishing tournaments. Just the traditional outdoor sports. IE, fishing and hunting. SPORT and ATHLETIC COMPETITION are two entirely different things. As an angler, I am a sportsman, not an athlete. When I was young and agile enough to play basketball I was involved in athletics and athletic competition. I probably stayed involved too long after my skills and body deteriorated, and I wasn't really competitive any more, but that's another subject entirely. For a long while, I was heavily involved in fishing competition, and while I was competing in a sport, it was not an athletic endeavor at all. Not sure when athletic competition usurped the word sport from it's rightful place describing the traditional outdoor activities (blood sports, if you will), but for athletics to claim the word as its own and not allow the true sports to claim it is simply wrong. To back you up, Rich, the definition of sportsman from Merriam-Webster online dictionary at http://www.m-w.com/dictionary/sportsman : Main Entry: sports·man Function: noun 1 : a person who engages in sports (as hunting or fishing) 2 : a person who shows sportsmanship |
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