Tampilkan postingan dengan label World Championships. Tampilkan semua postingan
Tampilkan postingan dengan label World Championships. Tampilkan semua postingan

Senin, 13 Juni 2011

The Rituals of Sports and Politics


The Unnecessary Ritual of Athletes’ Visits To The White House
by Mark Anthony Neal | Atlanta Post

In the coming days, the National Basketball Association will crown a new champion. Someone will be crowned “MVP,” somebody’s “legacy” will be assured and still others will thank God, their mothers and their therapists in nationally televised post-game interviews. And of course there will be the endless self-congratulations on Twitter. It is all seemingly choreographed and no more so than with the eventual visit to the White House and photo-op with President Obama, who we all know is a big sports fan. Seems a win-win for all involved.

The practice of bringing sports champions to the White House became particularly noticable during the Presidency of Ronald Reagan, also a big sports fan, during the 1980s. Reagan’s administration was as astute as any, in taking advantage of such publicity opportunities. In an era defined by the global expansion of America’s symbolic power, what better opportunity is there than the President of the so-called most powerful nation in the World, meeting with the “champions” of the world. It most cases visits to the White House illicit very little reaction except when it’s somebody’s favorite team.

Six years ago, though, traditionalists were up in arms when members of the Northwestern University Women’s lacrosse team, wore flip-flips—albeit designer ones—to their visit to the White House. The subsequent brouhaha, known at the time as “Flip-Flop-gate,” seemed perfectly pitched for one of the most timeless of political faux-pas, the political flip-flop. The Chicago Tribune, reported the story with the headline, “You Wore Flip-Flops to the White House?,” while pundit after pundit opined about the diminishing values of American Youth. By the summer of 2007, the White House had an official dress-code policy for visitors, specifically stating “no flip-flops.”

Read the Full Essay @ The Atlanta Post

Jumat, 13 Mei 2011

Cullen Jones; 9 Months and 22.24 Seconds Later, Roster Spot Is Won




















9 Months and 22.24 Seconds Later, Roster Spot Is Won
by Viv Bernstein | New York Times

CHARLOTTE, N.C. — After nine months of training and more than a little tension between teammates and friends, the final spot on the United States swim team came down to a 50-meter freestyle sprint Thursday at Mecklenburg County Aquatic Center. When it was over, Cullen Jones barely held off Josh Schneider to earn the berth for the world championships in July in Shanghai.

Jones beat Schneider by four-hundredths of a second, winning in 22.24 seconds.

“I know a lot of people built it up like two boxers, and I think we definitely went at it like that,” said Jones, 27, a gold medalist in Beijing in 2008. “But at the same time, we’re friends. We definitely train well together.