Cascade, on Dec 2 2008, 06:52 PM, said:
helene_t, on Dec 3 2008, 05:41 AM, said:
Rossoneri said:
If many players are lazy then the regulators have an obligation to work for the interests of the lazy players.
Over the past ten days or so I have watched much more than my usual share of sport on television.
This included:
Two NFL games - On Sunday night Minnesota Vikings much to my satisfaction since I had money on them came from behind to defeat the New England Patriots including a 99 yard touchdown.
Two All Black games completing the Grand Slam in which they defeated all four home Unions (Scotland, Ireland, Wales and England).
The Rugby League World cup final in which the New Zealand Kiwis upset the hot favourite Australian Kangaroos.
The Australian Masters Golf tournament. On Saturday Robert Allenby holed his three wood second shot into the wind on the par five seventh hole from 223m (about 244 yards) for an albatross.
As I write this David Beckham is causing hysteria at Auckland airport as he and the LA Galaxy football team arrive for an exhibition match against an Oceania All Stars team this coming Saturday.
Strangely the administrators of these games do not see the need to cater to the majority who cannot kick the ball as hard as Beckham, run as fast as Bernard Berrianor pass as accurately as Gus Frerotte, be as strong as All Black Tony Woodcock or Kiwi Manu Vatuvei or have the precision and control of Robert Allenby. They do not make rules to give those without the physical attributes or too lazy to train as hard as these athletes a chance.
Why then in a mind sport like bridge do the administrators have an obligation to the intellectually lazy?
Because they pay for that right? The are the basic funders of bridge.
Sport is different, it is not funded by the lesser players of the game. It is funded by the physically lazy who pay for the NFL, Premiership and David Beckham through TV rights.
p