Sports can be the greatest thing in the world or they can be the most embarrassing display of human interactions. Humans are one of the most amazing creatures on the planet. One of our greatest features is being respectful. Most of us are raised to respect someone, whether it be your parent or everyone, we will show respect. There is no greater place to show respect than on a sports field. On a sports field, stress levels are high and everyone is watching. It is very easy to lose your cool but a great athlete can keep their cool. Win or lose, the athlete will always show respect to the opponent. Not only is it good because it’s right but just think, athletes are on national television. Who watches sports? Everyone, including kids, watch sports. …show more content…
The definition of Sportsmanship is an aspiration or ethos that a sport or activity will be enjoyed for its own sake, with proper consideration for fairness, ethics, respect, and a sense of fellowship with one 's competitors. Sportsmanship includes respect but is not enterally respect. Respect is both on the field and off. Respect is not only shown to other people but to yourself. If you don 't respect to yourself then 9 times out of 10 you won 't respect others. Google 's definition of respect is ¨a feeling of deep admiration for someone or something elicited by their abilities, qualities, or achievements¨. I believe it is more than that. I believe that respect is knowing that everyone is capable of doing something you can 't and there are things you can do that they can´t. Not only that but if they are doing all they can to put food in their families mouths and shoes on their kids feet, rich or poor, they deserve respect because they are at least trying their hardest in life. I personally believe life isn 't about taking but it is about giving all you can no matter how …show more content…
Players can get in a lot of trouble off the field just as they can on. Athletes are not just on camera while on the field but also while they are off the field. Their actions represent themselves. If they are not professional off the field then they more than likely won 't be professional on the field. Respect is everything. People with respect you more if you respect yourself. Respecting yourself off the field means staying out of legal trouble and drugs. Over the years a lot of athletes have had careers destroyed because they made big mistakes. One such example of this would be Terrelle Pryor from Ohio State. He traded his championship rings for tattoos which is against school policy and he got caught. This ended his career at Ohio State and sent him to the NFL where he is never heard of anymore. Another example of athletes in trouble is Michael Vick. Vick had a great reputation up until he was sent to prison for killing dogs. People, kids and adults alike, looked up to Michael Vick and when he was sent to prison it ruined his reputation. After he got out of prison not many teams wanted him on their team. He was lucky that the Philadelphia Eagles took him in. A good example of an athlete who respects themselves is Drew Basil. Drew was a kickr for Ohio State and not only did he respect the opponents but off the field Drew has his own kicking camp to help teach kids how to kick. An actor by the
Athletes do not always get in trouble, but when they do some athletes tend to have favoritism shown to them by the law enforcement. When it comes to athletes that break the law, one major viewpoint is that some athletes tend to get special treatment when they commit crimes because they are famous, but with harsher consequences. Athletes are supposed to be role models for younger kids who look up to them, but they are getting in trouble and causing controversy for all the wrong reasons and it is affecting their careers, the athletes might not think that it is because of the favoritism that law enforcement shows them, but it is. When athletes do commit crimes law enforcement tends to be bias toward them because they are known around the world (Withers). Therefore, this causes a lot of controversy surrounding the athlete because many people believe that they do not get disciplined like they should.
This research paper will determine whether professional athletes deserve a second chance to play in professional sports after inappropriate behaviors. Professional athletes are considered idols and are often held to higher standards. Society has become concerned with so many of today’s athletes making the evening news for their unsuitable behaviors.
When discussing why sports matter and the influence it has had over the course of history, many controversial issues have been whether or not sports have taught us to cultivate discipline. Sheed explains that sports can play an important role in the lives of people by helping them discover who they are and where they want to be. The lesson of sports goes deeper than just practicing or playing a game, they help build characteristics that will prepare you for many obstacles in life. Sheed mentions that sports were created and put into schools to teach discipline, patience, and honesty to male students. He continues to point out that sports are very competitive and that sportsmanship and discipline does not matter anymore, but instead the very need to win. In “Why Sports Matter,” Wilfrid Sheed, contends that “sports did not only outlaw cheating but drilled its participants to detect and despise it in each other”. This was a crucial lesson taught to a nation based on transactions.
Some natural effect of becoming a professional athlete it comes with a lot of obstacles,hate and rumors. But that sports,all they know is what the media or camera mans says in newspaper and stuff. Cam newton once said ”As a professional athlete in your mind u not supposed to do nothing that can get you out yo character,because “fans don 't know what you been through in yo life,they don 't know how you had to survive the trenches”.
The journal article, “What does sport mean to you? Fun and other preferences for adolescents’ sport participation” claims that fun, social aspects, masculinity, and identity are the main reasons youth participate in sports (Skille and Østera˚ s, 360). Oftentimes, athletes forget they are on the same team, and they start to form cliques or groups based around who has the best bench press or 40 meter dash time. As a result, teammates start to compete with each other instead of working towards the same goal. For instance, one coaching journal article claims that “moral reasoning” in youth is determined through “collective norms” or group behaviors that the coach has a hand in influencing (Shields, LaVoi, Bredemeier, Power, 748-749). A proper coaching environment should therefore revolve around a fun, supportive, and collective environment where success is encouraged through the full support of the team. This support can further be developed through proper positive mindfulness and code of conduct guidelines set forth by the coach; for instance, hazing should be discouraged and proper communication and helpfulness among teammates should be
Ethical behavior is one of the most important aspects in every day life. People who use ethical behavior usually gain the trust and confidence among their peers. In sports management for example, when a manager of a team uses an ethical judgment or has set rules on ethical behavior they usually sets up their team to have the same judgment. The media thrives off of athletes who do not make ethical decisions such as Tom Brady and the Deflate Gate. Morally deflating footballs to have an advantage when throwing a ball was seen as being unethical as it essentially affected the way Brady handled and threw the ball. The media took this decision that was made by Brady and ran with it as it made front-page headlines all summer. Brady is a great player
This sports study will define the negative effects of “gamesmanship” that has been encouraging unethical and immoral behavior in modern sporting culture. The difference between gamesmanship and sportsmanship will define the defense in the ethical values that are utilized in sports. Gamesmanship offers the philosophy that “winning at any cost” is the goals of sporting events, which include, cheating, bending the rules, use performance-enhancing drugs, etc/ A lack of ethical and mortal behaviors in “sportsmanship” defines the traditional focus on following rules, developing talent and skills, and moral conduct on and of the field. In modern day sports, the increasing dominance of gamesmanship defines the negative trend of performance enhancing
youth sports [were] the one haven for good sportsmanship," says Darrell Burnett, a clinical child psychologist and youth sports psychologist. "Not anymore. It's not just a game anymore." With technology (etc) distracting our children with violence and so on, we cannot afford to ruin what sports may do for them. With sports being just one of the few things left that can contribute to success in life, education, and health, parents need not to put any sort of unnecessary pressure on their kids at such a young age, or any age for that matter, ever.
Gamesmanship is becoming a standard for high level athletics that is reaching towards younger generations. For youth sports confusion by players over how far to push rules can result in simply breaking them. Coaches need to make decisions to promote the greatest amount of sportsmanship while still teaching children the rules of a specific sport. For this reason the question of gamesmanship, winning while pushing the boundaries of the rules, in youth should gamesmanship be promoted or prohibited by the participants?
Because sports news and sports figures are constantly in the news, sports reflect our values. We are living in a society that is filled with violence. Many adults choose to solve their problems in violent ways. When the stress of life becomes too much, or events at work or home are not going their way, they turn to violence to help them feel better. We hear the stories all the time on the news: the unhappy postal worker who lashes out at co-workers with a gun; the rejected husband or suitor who beat up or kill their girl friends or wives; or even the angry employee who has been let go and takes his frustrations out on innocent passers-by.
... conclusion, looking back at the evolution of sports, it has gone from a group of athletes that played a game they loved whole heartedly, to a group of athletes that play a game basically for greed; gone from a group working together and using their experiences to help others, to seeing how good they can make themselves look. Fans have suffered through players’ strikes so they can make more money. They have started using “performance enhancing drugs” to get bigger muscles so they can out do their own teammates. Sports reports talk about how an individual won the game rather than the team winning the game. Integrity and teamwork need to start at the high school level of sports so these young athletes will know how it feels to work together as a whole. It will benefit them in all aspects of their lives, from school to family and that is something to be proud of.
There are many theories to why there is so much violence in sports today and one of them is because the athletes today are able to get away with more when they are young. An example would be if a high profile high school athlete who had a scholarship to a big time school were to get in trouble maybe it would be hidden a lot more. Where as if another non-athlete had done the same thing there would be more of a price to pay. So from an early age these athletes learn that they are more important then other students or people. When they get to the college or pro level and someone tells them what to do they don't know how to handle it in the correct manor. Many professional athletes have been looked upon as a problem before they become pro because of certain violence problems they have had in the past. And in many cases it has hurt player in where they are drafted and the money that they make.
Jeff Kemp, a retired professional NFL quarterback, once stated, “Sports teach positive lessons that enrich America even while revealing its flaws” (Kemp). Athletics offer so much more than the joy of game day and the thrill of a win. Being involved in sports holds the key to a world filled with passion, excitement, and once in a lifetime opportunities. There is nothing better than seeing the student section arrive in full force or hearing the school fight song chanted before kickoff. However, when life moves on and leaves sports behind, the lessons it has instilled in athletes never disappears. The play calls may be foggy and the jersey will be too tight, but what was innocently learned in the jersey shines out at an older age. Although life lessons can be learned through everyday activities, lessons such as teamwork, self-confidence, and dealing with failure are only truly learned through sports by young athletes.
America whines while these athletes sign multi-million dollar contracts, moans when they get in trouble with the law and points fingers when the athletes do not live up to the standard of "role model." Yet these fans that whine, moan, and point fingers are the same ones that pay hundreds of dollars to see these athletes play. They are the same ones that berate the justice system if an athlete is ever convicted, and they are the same ones that buy the shoes and other products endorsed by an athlete who claims to be anything but a "role model.” Society needs to reprioritize. Doctors, teachers, law enforcement officers, professors, judges, and nurses deserve to be getting all of the media exposure and endorsement money.
Sportsmanship matters not only in sports, but also in the rest of our everyday lives. In any competition, whether a job interview, a school science fair, or even a friendly game of cards with some friends, sportsmanship teaches you to win humbly and lose gracefully. Sportsmanship also helps us to understand each other better, because when we get along, we can listen to the other person's perspective, and see where they are coming from, and avoid a bad, possibly violent situation. Almost everyday on the news violence is reported at a sporting event, evidence of bad sportsmanship. Without sportsmanship there would be no sports, because no one would want to compete with a person who when they lost, would throw a fit, cry, and whine.