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#11
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Eric Greenwell wrote:
Curtl33 wrote: While soaring is a sport, and it is competitive, I have a real hard time viewing the participants as athletes. If you can sit in a lounge chair for hours on end, playing Nintendo with a joystick, you've got the athletic stamina and dexterity to be a gold medal soaring pilot. I don't think you will get a single serious racing pilot in the world to agree with this assessment. I think a lot of them would agree, but they'd all point out that "stamina" and "dexterity" aren't on the list of things it takes to be a good racing pilot. And because of this, I don't think of soaring as an Olympic sport. It is primarily a very mental/intellectual sport, not a primarily physical one like most (all?) the olympic sports I'm familiar with. It isn't about flying a sailplane well, for example (like an aerobatic pilot), it's about guiding the glider to the right place at the right time, meaning where the lift is. I agree, but to paraphrase another poster, if it can be sold, and more importantly can sell, it'll be good enough for the IOC. Shawn P.S. I've known a very good Laser racer who was decidedly un-athletic. Curling, archery, and shooting are pretty light on athleticism as well |
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