Best spectator sports
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@jon-nyc said in Best spectator sports:
Yes. Can you imagine how insufferable I’d be as a cricket fan?
I doubt we'd notice much difference
@Doctor-Phibes said in Best spectator sports:
@jon-nyc said in Best spectator sports:
Yes. Can you imagine how insufferable I’d be as a cricket fan?
I doubt we'd notice much difference
POTD
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@jodi Very cool!!
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@jodi Very cool!!
@taiwan_girl said in Best spectator sports:
@jodi Very cool!!
I jusr went back and looked at that. Wonderful stuff.
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Long jumping is also compelling.
Link to videoYou can tell from the tan lines that the outfit is different when the cameras are on. That's generous of them.
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Ive noticed that long jumpers always seem to hop at the beginning of their run for the first few steps before starting to run fast. I wonder why that is vs. just start running?
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Italians brought so much to our world. They really are a notch above any other culture. Bring this back and say bye bye to MMA. I hate MMA. Bunch of heathens.
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Ive noticed that long jumpers always seem to hop at the beginning of their run for the first few steps before starting to run fast. I wonder why that is vs. just start running?
@taiwan_girl said in Best spectator sports:
Ive noticed that long jumpers always seem to hop at the beginning of their run for the first few steps before starting to run fast. I wonder why that is vs. just start running?
I was making progress on answering this question, but then the video got taken down, and now I can no longer do my research.
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Ive noticed that long jumpers always seem to hop at the beginning of their run for the first few steps before starting to run fast. I wonder why that is vs. just start running?
@taiwan_girl said in Best spectator sports:
Ive noticed that long jumpers always seem to hop at the beginning of their run for the first few steps before starting to run fast. I wonder why that is vs. just start running?
Timing.
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Yeah, especially for long jumpers they have to hit that mark perfectly (I think it's like 83 feet 7 inches) so it's a timing/routine thing. I remember doing (and failing) pole vaulting in high school and it's remarkable how many small techniques are needed to result in a perfect jump. Over time, it becomes muscle memory.
For high jumpers, not that anyone asked... it's interesting. The lean back move before they start running is part-routine, and part stretch to maximize the pliability of the body. Further, and more interestingly, they run in a curved line to maximize the efficiency of converting their running/horizontal momentum into the jump momentum... it's very mathematical, I wonder if there's a good youtube video that visualizes the efficiency of running in a curved line vs directly at it (or directly parallel to it), or maybe it's just common sense.