Jonathon Mills
Lauryn Kelly
AIM 102
October 29, 2015
Instinct
Violence is the exertion of physical force with an intent to injure a person, place, or thing, and a sport is an activity involving physical exertion and skill by an individual or group of individuals to compete. Contact sports become violent when they are taken to an extreme, so American football, ice hockey, rugby football, lacrosse, soccer, boxing, mixed martial arts, wrestling, and water polo are contact sports in which you should be able to control those extremities.
Banning violent sports remains a highly debated topic in today’s society. Throughout history, sport and violence have been synonymous. Sport was originally a form of military training, used as a method to
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Some fans and spectators see sport as a social activity, bringing communities together through fair play and friendship, whereas for others, sport represents a celebration of a community’s rich cultural history. Overtime however, we have seen an increase in the commercialization of sport. Sport has become a commodity; one that allows players to be traded in the market place for the highest price, and athlete and team branding have become the norm. In the US alone, the Sports Industry generated over $400 billion in gross revenues during 2010, with the four big leagues generating almost $22 billion (Plunkett Research, 2010). We can see from the figures below that it is not only the US that are …show more content…
It is highly regarded as one of the most violent sports played today, unofficially and officially allowing various forms of violence. The Economist (1975) suggests that Ice Hockey is the only all-human sport that allows physical intimidation as a customary tactic, outside of the rules. The players’ rules deem fistfights as legitimate violence, in which opponents are expected to drop their gloves and sticks, showing a willingness to engage in a fight. Assaults with the stick however are deemed to be illegitimate and carry penalties if carried out. Many fans and spectators regard fistfights as ‘a part of the game, ‘in which opponents establish and re-establish their honor and respect (Colburn, 1985). Research also suggests that as violence amongst teams increased, attendance at National Hockey League (NHL) games increased, giving teams an incentive to keep the violent aspects of the game, despite the numerous penalties and punishments given to
The book highlights the good and the bad of the sport. For someone who may not be too interested in it, or just has to read it for a history class, he made it entertaining. Giving not only a history lesson on the sport but just as much on the working class of America and the emerging commercialized leisure’s and shifting social classes in the nineteenth century. Gorn is able to interweave social and political issues of the times all told with characters as colorful and wild as the early days of this country. Men crave the order of violence with rules and attach elevated importance to such contests in part because so much of life is entirely unjust and oppressive.
The book’s evolving opinion about hockey might be interpreted as a tool for the public to read and perhaps comprehend the negative reality that occurs in and outside of the story. Cody’s outlooks on hockey develop from positive, to negative, and then, again, to positive. At first, Cody loves hockey; it makes him happy, dedicated, hardworking and is a positive outlet leading him to a bright future. When Cody begins playing for Coach Connors’ team, the abuse begins and his love for hockey is replaced with alcohol abuse, suicidal thoughts, and misery. His positive view of hockey come to be negative because of the effects of Connors’ abuse that he, in the words of Theo Fleury, young hockey player abused by Graham James, “did not have the emotional skills, the knowledge, or the ability to stop [it].”
According to Bleacher Report brawls and fights have increased between sports fans because there are more sports fans now than ever(bleacherreport.com). This facts shows that sports fans go too far because it shows that there are more fights and more people get hurt. Sports fans go too far because they hurt one another when rivalry gets intense and fans become upset over a sports game. The first reason sports fans go too far is that fans can hurt one another when rivalry gets intense. After big games the U.S. has to put up extra police officers because fan brawls are so common.
It’s also a way of life, many players are “enforcers” by profession. Sure they may have a hockey jersey on, but they aren’t out there to put points on the board, they get paychecks for fighting and hitting hard. Smith, Bobby. "End to Fighting Would Not Make Hockey a Safer Game." The Globe and Mail.
Keeping players in check during the game, either from dirty plays or bad attitudes, displays why fighting remains necessary in the hockey world and needs to stay that way. Fighting has been involved with hockey for quite some time now. While there are many arguments about the danger and overall relevance of fighting, it is needed in other aspects of the game. It is inevitable in a game this widespread that
If fighting gets banned, the popularity of hockey goes down. Would anyone watch hockey without fighting? If hockey bans fighting, the uniqueness of the sport is gone, the tradition is gone. A lot of hockey fans watch hockey because of the fights. There are non-hockey fans, which only watch the sport of hockey just for the fighting.
Munger cites sportswriter, Ross Bernstein, “Your goal is to dominate that guy … There are right ways and wrong ways of doing that, however, and that is what the code is all about. I never once tried to injure the guy across from me … but wanted to send him to the bench — and there’s a difference”. This establishes that among the athletes there is a code when it comes to how an athlete tackles another athlete. The author proves that athletes attempt to take down their opponents, but never purposely maim or injure.
As debates around fighting in the NHL circumnavigate, one thing is for sure, hockey has had a major history of fighting, and that draws fans. To showing that fights are safer, building momentum, and a sort of self officiating, there is only one correct answer in this debate for this special and idiosyncratic sport, and it is to keep the fights. Fighting should be kept in hockey because they aren 't as dangerous as the alternatives. Fighting in hockey keeps lowers the chance of injuries.
One author argued that football was a manifestation of humanity’s primal bloodlust; another stressed that brutish play preserved the Machismo ideal. All the books, however, seemed to draw a common conclusion: football’s tolerance for ferocity was systemic. I had a hunch that this culture of violence was far-reaching, but I needed specific evidence to prove it. To explore society’s role, I returned to JumboSearch and tracked down sources beyond the Tisch Stacks. I read into the bounty scandal that rocked the NFL, and tracked down initial reports and policy statements issued in response by League officials.
I am writing a reflection on the essay Rink Rage by James Deacon. I would recommend it to anyone involved in recreational sports especially parents. In this essay you learn about the aggression parents have towards the referees and how it’s influencing more parents to have outbursts and ruin the sport for the children. Over the years parents have been becoming more aggressive towards the referees to the point where they are actually assaulting them. This is becoming a much bigger issue though the offenders are not the majority the assaults are becoming more aggressive and in some cases have ended in death, this is something that needs to be dealt with and recognized.
Journalist Dan Diamond uncovered that football players are four times more likely to die from degenerative brain diseases, and only live to an average age of 55-60; pro players ruin their lives simply for money and fame. When you lose twenty, valuable years of your life, what’s the point of acquiring money or fame? Equally important, the vicious contact of football players numbs people to violence. Televisions across the nation displaying the almost suicidal collision of players gravely affects people’s minds. Violence desensitization can induce emotional detachment, which allows people to stand idly by as a grisly crime occurs.
Fighting in hockey Introduction: Should fighting in hockey be allowed. Fighting in hockey brings alot of attention to the game. Fighting in hockey should be allowed because it brings alot of entertainment and is fun to watch. They should fight in hockey because it brings alot of entertainment to the game and all the fans really enjoy watching it. Fighting in hockey should be allowed because allowing them to fight its safer because it holds them accountable, by them fighting it makes the fans more interested in the game because there is action, and fighting is a hockey tradition and is an unwritten law its in the official rules, however, fighting in hockey also gives a bad example to kids.
Student, Ross Taylor, author of “Paintball: Promoter of violence or healthy fun?” writes for all ages about the game of paintball. He claims that paintball could be a fun and healthy and not a violent game. His audience for this passage is people who haven’t played paintball but, could also be for those who have played. Taylor produces a well put passage using common ground, psychic space, ethos, pathos, and logos to show how paintball is a fun, healthy sport.
Sports show children that discipline and playing by the rules are incredibly valuable assets. Sports also show that breaching the rules and cheating will only set you back. " Strong discipline underpins our sport. We ensure that our sport is one of controlled physical endeavour and that we are honest and fair. We obey the laws of the game which ensure an inclusive and exciting global sport.
The sun illuminates countless all-American names, with the occasional Coke or Papa John’s sponsor signs. The play clock ticks down to zero, and the stadium is finally filled to maximum capacity. Kickoff commences, players scramble across the field, and suddenly the only problems in the world hinge on if the Nike plastered football is past the downs marker. There are the elite suites high above the stadium cloaked in shade, but the majority are cramped and blisteringly hot. We are all united as one, cheering our team to victory, and thriving on the culture that is modern day sports.