Saturday, 31 December 2011

Making Ballet Philippines Official

Posted by Website Introductions: Reading the article, I feel so happy because as a ballet enthusiast, I feel I am a part of the organization. Although not officially yet, I am working my way to be a part of this prominent Ballet Philippines. I really hope that the bill passed to make Ballet Philippines as the Philippine National Ballet Company materialized. I think this is what
Tags: ballet, cultural center. Comments: 0.

Source: http://blog.sports-buynow.com/ballet/20110926-032115-Making-Ballet-Philippines-Official

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Little Old Ladies May Want Athletes To Help Them Cross The Road

Photo credit: Beckman Institute CAVE
Boy Scouts just got some competition.  Now, when little, old ladies need to cross a busy street, they should find a well-trained athlete to do the job, according to University of Illinois researchers. 


In a test of skill transfer, Laura Chaddock, a researcher at the Beckman Institute?s Human Perception and Performance lab, and her team pushed a bunch of college students out into busy traffic to see how well they could navigate the oncoming cars... well, sort of. 

With the help of a virtual 3D environment called the CAVE, volunteer pedestrians can step into a simulated city street scene, seeing traffic whiz by on three surrounding screens, while walking on a synchronized treadmill.  Failure here does not end up in a trip the hospital, just a system reset.


Of the 36 college student participants, half were student-athletes at Illinois, an NCAA Division 1 school, representing a wide variety of sports, including cross-country running, baseball, swimming, tennis, wrestling, soccer and gymnastics. The other half were just regular students matched for similar age, GPA and video game prowess.  

Chaddock hypothesized that the athletes would have the edge in street crossing given their training in busy, attention-demanding sport environments.  Previous studies have found that athletes outperform non-athletes on sport-specific tests of attention, memory, and speed.  


?We predicted that an elite soccer player, for example, not only shows an ability to multitask and process incoming information quickly on a fast-paced soccer field by running, kicking, attending to the clock, noting the present offensive and defensive formations, executing a play, and finding open players to whom to pass? Chaddock wrote.  ?He or she also shows these skills in the context of common real world tasks.?


When the students stepped into the CAVE, they encountered a busy city street with cars and trucks zooming by at 40-50 mph.  They were asked to cross the street when they thought it was safe, but could only walk briskly with no sprinting.  To make it more interesting, (and realistic), the students were also given an iPod to listen to music, then a cell phone with an incoming call to distract their attention even more.


The team was correct in its prediction as the athletes completed more successful crossings than non-athletes by a significant margin.  But it wasn?t because the athletes were faster (they were limited to walking) or because they displayed better agility or moves.  Maybe it was because their advanced ?field vision? was able to scan the environment for patterns and opportunities to cross better than the untrained eyes of the other students.


?While efficiency of information processing may be one cognitive mechanism underlying athlete and non-athlete differences in street crossing performance,? Chaddock noted,  ?additional research is needed to characterize other cognitive factors that play a role in the cognitively complex multitask paradigm that involves attention, speed, working memory and inhibition.?

One other finding of the study confirmed what is probably already obvious.  Students who were talking on the phone when crossing the street were much more likely to not make it to the other side.


You might also like: How To See A 130 MPH Tennis Serve and Breaking Curveballs And Rising Fastballs Are Optical Illusions


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/80PercentMental/~3/lLzoHLmFHEI/little-old-ladies-may-want-athletes-to.html

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Funny video to get you laughing for Friday

*cough* Andy Dalton *cough* Digg this! Share this on Facebook Post on Google Buzz Share this on Reddit Stumble upon something good? Share it on StumbleUpon Share this on Tumblr Tweet This! Get Shareaholic

Source: http://marylandsportsblog.com/2011/12/funny-video-to-get-you-laughing-for-friday/

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Christian Ehrhoff vs Troy Brouwer

Draw Digg this! Share this on Facebook Post on Google Buzz Share this on Reddit Stumble upon something good? Share it on StumbleUpon Share this on Tumblr Tweet This! Get Shareaholic

Source: http://marylandsportsblog.com/2011/12/christian-ehrhoff-vs-troy-brouwer/

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Jaypro Sports Football Equipment

From Pop Warner to college and pro we have an amazing selection of high quality football equipment including goal posts, practice pads, player benches, blocking sleds and field accessories to enhance your team? practices and games. One of the most popular sports in the country is football. Its played at all levels from youth leagues [...]

Source: http://blogsgate.com/jaypro/jaypro-sports-football-equipment/

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Lacrosse and Field Hockey

Field hockey and lacrosse have similar equipment and field needs. Here at Jaypro we have a full selection of goals, scorer?s tables, player benches and field accessories to set up team practices and official games. Very popular at the high school and college level field hockey and lacrosse include both men?s and women?s teams and [...]

Source: http://blogsgate.com/jaypro/lacrosse-and-field-hockey/

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Sprinter Tim Montgomery Facing Jail Time

Sprinter Tim Montgomery, who was once the world’s fastest man, is sitting in jail waiting for his hearing on drug distribution charges. Montgomery faces charges of conspiracy to possess heroin with an intent to distribute the drug. In addition, he is also being sentenced in connection with a check fraud case. Tim Montgomery’s fall from [...]

Source: http://www.sportscontroversytalk.com/2008/sprinter-tim-montgomery-facing-jail-time/

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March Madness

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/UsaSportsBlogs/~3/heFc3odZsEE/march-madness.html

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Friday, 30 December 2011

Jaypro Sports Baseball & Softball

Get ready for baseball and softball season with our terrific selection of equipment, field covers and accessories and batting cages that will have your team ready for opening day. As with most sports practice makes perfect and we have a complete selection of baseball and softball training equipment for pitchers, fielders and batters to hone [...]

Source: http://blogsgate.com/jaypro/jaypro-sports-baseball-softball/

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Mike Weber vs Jason Chimera

I think this was a draw. Digg this! Share this on Facebook Post on Google Buzz Share this on Reddit Stumble upon something good? Share it on StumbleUpon Share this on Tumblr Tweet This! Get Shareaholic

Source: http://marylandsportsblog.com/2011/12/mike-weber-vs-jason-chimera/

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Is Video The Future of Ticket Sales?

Whether it be on or off the field in sports, we’re all trying to out do one another. Let’s face it, we wouldn’t be in business if we weren’t, we’re here to compete and to win. One of the most competitive parts of sports is the marketing behind the teams. How can fans be reached, [...]

Source: http://www.sportspiel.com.au/2010/07/is-this-the-future-of-ticket-sales/

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Tibet vs. Greenland Part II




http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oMND1xFe2gQ

Source: http://tibetsports.blog.com/2007/10/15/tibet-vs-greenland-part-ii/

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The dream of Team Tibet


Al Jazeera[Saturday, December 01, 2007 11:56]
By Brendan Connor in Brussels

Table tennis player Pema Yoko would one day like to represent Tibet at the Olympic Games [Al Jazeera]
Table tennis player Pema Yoko would one day like to represent Tibet at the Olympic Games [Al Jazeera]
It's a sunny afternoon, and like many football fields around the world, there are a couple of teams getting set to kick it about.
Here, the sides are made up of lads of Tibetan heritage, and they are playing in a tournament.
They have hopes of winning, but the main reason they are there is to spotlight their cause.
And that cause is an independent Tibet, free from China's rule, and perhaps someday, a place in the Olympics under their own flag.


Click here for more story



Click here for previous video clip Tibet vs Bhutan

Source: http://tibetsports.blog.com/2007/12/03/the-dream-of-team-tibet/

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Super Bowl XLV Defensive Back Head-to-Head

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/UsaSportsBlogs/~3/qaoVpEopcPg/super-bowl-xlv-defensive-back-head-to.html

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Tibet vrs Greenland Part I

Click on the link for the video.

Tibet Vrs Greenland

part 1

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9z9zYytbaHw

 

Source: http://tibetsports.blog.com/2007/10/08/tibet-vrs-greenland-part-i/

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Thursday, 29 December 2011

Tibet vs. Greenland Part II




http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oMND1xFe2gQ

Source: http://tibetsports.blog.com/2007/10/15/tibet-vs-greenland-part-ii/

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Opportunities and What They Cost

One of the fundamental concepts in economics is that of opportunity cost. In order to understand opportunity cost, though, we need to take a step back and think about costs in a more general way. The standard example goes like this: I like books, so I want to turn my passion into a job and [...]

Source: http://thebadeconomist.com/2011/12/23/opportunities-and-what-they-cost/

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Rugby World Cup 2011


To satisfy the needs of all the sports fans out there, the Rugby World Cup kicked off this month with the Quarter Finals just two and a half weeks away! Mike Tindall is set to return to the England line-up for the clash with Romania on Saturday. Romania has a good scrum, they've got a good driving game and a good tight game as well. Mark Cueto who came within millimetres of turning the tide for England in the 2007 final will take to the Rugby World Cup field for the first time since that night in Paris. The action will take place 24 September 2011 - 18:00, Otago Stadium, Dunedin.

Source: http://www.angelfire.com/ms2/001/blog/index.blog?entry_id=1430284

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Walking underwater isn t only great fun but a great workout as well

Posted by Website Introductions: This kind of activity is used to train astronauts before they go into space as they say that working underwater is the closest thing that humans can get to flying. This is great fun if you ever have the chance as it literally takes you out of your head for a while into an alternative universe. The last time I was diving, there was nothing else
Tags: diving, training. Comments: 0.

Source: http://blog.sports-buynow.com/diving/20110925-185932-Walking-underwater-isnt-only-great-fun-but-a-great-workout-as-well-

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Sports And Tourism

Posted by Website Introductions: We all know that sport positively affect our well-being physically and socially. We could reap off the benefit of having a healthy body and be able to meet other people and make friends along the way. A country's tourism industry could benefit the popularity of some sports. Like in the Philippines particularly in Camarines Sur. The place was
Tags: camarines sur, water sports. Comments: 0.

Source: http://blog.sports-buynow.com/camarines_sur/20110821-042820-Sports-And-Tourism-

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Just Pretend Those Carrots Are Cheese Fries

The problem with your diet is not that you?ve been eating the wrong food, but rather you?ve been thinking about your food all wrong.  According to Alia Crum, a clinical psychology researcher at Yale University, our mind?s opinion of food labeled or thought of to be ?diet? or ?low fat? can actually affect our body?s physiological response after eating it, which changes our metabolism.  

Her sneaky research team told 46 volunteers that they were getting two milkshakes to drink.  In the first test, they were told they were sampling a ?health? shake that had no fat, no added sugar and a skinny 140 calories.  At a separate test, the same group were told they were rewarded with an ?indulgent? shake weighing in at a guilt-inducing 620 calories and full of fat.

The trick was that in each test, the milkshakes were actually identical with each having 360 calories.  Only the description and labelling of the shakes were different.

At this point, Crum and her less than honest team could have just asked the volunteers which shake made them ?feel fuller.?  Instead, they chose to measure satiety by observing changes in the level of ghrelin, the so-called ?hunger hormone? in the stomach that signals the brain when to eat and when to stop eating.  When you?re hungry, your level of ghrelin goes up, telling your brain to find some snacks.  After a meal, your ghrelin goes down trying to convince you not to go back for a third helping.

Blood tests were gathered from the drinkers before, during and after the shakes to measure their ghrelin.  

Results showed that when the participants drank the ?health? shake, their ghrelin levels stayed about the same or slightly increased.  However, after drinking the ?indulgent? shake, their ghrelin levels dropped significantly.  In other words, their perception of what they were eating tricked their body into responding differently. Same shake, different physiological responses.

The study was published last month in the journal Health Psychology.

So, let?s put this in the real world.  You?re trying to lose weight by eating ?healthy? foods, with lower calories and fat.  But, you?ve also been conditioned to think that these foods just don?t satisfy your hunger like a greasy cheeseburger would.  Eating 500 calories of fruits and vegetables doesn?t feel as good as eating 500 calories of french fries.  

"What was most interesting," Crum said, "is that the results were somewhat counter-intuitive. Consuming the shake thinking it was ?indulgent' was healthier than thinking it was ?sensible.' It led to a sharper reduction in ghrelin." By drinking the ?indulgent? shake, you actually might eat less after that since your lower ghrelin levels would dampen the hunger signal to your brain.

"I think the most important message from this study is for consumers to be aware of the mind-set that they are in while they are eating, and especially the mind-set that individuals seem to automatically adopt when trying to maintain or lose weight," writes Crum.. "The mind-set of 'sensibility' or 'restraint'?no matter what we're eating?might be compromising our body's physiological response, counteracting our hard work at dieting. People should still work to eat healthy, but do so in a mind-set of indulgence."

Tricking the brain is not new to Crum.  In 2007, she assisted psychologist Ellen Langer in a groundbreaking mindfulness study that convinced New York City hotel maids that the daily work they performed was enough to improve their health.  They interviewed 84 maids on their daily exercise habits outside of work.  Most said they barely worked out at all.  

Then, they educated half the group on how their daily work of changing beds, vacuuming, etc. was actually good exercise.  After one month, they reported that the educated group?s blood pressure had dropped by 10% without any additional work or exercise.  Langer and Crum claim the placebo effect had changed the women?s health, just by the perception that they were exercising.  The study had its critics, but it was an interesting finding nonetheless.

So, while a Big Mac is still bad for you, it may actually convince you to eat less that day then trying to fool your brain into thinking your bag of carrots is actually a bag of cheese fries.

You might also like: Exercise Burns Fat During But Not After Your Workout and New Proof That Exercise Pumps Up Your Metabolism


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/80PercentMental/~3/YgrPVP609Cs/just-pretend-those-carrots-are-cheese.html

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Comment on Hutchison keys OCU?s third title (Wrestling) by Kennith Sandavol

Terrific post. I normally jump all over the web too much to bother commenting but made an exception here ;-)

Source: http://www.alaskasportshall.org/blog/?p=1092&cpage=1#comment-3588

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New Study Identifies NBA Players Who Shoot Too Much

To reach the NBA Finals, Russell Westbrook of the Oklahoma City Thunder needs to pass more, especially to his teammate Kevin Durant.  That would be the message that two researchers would send to Thunder coach, Scott Brooks, if given the chance.  Matt Goldman, a graduate student at the University of California, San Diego, and Justin Rao, a research scientist at Yahoo Labs recently named Westbrook as the biggest ?chucker? in the NBA because of statistics showing that he shoots much more often than he should, while Durant is classified as an undershooter, whose team would benefit from him taking more chances.


While their statistical theory builds a case for how to achieve optimal efficiency on the court, they don?t explain why elite players make the in-game decisions that they do.  For that matter, what about the high school ball player or the weekend warrior at the gym; how do they make the decision to pass or shoot?  For that, Markus Raab and Joseph Johnson, both sport scientists, have some insights  from their research.


First, let?s do the numbers.  Goldman and Rao dug into the NBA stats archive to analyze over 400,000 team possessions over the last four seasons, 2006-2010, across the entire league.  In a paper and presentation at the recent MIT Sloan Sports Analytics Conference, they presented a model that compares the difficulty of a shot taken in relation to the time remaining on the 24 second shot clock.  Then they compare this with a concept called ?allocative efficiency?, or the benefit of equally distributing the ball to any of the five players on the court and also ?dynamic efficiency?, or deciding whether to ?use? the possession by taking a shot or ?continuing? the possession by making a pass.  As the shot clock winds down, the marginal difficulty of a shot considered will need to rise or they risk getting no shot off before the 24 seconds expires, wasting the possession.

They found that most NBA  players are very efficient in their shot selection.  Surprisingly, several elite players are actually not shooting enough, according to their model.  Here is the list of all NBA players analyzed and their score, where a negative number (at the top of the list) represent overshooters.  Joining Westbrook at the top of the list were well-known names like Lamar Odom and Tracy McGrady.  Even bigger names like LeBron James, Ray Allen, Dirk Nowitzki, Chris Paul and Joe Johnson actually show up at the bottom of the list and may hurt their team with their unselfishness.


So, what goes on in these very well-paid athletic brains?  Are the trigger-happy players selfish, over-confident and in need of attention?  Markus Raab, professor at the German Sport University-Cologne, and Joseph Johnson, professor at Miami University of Ohio,  have spent the last ten years studying the decision-making processes of athletes in several different sports, but especially fast-paced games where quick decisions are critical.


Let?s imagine the Thunder point guard, Westbrook, bringing the ball up the floor.  He crosses the half court line and his decision making process kicks in.  The Raab/Johnson process first recognizes that perception of the situation is required before the player can generate all of the different options in his brain.  Just like a quarterback examining and identifying the defensive alignment as he breaks the huddle, the point guard in basketball has to visually process the scene in front of him.  From there, his brain, based on his vast memory of similar basketball experiences, begins to make a list of options.  These can be spatial options, like move the ball left, ahead or right, or functional options like pass or shoot.  


Through research with basketball and team handball players, the researchers found that the most effective strategy is to ?take the first? option that the player conceives as that is most often the ?correct? choice when analyzed later by experts.  Much like going with your first answer on a test, the more that you deliberate over other choices, the greater the chances that you?ll pick the wrong one.  

However, each player will have their own library of choices stored in their memory and this magical sorting of best options can be influenced by several unique variables.  

One of these pre-determined factors is a personality preference known as action vs. state orientation.  According to Raab, ?An action orientation is attributed to players if they concentrate on a specific goal and take risks, whereas a state orientation is attributed to players if they have non-task-relevant cognitions and reduce risk-taking behavior by considering more situative considerations and future behavioral consequences.?  In other words, someone who has an action mentality is more likely to shoot first and ask questions later, while a state oriented player is going to consider more options with more long-term outlook.


For this and similar experiments, Raab and Johnson showed first-person videos of many different basketball in-game scenarios to players of different skill levels and personality types, then froze the scene and asked them to make a quick decision of what to do next with the ball.  They recorded the decision and the time it took to make the decision.  They found that those players who have more of an action orientation, according to a personality test given prior to the drill, were more likely to shoot first and more quickly.  Clearly, Russell Westbrook must fall in this category.


Raab followed up this study with a similar one that measured the difference between intuition-based decisions and more cognitive, deliberate decisions.  A player who ?goes with his gut? was shown to make faster and more successful choices than one that over analyzes.  This may help explain the list of elite players who tend to pass more than shoot.  They have more experience and patience to rely on their intuitive feel for the game.  While Goldman and Rao may ask them to be more action oriented, these players have learned that they are often just one more pass away from a much higher percentage shot.


Certainly, this is the tip of the iceberg regarding the psyche of a player at any level.  There are many more variables, some fact-based (I?ve missed my last 5 shots, so I?m going to pass) while some are more emotional, (I don?t want my teammate to get all the glory.)  For now, Thunder fans can only hope that their point guard learns to share.


See also: Are Bank Shots Best In Basketball? and NBA Teams Win With Ethnic Diversity


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/80PercentMental/~3/YUG18yAROGI/new-study-identifies-nba-players-who.html

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Wednesday, 28 December 2011

Dry Shoes for Better Performance

Posted by Website Introductions: Shoes is a very important gear in any sports. Other than protecting the feet, shoes can also improve performance during any game. It could also affect your game if you don't take good care of it. Keep in mind that you should use clean shoes inside and out so you won't be having athlete's foot or any fungal problems. The article below have some
Tags: sports shoes, hygiene. Comments: 0.

Source: http://blog.sports-buynow.com/sports_shoes/20111016-053814-Dry-Shoes-for-Better-Performance-

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Video Clip of Tibet Team in Gangtok.



Tibet team in Gangtok. Historical match between Tibet vs Bhutan.

Click for videos

Source: http://tibetsports.blog.com/2007/11/14/video-clip-of-tibet-team-in-gangtok/

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Digital Sport Summit Lead Up

With only a few days to go until Digital Sport Summit, we’re well on the way to having another fantastic event. Are you coming to Digital Sport Summit next week? Join us for pre-conference networking drinks next Tuesday night (June 7, DSS eve), at the Hilton on the Park, from 6.30pm. Come join presenters, panel [...]

Source: http://www.sportspiel.com.au/2011/06/digital-sport-summit-lead-up/

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Baltimore Ravens Cleveland Browns Injury Report

Baltimore Ravens Out WR Anquan Boldin (knee) Did not participate K Billy Cundiff (L calf) DE Cory Redding (ankle) Cleveland Browns Did not participate QB Colt McCoy (head) WR Jordan Norwood (head) S TJ Ward (foot) Limited participation WR Mohamed Massaquoi (foot) LB Ben Jacobs (head) CB Joe Haden (thigh) DT Scott Paxson (hand/calf) WR [...]

Source: http://marylandsportsblog.com/2011/12/baltimore-ravens-cleveland-browns-nfl-injury-report/

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Predicting NFL Success By What Draft Picks Say

Thankfully, the NFL Draft and all its hype is behind us.  The matchmaking is complete but the guessing game begins as to which team picked the right combination of athletic skill, mental toughness and leadership potential in their player selections.  Hundreds of hours of game film can be broken down to grade performance with X?s and O?s.  Objective athletic tests at the NFL combine rank the NCAA football draftees by speed and strengths, just as the infamous Wonderlic intelligence test tries to rank their brain power.  

However, despite all of this data, coaches and general managers often point to a player?s set of fuzzy personal qualities, dubbed the ?intangibles?, as the ultimate tie-breaking determinant to future success in the league.

Always looking for the edge in this crystal ball forecasting, teams are turning to other technologies and methods that have been used in related assessment arenas in business and politics.  As any good self-improvement speaker will tell you, success leaves clues.  By studying established leaders, certain traits, attitudes and themes can be identified as consistent ?bread crumbs? left behind for others to follow.  In the same way, potential leaders that don?t pan out also demonstrate patterns of behavior that can be linked to their less-than-hyped performance.

Now, a new tool is available to NFL front offices and, as with many high-tech innovations, they have the U.S. military to thank.  Achievement Metrics, a risk prediction service for the sports industry, now provides speech content analysis meant to give the odds of a budding superstar either rising into a leadership role or sinking into legal trouble based on just their public comments.  Their base technology grew out of the work that their sister company, Social Science Automation, has provided to the CIA and government agencies including profiles of possible terrorists, based on their use of language.

Using only the transcripts from a player?s recent college press conferences or interviews, the company?s computer algorithms find patterns in a player?s words and phrases.  Its not just a few vocabulary no-no?s that set off the alarms, but rather a pattern of selected triggers from a ?hot list? of over 2000 words.  So, unlike the Wonderlic IQ test that might allow for some pre-test cram sessions to increase the score, this analysis is much more intricate and based on an athlete?s words from the past.  And, by using just the transcripts of speech, the tone, volume and pronunciation of the words don?t matter; simply the ideas and subconscious selection of phrasing.

Combining numerical text analysis stats such as word meanings and frequency with established psychological profiling theories, players can be categorized in dimensions such as need for power, level of self-centerdness, ability to affect destiny and many more.

Currently, the database includes an analysis of 592 NFL players? speech patterns matched with their off-field behavior, both positive and negative, with a correlation algorithm.  As much as this seems like a scene from Minority Report and the fictional ?Pre-Crime? department, the accuracy of the results are impressive, according to the company website:

-  89 percent (89 out of 100) of the players placed in the high-risk category have been arrested or suspended while in the NFL.
-  Even more striking, only 0.13 percent (two out of 1,522) of players categorized as low-risk have been arrested or suspended during their professional careers.
-  Of the players in the database who have been arrested or suspended while in the NFL, the models placed 98 percent (104 out of 106) in the intermediate- or high-risk category based on their football-related speech from college.

Below is the current scatter plot graph that shows the distribution of NFL subjects along a ?bad behavior? continuum from their database.  Any college football player who ends up in Areas 3 or 4 after his speech analysis is not good news for his future employer.
 

Here is Roger Hall, Achievment Metrics? CEO and psychologist, explaining the process at the MIT Sloan Sports Analytics Conference held in March:

As Hall notes in his presentation, quarterbacks can have a major influence on an NFL team, so there has been much focus on the 2011 crop of draft picks and their chances of success.  Not to leave us hanging, Hall recently released the analysis of this group alongside some of the established QBs in the league.  On the Y-axis is the Positive Power score, or the level of belief in self-controlled destiny and along the X-axis is Ingroup Affiliation or the level of team orientation.  If given a choice, a team would probably prefer their prospect to be in the Aaron Rodgers/ Philip Rivers quadrant rather than the Alex Smith/Matt Leinart quadrant.


Assessing off-field risk is only the beginning for this type of analysis as long as the correlation equals causation relationship is believed and backed up with more data.  While some old school scouts and evaluators will cling to their intuitions, more forward-thinking GMs will try any new angle to get the edge.  It may just turn out to be a $20 million edge.


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/80PercentMental/~3/ulGxl9_qwZ8/predicting-nfl-success-by-what-draft.html

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Looking Back At Digital Sport Summit: 5 Key Learnings

I was part of a team of three who hosted the Digital Sport Summit on July 7 at the Melbourne Cricket Ground. We had a great turn out of 160 people; we have since received some pretty amazing feedback and have already had people ask about how to be involved next year. For that success [...]

Source: http://www.sportspiel.com.au/2010/07/looking-back-at-digital-sport-summit/

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A Perfect Country for Boxers

Posted by Website Introductions: The Philippines is home to champions and various people have reached that international recognition of fame and success, one of whom is Manny Pacquiao. This humble boxer from General Santos City is literally a celebrity, politician and icon to children and adults alike was a nobody back in his early days but worked his way up. Now he crafted this
Tags: martial arts, boxing icon. Comments: 0.

Source: http://blog.sports-buynow.com/martial_arts/20111015-21106-A-Perfect-Country-for-Boxers

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Tuesday, 27 December 2011

Looking Back At Digital Sport Summit: 5 Key Learnings

I was part of a team of three who hosted the Digital Sport Summit on July 7 at the Melbourne Cricket Ground. We had a great turn out of 160 people; we have since received some pretty amazing feedback and have already had people ask about how to be involved next year. For that success [...]

Source: http://www.sportspiel.com.au/2010/07/looking-back-at-digital-sport-summit/

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Between the Hashes- Week 16 Edition

Welcome back to the Week 16 edition of Between the Hashes where we preview some good plays for your fantasy football teams for the upcoming slate of NFL games. This is my last Fantasy Football article of the year as next week I’m off to Western Maryland to hibernate for a week. Recharge the batteries [...]

Source: http://marylandsportsblog.com/2011/12/between-the-hashes-week-16-edition/

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Back To The Beginning

It was just over three years ago that I wrote a short article called "The Sports Cognition Framework" for my squeaky new blog.  It was one of the first five articles I had ever written and it shows.  However, it captured the core of my passion and interest which is reflected in the name I chose for this blog, Sports Are 80 Percent Mental.  Learning about the connections between skill, psyche, and tactics in sports remains my goal.

Between that simple start and today's post (#185 for those scoring at home), I have wandered all across the spectrum of sports science, sports medicine, sports psychology and fitness research.  Along the way, there was a weekly column for Livescience.com and a few dozen articles for Life's Little Mysteries.

However, the focus of my writing has become blurred.  In a quest to get freelance articles placed online and expand the readership of this blog, I've tried covering an ever-increasing universe of sports research.  As with many endeavors, it is time to refocus on the original intent of this project.  It is time to get back to the beginning.

Most importantly, I value and appreciate your loyal visits to this site and your tweeting, liking and linking of the articles you enjoy.  I hope that will continue but wanted to give you a heads-up that future articles will be centered on the core concept of sports cognition.  Focused quality over quantity will be my mantra.

To that end, what questions do you have?  Have you thought about this stuff, too?  To be more specific, currently in the sports training world there is the popular, yet more general theory of "practice makes perfect" skill development, along with practical mental coaching tips and tricks.  What drives me, though, is drilling down much further into the brain-body connection and picking apart the root causes of sports expertise.

The research is there, buried in academic journals.  If it can be extracted, explained and extended out to coaches, parents and players, then we can break down some traditional training myths while developing a better understanding of the sports we love.

So, my humble request is that you give the more specific 80% Mental a chance by visiting, keeping your RSS subscription, and joining the conversation both here and on our Facebook page.

Thanks!
Dan

P.S. My breakthrough to re-purpose my work was inspired by a new manifesto from Steven Pressfield, appropriately titled, Do The Work.  The Kindle version is now selling at the very reasonable price of free, thanks to Seth Godin and the Domino Project.  I highly recommend it!


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