Interesting Sports Promotion
Monday, March 30th, 2009Check out this sports promotion. Scroll down for the calorie count.
Check out this sports promotion. Scroll down for the calorie count.
For those of you who chose Option #1, the third and final reflection paper is due May 1, 2009 at 5:00PM.
For those who elected to pick Option #2, your “publishable quality” piece is also due May 1, 2009 at 5:00PM.
I will have a box set up in the reception area of HPER 112 to collect the papers.
The final exam will be Thursday, May 7, 2009 from 7:15PM to 9:15PM. Details here.
The Wall Street Journal reports on the finding here.
Larry Scott, CEO of the Sony Ericsson WTA Tour for the past six years, has opted to step down and take the Pac-10 Commissioner position. Jon Wertheim of Sports Illustrated shares his thoughts here.
I will lecture on Ch. 12 tomorrow, so please read it ahead of time.
On Thursday (March 26), Reflection Paper #2 is due (if you chose Option #1 for the course writing requirment). If you wrote Reflection Paper #1 about Jerry Maguire, Reflection Paper #2 must pertain to one of the academic articles in the course supplement. I will be in class from 1:00PM to 1:05PM on Thursday to collect Reflection Paper #2. You can turn it in early if you want (hard copies only, no emails).
If you chose Option #2 for the course writing requirment, please email me an update on your progress (if you haven’t already).
There is a new academic paper being circulated positing that a college basketball team is more likely to win a game if they trail by one (1) point at halftime. The New York Times write-up (by the authors) about the article is here. The paper itself is here. A tennis-specific paper with the opposite finding can be found here. I have yet to read either paper, but look forward to it.
Top ATP World Tour pro Mario Ancic is speaking at Harvard Law School tomorrow. Details here.
Sports Illustrated writer L. Jon Wertheim has an interesting piece on drug testing in tennis in the latest issue of Tennis. As of today, I couldn’t find an e-version. However, a related article was recently featured on ESPN’s website and can be found here.
The Wall Street Journal has an interesting piece about the theory of deliberate practice in the sport of golf. Check it out here.