Geezus...C_C part 2.Pretty simple really. Athleticism is a skill, one that is more a have-or-don't than a can-be-acquired-through-gymwork.
Fitness and athleticism is not the same thing.
Weight training won't make one iota of difference to either fitness or athleticism. Cardio work will improve fitness but won't make a non-athlete into an athlete. Otherwise the best at Athletics Championships would be those with the best work-ethics alone.
Example - AB de Villiers and Herschelle Gibbs are natural athletes. Robert Key is not. Yet Key (in more recent times) and ABdeV are all fanatical trainers. Gibbs is not. But it doesn't change their athletitcism.
You're missing the point. training does help increase athleticism, but only to an extent. A person who is naturally very athletic will always remain more athletic than another who is slow to begin with, but trains like hell. Some people are just naturally more athletic than others. A person who trains hard will definitely become fitter, but he'll be fitter than he previously was, not necessarily fitter than another more gifted person.Geezus...C_C part 2.
No, weight training does help strengthen and condition the muscles. For example, Agility is a trait of athleticism. Agility is not something you either have-or-don't-have. You can be more agile by increasing your speed.
To be athletic means to exhibit athletic qualities. To be physically strong is another such aspect. How can you become physically strong? As said, weight training is one method.
And weight training does help fitness. By weight training you build up lean muscles which increase your body's metabolic rate thus reducing the body's fat storage and also burning up fat you may have stored unnecessarily. By doing this, it is one way you may become a fitter person.
Yes but that wasn't my point. Some players will have been endowed with a naturally fit body, and will have a physique not everyone can build upto - that's just a physical limitation. But there is a standard of athleticism everyone can achieve in their own right, and by doing so that will help - as Matt mentions - to attain better and more consistent performances.You're missing the point. training does help increase athleticism, but only to an extent. A person who is naturally very athletic will always remain more athletic than another who is slow to begin with, but trains like hell. Some people are just naturally more athletic than others. A person who trains hard will definitely become fitter, but he'll be fitter than he previously was, not necessarily fitter than another more gifted person.
It will improve their performance, so long as they don't stop doing their skills practice to concentrate on their fitness.Yes but that wasn't my point. Some players will have been endowed with a naturally fit body, and will have a physique not everyone can build upto - that's just a physical limitation. But there is a standard of athleticism everyone can achieve in their own right, and by doing so that will help - as Matt mentions - to attain better and more consistent performances.
What you mention in the bolded part is exactly what I am - or was trying - to say. If anybody who is amazingly skillful (like test cricketers) can train enough to raise their fitness than what it was before, that will automatically raise their game. Maybe a situation to take into account is comparing two people who are similar in build, yet one is a bit more skillfull than the other. The one who is inferior in skill embarks on increasing their athleticism - or fitness, what have you - and raise their game enough to compare against the other guy with more skill. Not sure if I'm clear, but I mean you can gain some ground by doing this training.
(might aswell say something decent in this thread while i'm sober)Haven't the Dutch, the Germans, the Aussies and the Spanish been better than India or Pakistan for ages anyway?
I think Tarrick can now be our resisdent drunk.(He is drunk again, BTW)
Haven't the Dutch, the Germans, the Aussies and the Spanish been better than India or Pakistan for ages anyway?
Yes, the Dutch, germans, aussies spanish and South-Koreans have been far better then the Pakistan and India teams.
11 Olympic gold medals says no.
Have a look at the context in which Fiery's question was phrased. The discussion centers around the fate of the subcontinental hockey teams when focus shifted from skills to sheer fitness and powerplay. So when Fiery suggests that the Dutch, the Germans, the Aussies and the Spanish have been better than Ind/Pak for "ages anyway", it obviously encompasses the pre-astroturf era too, necessitating a different and more correct reply than yours.have a look at in which year the last one was won? and read my post again.
It isn't a question of a sport being better or worse. Your viewpoint will depend on what you want from the sport. Just considering Field Hockey, if you're the type that believes it is a game primarily of stamina and speed, you would be of the view that the sport has improved over the years. If however, you're the type that places emphasis on the beauty of the sport lying in the dribbling skills, the skill that resides in knowing exactly how to power the ball so that you've compensated for the unpredictability factor that comes from playing on natural grass, then you'll feel the sport has lost its way over the years.If people are to be believed, every single sport isn't as good as it used to be. Cricket, AFL, tennis, soccer, boxing... hear it all the time.
Whilst I can be as romantic and nostalgic when it comes to appreciating the sublteties of sport, what it comes down to is that the best tactics to win (so long as they are within the rules and 'spirit' of the game) should be employed. If a cricketer who is more athletic yet less 'skilled' in terms of batting (for the eg. of cricket), breeds better results than the skilled batsman, that is the way the game will go whether people like it or not.It isn't a question of a sport being better or worse. Your viewpoint will depend on what you want from the sport. Just considering Field Hockey, if you're the type that believes it is a game primarily of stamina and speed, you would be of the view that the sport has improved over the years. If however, you're the type that places emphasis on the beauty of the sport lying in the dribbling skills, the skill that resides in knowing exactly how to power the ball so that you've compensated for the unpredictability factor that comes from playing on natural grass, then you'll feel the sport has lost its way over the years.
I'd liken it to the difference between shooting a target with a perfect gun in a closed shooting range, and with a gun that has a crooked sight, in open air.
Sure, you'd still find better shooters and lesser shooters in the former case under those 'sterile' conditions, so to speak. But wouldn't you be more thrilled if you've shot the target compensating for the crooked sight and the wind ?
11 Olympic gold medals says no.
Ha! Great Britain has won a gold more recently than India or Pakistan and hockey is perceived very much as a lasses sport over here.have a look at in which year the last one was won? and read my post again.