SBUS 250 Final Study Guide

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Stimulants

(caffeine, cocaine, Benzedrine, Ritalin, and Methedrine) are used to get hyped up before competition & to heighten one's arousal level

1st Wave of Black Athletes Activism

- 1900-1945 - international recognition - historical influences: nationalism, imperialism, WW - significant athletes: Joe Lewis, Jesse Owens - segregation & discrimination in the US - couldn't find jobs - media coverage: criticized athletes who lost their fame

2nd Wave of Black Athletes Activism

- 1945-1960s - access to American mainstream - historical influences: decolonization - significant athletes: Jackie Robinson - institutions became less segregated - media coverage: shut up & play

3rd Wave of Black Athletes Activism

- 1960s-1970s - part of Civil Rights Mov't - historical influences: CRM, Black power - significant athletes: Muhammad Ali, Bill Russell, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, Tommie Smith, John Carlos - rebellion against institutionalized America - media coverage: don't protest this way

No Significant Wave of Black Athletes Activism

- 1980s-2010 - "post racial america" - historical influences: end of Cold War, Capitalism - significant athletes: Michael Jordan, Charles Barkley - making money $$ - media coverage: not critical

Olympic Games Marketing

- 1st National live TV broadcasting in Berlin 1936 - The Olympic Games are broadcasted to 220 countries & territories - TV rights are the highest source of revenue for the Olympic Mov't - Broadcasting right from N. America (esp. NBC) are the highest - Other sources of revenues: TOP program, OCOG domestic sponsorship, OCOG ticketing, OCOG licensing - While there are 193 official state in the UN, over 280 countries & nat'l Olympic Communities compete in the Olympic Games

In 2014, total sports coverage on local network affiliates and SportsCenter devoted...

- 2.3% to women basketball - 6% to women's other

4th Wave of Black Athletes Activism

- 2011-present - seeking for power & using power - historical influences: social media - significant athletes: Colin Kaepernick, LeBron James - athletes using their power & platform to raise social issues - media coverage: mixed, athletes using social media to send messages

Protest during the COVID-19 Pandemic

- 2020 - seeking structural change in governing bodies - historical influences: global pandemic, elections, deaths & shootings of George Floyd, Breonna Taylor, Jacob Blake, BLM protests - significant athletes: Stephen Jackson, LeBron James, Naomi Osaka, WNBA players, Marcus Rushford - media coverage: mixed, athletes using social media & demanding action

In 2014, women's sports coverage on local network affiliates and SportsCenter devoted...

- 81.6% to basketball - 6.4% to tennis - 5.9% to golf - 3.4% to other - 2.7% volleyball

Historical Development of Sport

- Ancient Middle East (Assyria, Babylonia, Egypt, Ancient Israel) - Ancient Greece (Olympia 117BC-394AD) - Roman Empire (80BC-476AD) - Catholic Church - Middle Ages - Renaissance (1300-1700_ - Industrial revolution, modernization, urbanization, social reforms - England, Germany, France - United States - Western history tends to ignore other influences

On the Field Violence

- Brutal body contact: actions within the rules of sport that can cause injuries - Borderline violence: actions that violate the rules of the game but are accepted as part of the norm of the sport - Quasi-criminal violence: actions that violate formal rules of the games, the norms of the sport & at times the law - Criminal violence: actions that not only violate the rules of the game but are outside the law

Paralympic Games/Movement

- WWII - Ludwig Guttmann & the 1948 Stock Mandeville Games - Rome 1960 (900 athletes) - 1963-1984 took place in the Olympic years but not in the hosting city of the Olympics - 1976: 1st Winter Paralympic Games - since 1988, took place in the hosting city of Olympic Games - since 2000, every bidding city is bidding for the Olympic & the Paralympic Games

Sports Tech Framework

- activity & performance: measurable & equipment; performance tracking & coaching - fans & content: news, fans experience & social platforms, fantasy sports & betting - management & organization: organizations & venues; media & commercial partners

Societal Analysis

- analyzing data obtained through various methods already described - pro: applies social theories & morals to examine life from a social point of view - con: if only one social theory or model is used, it may ignore salient facts or skew analysis

Pierre de Coubertin

- born in 1863, son of a Barron - was a child when Prussia defeated France in the 1870 war - didn't fit w/the army, started studying law then political science - studied the war & came to a conclusion that soldiers in France lacked fitness

Sport & Terrorism

- casualties - media coverage - psychological impact - financial impact - reaction by communities

Content Research

- collecting info or pics from media & assigning themes - pros: can assess much data; can analyze societal priorities & biases - cons: uses inferences from others reporting rather than from self-reports

Off the Field Violence

- criminal behavior - assaults & sexual assaults by male athletes - violence among spectators - violence among media viewers - terrorism at sport events

Aggression is...

- directed towards another person - intentional - not an emotion - forceful attack on someone

Historical Research

- examining primary documents, interviewing primary resources & experts & analyzing historians' interpretations - pros: examines sport trends over time; can make comparisons w/society -cons: addresses only large societal trends

Special Olympics

- for athletes w/intellectual disability, cognitive delay, leaning disability or vocational problems - 185 countries, 1.7 million athletes - began w/1,000 athletes at the 1968 Chicago Games - goals: help participants improve fitness, develop skills & enhance confidence/one's self-image - the Special Olympics World Games are held every 4 years - during the 20th Century all the summer games were held in the US; now more b/t countries - Los Angeles 2015: 6,500 athletes, 3,000 volunteers, 25 sports - around 90,000 special olympic competitions annually - London 2012: over 4000 athletes, 104 countries, 2.7 million tickets sold - 22 sports in the 2016 Paralympic Games in Rio

Development of the Modern Olympic Games

- he grew out of his revenge quest & focused on using sport as a tool for peace - he wanted to recreate values of an ancient Greek society - uses his connection to connect diff. sport athletics & unions - influenced by the regional games in Europe & his visits abroad - influenced by the Victorian social class diff. in England; sees sports as amateurish - June 23, 1894, in Paris, the newly formed IOC voted on the revival of the Olympic Games - Athens was chosen to host the 1st modern Olympic Games in 1896 - Demetrius Vikelas was elected as the 1st IOC president

Native American Athletes

- lacrosse was created my Native American Indians - Jim Thorpe (Potawatomi) was selected the best athlete of the first half of 20th century - 2006: NCAA issued a policy against the use of such images that portrayed Native Americans

Ethnography

- notes & conversations obtained by personal observations & immersion in an environment or group - pro: provides an insider view - con: can be costly & time intensive

Sport

- physical activity & skill - competition: outcome important & not predetermined - institutionalization - specialized facilities & equipment

Play

- physical activity of childhood - free activity to explore environment, express oneself & pretend - no firm rules or set location - outcome is unimportant - pleasure as the only objective

Work

- physical/mental effort needed to perform a task - often connected to earning a living - pro athletes work when they are paid to play a sport - high performance athletes may exp. sport as work even if they are not paid

Interviews

- questioning individuals or small (focus) groups - pros: can be in depth; can prompt unexpected answers - cons: can be time consuming, expensive & limited to small samples

Survey Research

- questionnaires - pros: quickly collects much data for trend analysis; random sampling permits generalization to larger population - cons: relies on self-reports; may not account for personal diff. & mislead if data aren't discreet enough

Closed League

- same teams compete every year - no mobility b/t teams - one main competition - competing teams & league formation change based on institutionalized league decision & financial preferences - mostly in US & Canada

Adult Organized Sports

- skills of the game - rules of the game - proper playing positions - obedience to adult directions, strategy & training methods

Game

- specialized form of play w/more structure - mental or physical form (inactive or active) - informal/formal rules - competition (optional) - outcome determined by luck, strategy or skill

Sports & Politics in the 21st Century

- sport diplomacy as part of public diplomacy - gov't targeting domestic & foreign markets - no mass boycotts - some political manifestations global & domestic terrorism

Self Categorization & Social Identity Theories

- states that people who view themselves as both individuals & as part of a group (group memberships) are important in the development of self-identity - states that individuals group themselves & others into various categories to make sense of the social world & their place within it (characteristics)

Open League

- teams are promoted & relegated every year - mobility b/t leagues - various different types of competition - teams rarely move b/t cities - league size & format changes based on institutionalized decisions

The End of the Games

- the Catholic Church abolished the Games in 394AD & the gladiator fight at the Colosseum at the 5th Century - Middle Ages: some knight competitions around Europe & local festivals - 18th-19th Century: the industrial revolution, urbanization, more spare time, muscular christianity, YMCA

Sport & Religion

- the games as celebration for the gods - Temple of Zeus & Temple of Hera - angry statue of Zeus holding a lighting bolt at the entrance of the stadium to scare Zanes (cheaters) - statue of Apollo - Nika: goddess of victory => influenced NIKE

The Impacts of COVID-19 & 2020

- the pandemic: halted the world of sports - the social protests: BLM mov't - the 2020 presidential elections - protest from athletes

Muscular Christianity

- was spread & developed through the YMCA - mostly linked to sports in the US during the 19th century - sees physical fitness as a way to glorify god

Title IX Compliance Test

1. Proportionality test 2. History-of-progress test 3. Accommodation-of-interest test

When was the first Olympic Games?

1896 Athens, Greece

When was the first Paralympics?

1960 Rome

When was the first Special Olympic Games?

1968 Chicago Games

When and where did Black September did it's attack?

1972 Munich Olympic Games

When did the US boycott the Olympic Games?

1980 Moscow Games

When did the USSR boycott the Olympic Games?

1984 Los Angeles Games

eSports is expected to be a medal event in the...

2022 Asian Games

Girls sports in HS participation

249,105 in 1971 (before Title IX) to 3,172,637 in 2009

Female participation in college sports

30,000 in 1977 to more than 180,000 in 2010

Division II

312 members; offers very few full scholarships

Division I

347 members; offers full scholarships

Division III

451 members; offers no scholarships for athletics

Football Championship Subdivision (FCS)

63 scholarships for football players

Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS)

85 scholarships for football players

Almost all major Division I sports events were postponed after...

9/11

3 Most Common Eating Disorders

Anorexia Nervosa: people who starve themselves in order to achieve what they perceive as an ideal body weight; no matter how thin they are, they may still regard themselves as fat Bulimia Nervosa: involves binge eating followed by purging Compulsive Exercise: overexercising

When was the Boston Marathon incident?

April 15, 2013

Many __________ athletes come to the US already highly educated & established in the middle or upper class.

Asian-American

Who was the founder of the Paralympic Games?

Dr. Ludwig Guttmann

Which country used a government-led systematic doping system to improve athlete's performance and risked athletes safety in the 1970s

East Germany

Who was the founder of the Special Olympic?

Eunice Kennedy Shriver

All NCAA Division I suspended their season at the same time.

False

During WWII, the US President demanded the MLB to stop playing.

False

Only non-democratic countries have been using national sports events to promote national pride

False

The ancient Olympic Truce was respected in modernity, as no act of war, terror or violence against athletes occurred during Olympic Games held in the 19th, 20th and 21st centuries

False

Most NCAA schools with big football programs are part of the...

Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS)

When did the incident in Atlanta happen?

July 27, 1966 Summer Olympic Games

Hispanic or Latino athletes are over-represented in...

Major League Baseball (MLB)

Larry Nassar sexually abused athletes while treating athletes as part of which of the following organizations?

Michigan State University, USA Gymnastics & the US Olympic Committee

Who was the founder of the Olympics?

Pierre de Coubertin

Sport Marketing Process

Planning: - mission & vision - internal & external analysis - SWOT (Strengths, Weaknesses, Opportunities, Threats) Implementation: - segmentation, targeting, positioning (STP) - the marketing mix (the 4 Ps: product, price, place, promotion) Evaluation: - systematic tracking, evaluation & modifications

Kolhberg's Six Stages of Moral Development

Pre-conventional (Ages 0-9) 1. Punishment & obedience 2. Pleasure or pain Conventional (Ages 9-20) 3. Good boy/girl 4. Law & order Post-conventional (Ages 20+) 5. Social contract 6. Principled conscience

Who was first to file an official complaint to the police against Larry Nassar?

Rachel Denhollander, a former amateur gymnast from Kentucky & a lawyer

Coaching and parents over-emphasizing the importance of the game's outcome, over-training at a young age, and stress and anxiety can lead to children to drop out of sports because of burnout.

True

In 1964 & 1968, South Africa was banned from the Olympics due to its practice of apartheid.

True

Some Muslim female athletes wear a hijab while competing for religious and modesty purposes

True

The Americans with Disabilities Act is a law signed by President George H. Bush in the early 1900s and addresses discrimination against people with disabilities

True

The games in Olympia were banned by the Roman emperor Theodosius because pagan worship contradicts Christianity

True

Does social class & socio-economic status have an impact on sport participation & choices of sports?

Yes

Social Class

a defined category of people who share a similar position in society based on their socio-economic level

The SportsTech Matrix consists of

a user angle & a tech angle

All forms of violence in sports are...

against the rules & is illegal

Who must comply with Title IX?

any education program or activity receiving federal financial assistance

Qualitative

collects info through interviews or observation of individuals, groups, societal characteristics & trends

Quantifiable

collects or studies data that can be counted and analyzed statistically

Hegemonic Theory

compare genders in the context of sport

Athlete Organized Sport

developed naturally through the children

Figurational Theory

emphasizes people's connections and interdependence; examines historical changes of networks of people over time

Disposition-based Theories

explains why we like what we like

Fantasy sports falls under the category of...

fans & content

Conflict Theory

focuses on forces that produce instability, disruption, and disorganization (i.e. economic power imbalances)

Interactionist Theory

focuses on social interactions and relationships (bottom-up approach)

Uses & Gratifications

focuses on the media user (individuals who use media actively to achieve their own goals)

Cultivation

focuses on tv's influence on the construction of our beliefs about reality; the longitudinal effects of tv

Steroids

increase an athlete's muscle size, speed & power; also enhances masculinity, aggressiveness, sense of well-being & sexual prowess)

Between 1989 and 2014 the percentage of network news coverage of women's sports has consistently been...

less than 10%

Prescription drugs and over-the-counter drugs

promote healing from sickness or injury or mask pain

Underconformity

refers to behavior that doesn't conform the generally accepted rules of sport (breaking rules-team, school, competition)

Framing

refers to the active process involving the selection of certain aspects of an issue by the media & its effects on undermining of a message by media consumption (i.e. black athletes feeling that historically they have been portrayed by the media as physically talented)

Race

refers to the attributes that are passed along genetically from generation to generation

Ethnicity

refers to the cultural heritage of a group of people

Overconformity

similar to underconformity but isn't carried to the extreme that constitutes deviant behavior (drastically altering food intake by gain/lose wright, using supplements to improve strength or bulk up muscles)

Feminist Theory

society is patriarchal and ignores or undervalues female virtues

"Sport as an Opiate of the Masses" refers to...

sport as a tool of keeping people from worrying about things that matter to their lives

Functionalist Theory

sport reinforces society's value system

Critical Theory

studies the power or authority that a group wields over others

The 1st major American league that suspended its season because of COVID19 was...

the NBA

The governing body that is responsible for the detection and prevention of doping in sports is...

the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA)

According to Cooky, Messner, and Musto (2015)...

the highest coverage percentage of women's sports was Network News 1999

Agenda Setting

the media have power in their ability to define & shape the discussion of public events; the media do not tell people what to think, they tell people what to think about

What is true about men's sports in the D1 FBS colleges in the NCAA?

the only college sports that generate net profits are college football and men's basketball

The electronic media form that was most common in the 1930s was...

the radio

Dr. Ludwig Guttman

treated injured war veterans through athletic competitions which started the Paralympic Mov't

Do some sports require a certain amount of violence?

yes


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