Monthly Archive for October, 2012

Page 3 of 4

Amstrong: the doping-system

The Daily News reported on Tuesday that Nike may have been complicit in Armstrong’s doping scheme, described in the USADA report as the most sophisticated in the history of sports. Kathy Lemond, the wife of American cyclist Greg Lemond, testified under oath during a 2006 deposition that Nike paid former International Cycling Union president Hein Verbruggen $500,000 to cover up a 1999 Armstrong positive drug test.

Read more: http://www.nydailynews.com/sports/i-team/protesters-demand-nike-cut-ties-disgraced-armstrong-article-1.1185339#ixzz29Xv4o5zT

In sports, doping has emerged precisely because of the approach that the pursuit of victory justifies the use of any means to get it, and those who are against this idea: “it means, then, that they do not want to win.” But not enough to win the will of an individual (Armstrong) willing to set up the fraud, it need to build an organization that moves in the same way and shares the use of doping as a winning system. Of course, the higher the charisma and authority of the athlete, the greater its influence across the organization, the more difficult it will be for his teammates to refuse doping. To consolidate this system needs strong alliances and partnerships with other organizations, such as sports or business. This is why the news of the possible involvement of Nike and the former UCI president could be this additional piece of the puzzle. Armstrong was not alone in this adventure and now we’re finally finding out who were his allies.

To learn more about fraud: Alberto Cei, The Lords of the fraud. The mechanisms of financial and sport fraud. www.francoangeli.it / Research / Risultati_ricerca_avanzata.ASP

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

To win the cancer

This is the story of Amanda Mercer, 44 yeras old, that four months after being operated on for breast cancer, along with other teammates, set a new record of team swimming the English Channel. After the surgery the doctors had not only recommended Amanda to start this challenge, but she was told that she could never do it, much less training because the chemotherapy would make her very sick and weakened. Her instinctive response to this reply was: “They do not know me.” Nine days after the first chemo went to swim and made just 1 km, very slowly but it felt good. After 12 days, began to swim faster and again he was convinced that he would make it. The second and third chemo were terribles. She could no longer keep up with her teammates, she was tired, but the heart told her that shewould have done anyway. Fourteen days after the last chemo Amanda was on the boat ready to dive into the cold water of the English Channel for her first round of an hour of swimming. After the first two rounds she began to feel tired with a strong nausea, if she had not dive into the sea the team would be disqualified. She dived anyway and after a few minutes was overcome by fatigue and negative thoughts. She began to think of a friend who had an incurable disease and that what she was feeling was nothing compared to the situation that Bob lived. The body began to react positively, thought also to her husband who was waiting on the beach in Dover and concentrated to count the strokes. The cancer did not stop her, it did her just go slower.

More on  http://www.huffingtonpost.com/amanda-mercer/breast-cancer-awareness_b_1955095.html 

Obama stress management

Experts say that Obama will give his best after wrong and when the pressure rises to the maximum. Like many I hope so. At the same time so this is the best description of the optimistic individual and fully illustrates the American said: “No matter how many times you fall but how quickly you rises.” This is the purpose of  every mental training and coaching job.

Ian Thorpe and the champions’ depression

Ian Thorpe, one of the greatest swimmers, wrote in hia autobiography that he has been depressed but he had never spoken openly about it. ”Not even my family is aware that I’ve spent a lot of my life battling what I can only describe as a crippling depression”. The 30-year-old said he had striven to be perfect and had wanted to keep what he felt was a “character flaw” from his family. After the Sydney Olympics and while training for Athens, Thorpe decided to get answers and had a “clandestine visit” to a doctor, where he got “some help”, including medication.  ”I used alcohol as a means to rid my head of terrible thoughts, as a way of managing my moods – but I did it behind closed doors, where many depressed people choose to fight their demons before they realise they can’t do it without help”. ”There were numerous occasions, particularly between 2002 and 2004 as I trained to defend my Olympic titles in Athens, that I abused myself this way – always alone and in a mist of disgrace.”

We live in the period in which the depression is the most common mental disorder. Depression stimulated by the perception of not more control life and the belief that no one can help us. The champions also suffer of it and not only people who feel desperate because they live their lives as a failure or a failed attempt to realize their dreams. The champions may become trapped as they are in search of perfection that can never be reached and the need to repeat their successes, in an environment that considers them heroes only if they continue to win, otherwise as easily they become something to be deleted. The transience of success, despite the fame and the money, can destroy lives if those who live in this condition do not find the ways to get out alive and happy. Not everyone wants to learn, not everyone lives in an environment that warns and support them, and so they become depressed. Also because if ever they tried to speak, they will find many friends ready to tell, that they had everything and cannot complain.

Beyond Icarus

Felix Baumgartner has not burned as it happened to Icarus. Many people wonder about the meaning of these challenges. My opinion is that the challenges serve to expand the boundaries of our actions. The purpose is to do the unthinkable: it became feasible through a project, culminating in the action. Science and organization are the basis of this success, but these contributions have been enhanced by the quality of the preparation of Baumgartner as well as the skills he has shown in flight.

Felix Baumgartner has gone to break the sound barrier

  • Felix Baumgartner prepares for freefall skydive from edge of space

The US players’ new awareness about LGBT rights

These days, we’re more likely to see professional athletes on products than protest lines. But it wasn’t always this way. In the 1960s, sports stars were often as famous for what they believed as for their home runs. Back then, many athletes spoke out about civil rights. Muhammad Ali was stripped of his heavyweight title and threatened with imprisonment for refusing to fight in Vietnam, on the grounds of racial discrimination. By the 1970s, the issue of the day was women’s rights. Tennis player Billie Jean King used her fame on the court to fight for equal opportunities for female athletes. Today, King is also an advocate for gay rights, but for most of her career, she stayed in the closet. Now, it’s not uncommon for a female pro athlete to come out, but as of yet, no current male players of America’s four major pro sports (football, basketball, baseball and hockey) has publicly said he’s gay.

Former Major League Baseball player Billy Bean spent nine years in silence about his sexual orientation in the ’90s. “For me, I was a baseball player, and I did not identify as a gay person who played baseball. I was a baseball player first and foremost,” he tells weekends on All Things Considered guest host Celeste Headlee. “You don’t get to the major leagues — nobody does — without making that the absolute No. 1 priority and passion of your life.” He says no one knew he was gay. “I had never told anybody. I’d never told my parents, I’d never told my best friend. The only person that knew was the person I’d left my wife for,” he says. He spent three years with his partner, who died in 1995. “That was a very, very difficult experience for me to try to weather on my own,” Bean says. “But I just think that because I had no precedent of anyone in the environment, there was no person for me to model myself after. And I think that I was afraid.” When Bean played, he says gay slurs were “thrown around like ‘if,’ ‘and’ or ‘but.’ ” Bean, author ofGoing the Other Way: Lessons From a Life in and Out of Major League Baseball, never spoke up. “I didn’t talk about gay rights, I didn’t defend gay rights. I didn’t bring up the topic. It was my dirty little secret,” he says.

Earlier this month, ESPN published a poll on athletes’ political views, including whether the U.S. should legalize gay marriage (http://espn.go.com/nfl/story/_/id/8465169/anonymous-athletes-give-views-presidential-election-social-issues-sports-gambling-espn-magazine) . The study found overwhelming support in the NHL — 92.3 percent — as well as majority support in the NFL. MLB and NBA players were 45 percent and 46.2 percent, respectively, in favor of legalization.

A number of teams have found advantages to reaching out to the LGBT community. Some teams have been making public service announcements and giving donations to community organizations. See video of Baltimore Orioles:  http://mlb.mlb.com/video/play.jsp?content_id=17294739

(From: http://www.npr.org/2012/10/13/162862945/a-shifting-playing-field-coming-out-as-a-gay-athlete)

(Visit: http://www.itgetsbetter.org/)

Leadership and employee management

Topics such as leadership and management of a team are always up to date daily as organizations need to deal with them effectively if they want to achieve their goals. And  it’s even more difficult today when most of the organizational realities, publics and privates, have reduced the financial resources with which to reward their employees, while at the same time calling for greater commitment and flexibility. On the basis of these premises Federculture (the Italian Association of Local Authorities, www.federculture.it) has included in its training program two days devoted to the theme “Leadership and management of responsibilities assigned to employees.” The workshop will be held in Rome and it is open not only to employees of local authorities but to all those who are interested in this issue. For more information: http://www.ceiconsulting.it/it/experiences/

(Italiano) Quando vengono segnati i goal decisivi nel calcio

A study that I conducted in the Italian football championship analyzes the period in which the teams scored the decisive goal, for example, if the final score is 1-1 or 2-2 the goal under consideration is what led to the break-even final. Analyzing the last goal made ​​in three Italian first division championships have been  investigated three types of outcomes: draw, winning with a margin of one goal and with the difference of the two goals.
These results  show that the decisive score goals are made in the last period of the game (from 76 to 90 minutes),​​ no matter what the final result with 44.2% of goals. The second period with greater frequency networks is from 61 to 75 minutes with 24.6%. Therefore, the last half hour of the game is the most important for the number of goals, representing 68.8% of the goals. Only 16.3% of decisive goals are made ​​in the first time, this figure is very close to the percentage of goals scored in the first 15 minutes of the second time (14.7%).

Top finishers Tour de France tainted by doping