I love sports.
I love the way I can openly hate something and it’s ok, just because it has to do with sports. I can completely disregard a comment from someone just by saying, “What does he know, he’s a Phillies’ fan.”
Sports delve into every emotion that a human being can possibly feel. Sports can directly cause heartbreak and depression (see Bill Buckner’s fielding error in game six of the 1986 World Series). They can also cause supreme elation and joy by overcoming impossible odds (take the New York Giants defeating a perfect 18-0 New England Patriots team in Super Bowl XLII for example).
Sports can bring entire nations or ethnicities together around a radio or TV as they root for national heroes, like Americans did for the golden boy himself, 14-time Olympic gold medalist Michael Phelps.
Winning a championship brings such delight to fans; the victory actually transcends the sport itself. So much so that the President of the United States calls the champion just to congratulate him. All politics aside, to say that that’s a big deal is an understatement.
Sports have played a major role throughout history. Wars have been fought over sports like the Soccer War between El Salvador and Honduras in 1969, and wars have been halted so that sporting events could take place.
The Olympics were so important to the ancient Greeks that they would cease fighting to observe the athletic festival. Acts of betrayal have affected mass populations such as the fans of the Brooklyn Dodgers when the team moved to Los Angeles in 1957, or the Baltimore Colts’ relocation to Indianapolis in 1984.
Sports are fascinating thanks to the way that they utterly defy basic logic and a lot of times scientific fact. There is no medical explanation that explains how a man can perform, and win at that, in one of professional golf’s biggest arenas as Tiger Woods did on a broken leg and blown knee at the 2008 U.S. Open.
There is no way that a man should be able to train his body to windmill a basketball and slam dunk it with ease like so many basketballers do. No way a man should be physically able to launch a 100 mph baseball over 600 feet off a baseball bat, and no way a human being from a small Jamaican village should be able to set the world record in the 100 meter dash at 9.58 seconds, but Usain Bolt did it.
Sports create opportunity. There are more than 49,000 student athletes competing in division I, II, or III athletics every year, and many of them get some form of scholarship money so that they are able to further their education.
Sports can bring people together and often times cause friction between family or friends. Everyone has seen those “house divided” vanity plates that feature college rivalries like UGA / GT or Ohio State / Michigan.
Sports idolize the phenomenal, not to say that an athlete is a particularly better human being than anyone else, but the accomplishments an athlete achieves does set him or her apart. An athlete can be remembered for a single moment in time that defines an entire season, decade or even an entire sport. Babe Ruth defined baseball and is still revered as the greatest ever after nearly 100 years after his career began. He did it off hot dogs and beer, not steroids.
Sports transcend even themselves. Athletes can make messes of their lives equivalent to the post-Hurricane Katrina Gulf Coast, see Kobe Bryant’s extra-marital affair, and they can then regain the adoration of the average sports fan just by being named to an All-Star team or winning a championship ring. Tiger Woods will be the world’s most beloved athlete once again, if he gets back to winning majors in true Tiger fashion. Mark my words.
I love everything about sports. I love the way that sports intertwine themselves with other types of history. Imagine if NFL linebacker Pat Tillman wasn’t killed by friendly fire in Afghanistan, or if Ted Williams and Joe DiMaggio didn’t serve in World War II and Korea. They were all in the primes of their careers.
The world is a competitive place, thus it loves sports. Don’t worry, there’s proof. Observe FIFA, the IOC, IBAF and FIBA. They are the international governing bodies of soccer, the Olympics, baseball and basketball, respectively, and they all aim to promote their sport internationally.
The average person may or may not love sports as much as the fanatics like me, but that’s what people like me are for. To share my love of sports with the average.
The thing I love most about sports is the ability to talk with almost anyone about them. There is always a debate waiting to be hashed out about sports, and the truly beautiful thing is, that it’s all speculation, so no one’s right or wrong. It’s just opinions.
It’s gorgeous.
That’s exactly why I love sports. Get it. Got it. Good.



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