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Showing posts with label Winter Sports. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Winter Sports. Show all posts

Saturday, 17 February 2018

What exactly is the difference between Bobsled, Luge and Skeleton?

                     


Imagine you've built a big, beautiful hotel in the mountains. Tourists come flooding in for the summer months for the beautiful weather, breathtaking scenery and to visit the mineral spas. But it's dead in the bleak winter months. It's also difficult to get around on the snow-covered roads.

You can't make the snow go away. Your plan for year-round success must involve embracing the snow and your surroundings. This is the exact attitude Caspar Badrutt had when he decided to make St. Moritz, Switzerland the place to visit in summer or winter. People loved sledding so why not put the snowy, mountainous landscape to use and create a wager with some English tourists to race down the lanes and alleyways? This is how the sliding sports of bobsled, luge and skeleton were born.

Since the idea for these sports took hold over 150 years ago, the sleds and tracks have improved dramatically, the best sliding athletes have strict training schedules and vacations to Switzerland in the winter are mostly for skiing.

See athletes at the top of their games compete in bobsled, luge and skeleton at the 2018 Whistler Olympics.

Bobsled

Bobsled teams consist of either two or four people (women only compete in the two person event). Every team includes a driver (sits at the front and steers) and brakeman (sits at the back and puts on the brakes after crossing the finish line). The four person team includes a couple extra people to help with the running start, called pushers.

Like all of the sliding sports, bobsled is competed on an icy track with many twists and turns to navigate. Bobsled races are very close and every fraction of a second counts. The fastest team will have the best combination of aerodynamics, weight, skill and initial push off strength.

In the Olympics, each bobsled event consists of four runs. The team with the lowest combined time wins.

Luge

Luge is both a single and team sport for men and women. The speed of a luge run ranks right up there with the bobsled, but without the comfort of a sled casing to surround the athlete.

Luge sleds are flat and constructed of fibreglass and metal runners. Athletes ride the sled on their backs, feet first. Unlike the other sliding events, there is no running start. Instead, competitors start sitting upright on the sled, propel themselves forward by pushing off handlebars and then paddle the track with their hands before lying down.

Just like bobsled, every second counts in a luge race. Mistakes made at the top of the track are most detrimental as the athlete needs to make up time the rest of the way down. Unlike the bobsled, luge sleds have no steering devices. Athletes are able to manipulate the direction of the sled by shifting their body weight.

In the Olympics, the singles events consist of four timed runs. The doubles event has only two timed runs. The winners of each event are determined by combining the times of all runs.

Skeleton

The sport of skeleton has been around since the late 1800's but was not officially included as an Olympic sport until 2002. Both men and women compete in skeleton, which is a singles-only sport.

Skeleton athletes slide down the track on their sleds, stomach facing downward, head first. They gather speed at the top of the track with a running start (approximately 25 - 40 metres) before jumping onto the sled.

The construction of a skeleton sled is similar to the luge sled in that it is made of fibreglass and metal runners. The shape of the sled is quite different though - like a skeleton (hence the name). Like the luge sled, skeleton sleds have no steering mechanisms, but they also have no brakes! Athletes must drag their feet to stop.

In the Olympics, the men's and women's sliding events consist of four runs each with the best combined time winning.

Devon O'Malley is a staff writer for Allura Direct, a vacation rentals website featuring properties in ski resorts that can be booked directly from the owner.

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Friday, 16 February 2018

Avoid Winter Olympics Fails with Visualisation

                    
Over the next few weeks, the Olympics will no doubt generate many headlines focusing on inspirational stories, unexpected successes, good/bad television ratings, and even scandals.

But here's a fact you probably won't hear much about: With each Olympics, countries throughout the world rely more heavily on sports psychology to help their athletes achieve success and win gold.


Why this increased reliance on sports psychology?

Simple. Sports psychology works.

Numerous studies have shown that the techniques of sports psychology significantly enhance success and performance. That's particularly true in the Olympics, when the different between gold and silver is often hundredths of a second or fractions of a point. When physical performances are nearly equal, the mental edge determines winning and losing. Psychology becomes crucial to success.

Sports psychology features a number of proven techniques to enhance success and performance, but this article focuses on one in particular: Visualization.

Visualization goes by many names, including mental practice and covert rehearsal. It's been a favorite tool of sports psychology experts for many years, but it has an even longer history as a technique for motivation, self-help, and self-improvement.

In the late 1800s, many popular self-help and self-improvement movements swept the country, including Christian Science and the "New Thought" movement. Some of these "schools" of self-improvement were overtly religious, while others took a more philosophical approach to the psychology of success. But they all shared a common belief in the importance of psychology as crucial to success. Specifically, they all taught that our beliefs literally shape our reality, and that visualizing the future *creates* the future. In a sense, they preached that psychology is destiny, and the path to self-help and self-improvement begins with visualizing what you truly want. Many of today's motivational gurus borrow heavily from these century-old self-improvement movements.

In the 1920s, followers of Freudian psychology also preached the benefits of visualization, but for different reasons. They believed that visualizing the future influences the unconscious mind, and in turn, the psychological dynamics of the unconscious would push you toward what you visualized, without you even realizing it. Again, the fundamental philosophy of self-improvement at work is that psychology is destiny, and visualizing the future is crucial for motivation and success.

==> Why Visualization Really Works

Today, research in sports psychology has made it clear that visualization can enhance success and performance in sports. But parallel research in positive psychology has confirmed that visualization can enhance success in everyday life, making it a valuable tool for those interested in motivation, self-help, and self-improvement. But the reasons that visualization enhances the psychology of success are more practical and pragmatic than followers of Freudian psychology or popular self-help movements would have us believe. Here are the three main reasons that visualization enhances success and self-improvement:

1) Visualization enhances confidence

Research in the field of positive psychology shows that simply thinking about an event makes it seem more likely that it will actually happen. As you think about an event, you begin to construct mental scenarios of how it might occur, and even more importantly, how you might *make* it happen. The result is often greater confidence, and self-improvement occurs via a "self-fulfilling prophecy." The psychological process is simple:

Visualization => Confidence ==> Action ==> Results ==> Success

2) Visualization boosts motivation

Visualization boosts motivation as well as confidence, making self-help and self-improvement more effective. As your dreams for the future seem more likely, you become more motivated to initiate and sustain action.

Setting goals is often a very rational, even "dry" element of one's efforts for self-improvement. But visualizing your desired future is a very different psychological process, making abstract goals very tangible and concrete in your mind. This process engages your emotions as well as your thoughts, and generates an authentic excitement that motivates self-improvement.

Visualizing your future also makes you aware of the gap between where you are now, and where you want to be. The result is more motivation for self-improvement, as you strive to close the gap between your future ambitions and your current reality.

3) Visualizing is a form of practice

This is the most important reason that visualization enhances success, but the one most often overlooked in self-help and self-improvement books. Like any kind of practice, visualizing a behavior makes you more skilled and successful when it comes time to actually engage in that behavior. Moreover, visualized behaviors can be practiced more quickly, easily, and frequently than actual behavior - that's part of why world-class athletes regularly complement their actual practice sessions with regimens of psychologically-focused visualized practice.

Visualization also used routinely in psychology and self-improvement because it is excellent for practicing behaviors that are too frightening, intimidating, or even dangerous to perform in person. For example...

Salespeople who fear rejection perform better and are more motivated if the visualize themselves facing, and bouncing back from, rejection

Psychotherapists routinely ask patients to visualize themselves facing their fears and anxieties as a way of easing them into actually confronting those fears

Recovering alcoholics can begin practicing their skills at resisting temptation by visualizing themselves facing, and resisting, tempting situations such as parties or restaurants

In each case, it is clear how visualization allows you to practice your success skills, making self-help and self-improvement more effective.

==> Visualization Tips for Maximum Performance

Of course, visualization needs to be a complement to actual practice, not a replacement. But done properly, it can make actual practice even more effective, and start fostering a psychological mindset of success. Done improperly, it can even hurt performance. To incorporate visualization into your self-improvement and motivational efforts most effectively, just keep these three principles in mind...

1. Correct visualization

Visualization only enhances success if you visualize the appropriate behavior. On the other hand, visualizing incorrect or ineffective behavior creates the wrong psychological mindset, hurting performance and minimizing success.

Sounds obvious, but this principle of the psychology of visualization is often violated, particularly by novice athletes. For example, someone who has just started playing basketball can certainly visualize themselves shooting f'ree throws, but because they haven't had much coaching or training, they are likely to visualize the wrong things (e.g., not bending their knees, not following through). As a result, visualization has been shown to actually hamper the success of novice athletes. But many studies have shown that experienced athletes, who use proper form and technique, will benefit from visualization, because they are likely to visualize the right things.

The bottom line: If you are new to a sport or other endeavor, maximize your success by skipping visualization for now. Instead, your best path toward success and self-improvement is to focus on real practice, learning from skilled performers, taking lessons, getting training, etc.

2. Distributed visualization

Visualization increases success and self-improvement most effectively when visualization sessions are distributed over time, as opposed to being "bunched" into fewer, longer sessions. This is true for any kind of practice or preparation. For example, in preparing for a test, short bursts of studying distributed over time (e.g., one hour per night for four nights) leads to better results and more success than cramming (e.g., four hours in one night). The advice of "a little practice over many days" - commonly offered by self-help books - is definitely not self-help snake oil.

3. Precise visualization focused on the means, not the ends

Visualization must be precise, vivid and detailed to be an effective tool for enhanced motivation and success. Self-help and self-improvement books often encourage people to visualize broad ends, like "being richer" or "having less fear." Although this can temporarily boost confidence and motivation, this is one case in which many popular self-help and self-improvement books often steer people in the wrong direction. Visualizing the "ends" - how your life would be if you accomplished your goals - is not the most effective approach because it doesn't provide the many benefits of practice.

Instead, research in positive psychology shows that visualizing the "means" rather than the "ends" leads to more personal growth; documented benefits include reduced anxiety, more effective planning, and enhanced success. For example, don't envision "having a great sales year." Instead, a better strategy for success and self-improvement is envisioning yourself going to specific sales meetings, your actions in those meetings, the reactions of others, and how you will specifically overcome obstacles and persist in the face of rejection. Use all your senses - as you imagine the actions of others, consider how they might they might dress and the sounds of their voices. In short, self-improvement requires visualizing how you achieve self-improvement, rather than how it will feel to have accomplished your self-improvement goals.

When visualization was successfully used as a psychological tool with the 1976 U. S. Olympic ski team, for example, precision, detail and focusing on the "means" were crucial to the process. Skiers focused less on their eventual success of winning the gold medal, and instead visualized themselves careening through the entire course, experiencing each bump and turn in their minds. That team went on to have unexpectedly strong success, and precise visualization has been a standard psychological tool in the training of Olympic athletes ever since. You can use these same principles to enhance your own motivation, self-improvement, and success.

Harvard-trained psychologist Dr. Stephen Kraus separates the science of success from self-help snake oil. Get his free 7-day Real Science of Success e-course, and report on Becoming More Resilient & Persistent at [http://www.RealScienceOfSuccess.com].

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Wednesday, 14 February 2018

Inspired to start skating?

                     

Poor Elise, in going for gold she took a tumble.

How about you, have you tried Speed Skating?

When was the last time you went Ice Skating?

Skating is a fun sport but one needs to be very cautious while skating as there are several risks involved with it. Do you have a desire to go skating? 

If yes then get ready because in this article we are going to provide you with several tips of ice skating that will set you on the freezing floors like a pro.

The first thing you need to do is get a pair of good ice skates for you. You can buy a new pair or hire them from the skating centres. Tie it in a proper way. Make sure it is just perfect, neither too loose nor too much tight. When you are ready with the skating shoes jump (I mean go) on the skating field or rink.

Avoid looking down when you start skating. You need to look by keeping your head high in the direction that you are moving in because this will make you stable on the floor and reduce the chances of you falling down.

You also need to warm up because the sport takes place in a cold area. So if you warm up it will be all the more good for you. A perfect warm up technique is to start with some light bending and then go on to stretching. You can also take some lessons that will teach you the basics to use your ice skates if you are very serious about learning skating.

Another thing that you should avoid is leaning back. This is because leaning can make you fall badly on your back and hurt yourself. Always try to keep your knees bent so that the weight is in the forward direction.

To stop skating you have to bend your knees and turn the toes in the inwards direction. You should also point your heels out and push them out. This will slow you down and let you stop.

You will experience the best skating if you are moving in a clockwise direction. If you fall down don't take that too much seriously because these are too common.

So, we hope that these tips will be useful to you and will get you going when you are in the rink. These are just the basics that will set you on the floors. For going speed skating, ice hockey or figure skating you should take advanced courses on skating and have fun.

To know more about figure skates, please check our website.

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Tuesday, 13 February 2018

3 Sports to watch out for in this years Winter Olympics

                     

Weightlifting is one of the most fascinating Olympic competitions, especially the amazing demonstrations of Greek lifter, Pyrros Dimas.

Watching a man lift 207.5 kilograms conjures up both awe and inspiration, while only imagining the blood, sweat, and tears that must have gone into preparation for that kind of feat.

Although Dimas is usually absent from the Winter Olympics, there are a number of exciting events, including luge, even though Jerry Seinfeld described it as a sport in which you exert your calves to simply head off in the right direction.

Luge, as well as every other Winter Olympic sporting event requires a delicate balance of endurance and skill.

1. Speed Skating

Speed skating comes in two varieties, long- and short-track, taking place on ovals of either 400 meters or 111 meters, respectively.

Watching the speed at which these competitors travel, only inches away from razor sharp skating blades all around them is breathtaking.

2. Nordic Combined

This event is a hybrid of two popular winter sports, ski jumping and cross-country skiing.

At least those two winter sports are more related than the unusual Biathlon, consisting of cross-country skiing, and yes, none other than... rifle marksmanship?

In Nordic Combined, the competitors have to navigate a 15 kilometer course at blazing fast and chillingly cold speeds.

It's a constant balance of aerodynamics, power, balance, and endurance.

3. Ice Hockey

Perhaps one of the most recognized and "normal" winter Olympic sports is ice hockey.

If you've ever been to a hockey match, you don't need me to tell you how hard these guys work, and sometimes even fight, for the chance to just get a relatively small amount of shots at the goal.

Ice hockey is as full-contact, if not more so than traditional American gridiron football.

Conclusion

Every athlete you see participating in the Winter Olympics this year has an extraordinary amount of endurance, strength, will-power, and/or heart that got them to be one of the top athletes in their sport.

So, while you may never achieve the near-perfect levels of mastery as your Olympic counterparts, you can still get in great shape and have tons of fun by trying any of these for yourself.

You'll probably appreciate the athletes even more too!

What Olympic sports have you tried for yourself?

For even more information and examples of winter Olympics, ski your way over to the number one health and fitness site on the net here:

http://www.fitbuff.com

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Monday, 12 February 2018

Where does the Winter Olympics originate from?

                   

The Nordic Games were the first iteration of winter Olympic games. Viktor Gustaf Balck first organized the Nordic Games in Sweden in 1901. 

This international mult-sport event that was designated specifically for winter sports was thereafter held regularly until 1926. In the meantime, Balck was rallying to have winter sports (starting with figure skating) included in the Olympic sport roster. He was unsuccessful until 1908, when four figure skating events were included in the 1908 Summer Olympics in London.

When planning the next summer Olympics (to be held in 1912), an Italian count named Eugenio Brunetto d'Usseaux beseeched the International Olympic Committee to plan a week of winter sports as part of the 1912 games. The idea was not welcomed warmly, for a couple different reasons. First, the committee did not want to detract from the Nordic Games. Second, the committee was concerned about the lack of facilities for other sports.

More ground was gained in 1916, when the idea to include a week of winter sporting events was again proposed. The committee went as far as to plan the week of sports including figure skating, speed skating, ice hockey and Nordic skiing. Unfortunately, the 1916 games in Berlin were cancelled due to World War I.

Figure skating and ice hockey were featured in the first Olympic games after the war, held in Antwerp in 1920. Shortly thereafter the International Olympic Committee decided that the organizers of the next Olympics (to be held in 1924) would also host an International Winter Sports Week. The first Winter Sports Week took place in Chamonix in 1924 and actually lasted 11 days. The event was a huge success, drawing more than 200 athletes from 16 competing nations. In the first week, women only competed in figure skating events.

In 1925, the International Olympic Committee created a separate event designated for these types of sports. The event was called the Olympic Winter Games, and at the same time, the 1924 Winter Sports Week in Chamonix was retroactively designated as the official first Winter Olympics. 

The second Olympic Winter Games were held in St. Moritz in February of 1928. The next Winter Olympic Games were held in North America for the first time. The location of the event was Lake Placid, New York. The turnout at the 1932 Winter Olympics was not impressive, however, partly due to the financial stress of the Great Depression. 1936 was the last year in which both summer and winter Olympics were held in the same country. 

Both the 1940 and the 1944 Winter Olympics were cancelled as a result of World War II. The 1956 Winter Olympics in Cortina d'Ampezzo, Italy were the first to be televised.

The next Winter Olympics Games scheduled are to take place in 2010 in Vancouver, B.C. Below is a list of scheduled medal events:

- Alpine skiing

- Biathlon

- Bobsled

- Cross-country skiing

- Curling

- Figure skating

- Freestyle skiing

- Ice hockey

- Luge

- Nordic combined

- Short track speed skating

- Skeleton

- Ski jumping

- Snowboarding

- Speed skating

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