Wednesday, June 1, 2011

A brief history of Roller Derby!

Following on from our interview with BB Bombshell from local Roller Derby team, Tiger Bay Brawlers, here's some information about the sport and their forthcoming 'Skate of Emergency' event THIS SATURDAY 4th June 2011!

Roller derby is often called the fastest growing sport in the world. In it's modern form it is only about 10 years old. It is mainly played by Women and is fast and full contact! Most skaters have an alias or "skater name", which represents their skate persona.



Here is a very short basic guide video
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P2W2b1WBmm4

Here is a video made from 6 bouts which were a part of a tournament in London. London Roller Girls are the best team in the UK (and Europe) they play with teams all over the world. We want to this good! It's long by you get a real view of what the scene is like.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yiQwULGwrnw&feature=channel_video_title

BB Bombshell is our Captain, she joined us just after we formed. She skated with VDRL a Australian team but is over in the UK at the moment. She has been our head coach ever since - our team would not be where we are if it was not for her. She is has played with the UK AllStars.

There is another team in Cardiff called the Cardiff Roller Collective.

Our bout next bout is on Saturday in the Newport Centre. Doors open at 5:30. We give a full explanation about the sport, and their will be commentators as well. It is only £7 in advanced (under 12s are free) and £9 on the door.

Tennis Wales joins call for volunteers

Why not pitch in at your local tennis club this Volunteer’s Week – that’s the appeal from Sport Wales and Tennis Wales.

Volunteer’s Week celebrates the fantastic contribution that millions of volunteers make across the UK. To highlight the true value of sport volunteers to our communities in Wales, Sport Wales has unveiled compelling new data, which it hopes will inspire more volunteers to get involved in their bid to recruit nearly 250,000 sports volunteers in Wales by 2016.

The headline findings of Sport Wales’ research make for impressive reading:

·         An estimated 113,000 adults currently get involved in sports volunteering.
·         They dedicate an average of three hours a week to their clubs and sporting events free of charge.
·         That means that nearly 17 million hours are devoted to supporting Welsh sport each year.
·         The financial value of that commitment is worth more than £160 million a year.
·         Those hours worked are the equivalent of nearly 10,000 full-time extra employees added to the sports labour market.
·         That’s a significant contribution considering that the number of paid employees within Welsh sport is currently estimated to be around 23,200 people.


Sports volunteers in Wales commit to a wide range of roles including; coaching, administration and providing transport for community sports clubs and school clubs. But even cutting up the half time oranges or washing the kit can make a huge difference.

“The truth is that tennis in Wales simply could not function without the hard work, dedication and talent of countless volunteers up and down the country,” said Tennis Wales chief executive, Peter Drew.

“Volunteer’s Week is a timely opportunity to thank them and to spread the message more widely that volunteering is vital to the success of our sport and is very rewarding for the individuals involved.”

Chair of Sport Wales, Professor Laura McAllister said: “Volunteers are the lifeblood of many activities in our communities and this is especially true for sport. Last year, through Sport Wales’ Behind Every Star campaign, we sought to raise awareness of coaching and volunteering opportunities in communities up and down Wales. We have set a challenging target to engage 10% of the Welsh adult population in volunteering in sport by 2016 and National Volunteer’s Week is a great springboard for us to raise awareness of the opportunities available once again.

“We want to not only see those people actively involved in coaching grow, but make sure people are aware that sport needs people with a whole range of skills, from building websites and helping with administration to driving the team mini-bus and cutting up the half-time oranges. There is a role in sport for everyone. We would urge anyone who might be tempted to help out, be it at their child's sports club or with a student sport team, to just pitch in and give it a go this Volunteer’s Week.

“We’d hope that by giving it a try, and seeing what a difference they can make, that people will want to continue volunteering in sport for as long as they can. Each and every one of us has a part to play in shaping a culture where sport becomes a habitual way of life. Volunteers are vital to keeping sports clubs and events running, jumping and scoring across all our Welsh communities.”

For information about volunteering within tennis in Wales, please contact Tennis Wales at 029 20 463335 or www.tennis.wales.org

Sepp Blatter Elected to Another Term

The Boudreaux Bet

Don Boudreaux and I are narrowing in on the terms of our bet.  Here is the email I just sent to him in response to his acceptance of the terms that I had offered:
Don-

Many thanks ... and just to be clear from my end.

1. The over/under for the bet is 4,022 deaths due to tornadoes, hurricanes and floods in the United States between January 1, 2011 and December 31, 2030.
2, If that number is not reached by January 1, 2031, I lose.
3. If that number is reached before January 1, 2031, you lose.
4. The dataset used is the official NWS loss record kept here:
http://www.weather.gov/os/hazstats.shtml
5. If I win you will make a donation to the American Red Cross
6. If you win I will make a donation to an economics program of your choice.
7. Also, if I win you'll write an op-ed explaining the bet and why you lost (and of course, I am willing to do the same)

The only issue left to settle is the amount of the wager.  I see from your blog that you want to put an upper limit, which of course makes good sense.  I also recognize that you may wish to rope in a few others on this bet ;-)  Let me know how you'd like to proceed, I am happy to leave the amount bet open for a bit if that would be of any use, just let me know.

I am very glad that you have offered this opportunity as it means that some money (eventually) will go to some worthwhile causes and to the extent that it raises awareness of the risks of extreme events for loss of human life, there will be no losers here. For my part, I certainly hope that the numbers turn out in your favor.

I'll post this up on my blog as a record, and will revisit the issue (probably at most) yearly.  Perhaps we might even write something jointly along the way.

Finally, nice to meet you and I look forward to the collaboration.

All best,

Roger

Letter in the FT on FIFA Accountability

I've got a letter in the Financial Times today (subscription required) discussing briefly mechanisms and prospects for holding FIFA accountable.  Here is an excerpt:
The new allegations of corruption surfacing almost daily might suggest that FIFA sits out of reach of  mechanisms of accountability from member states. But such a judgment would be premature. The European Court of Justice has ruled on several occasions that, as an economic activity, football is subject to European law, with important decisions having been rendered on issues such as the mobility of players between teams and sports disciplinary rulings.
 There is an academic paper in the works, stay tuned.

Thoughts on The Ohio State University

Some random thoughts on Ohio State (even if, as a Northwestern fan, I am enjoying a wee bit of schadenfreude):

1) I read Zach Lowe's piece linked by Mike connecting this scandal to the NBA age limit, but I do not buy the connection.  Whatever the merits of allowing more players to go pro right away and therefore incentivizing more players to do so (either straight to the big leagues or into some professional minor league system), is not going to change the fact that improper benefits are going to be spread around to the players that do go to college. Especially since, as Lowe points out, only the "tiniest subset" of players are able to go straight to the NBA--and an even tinier subset would be able to go straight to the NFL. There are always going to be star players who go to college or players who, in college, become stars. And as long as college football and basketball continue to be popular as sports, boosters and others will continue to be on the scene and players will still get cars, tattoos, cash, etc. In fact, we still would have the current case. Other than Aaron Terrelle Pryor, would any of the other five suspended players have been able to skip college? Probably not. For that matter, were any of the other five stars?

The issue is not, as Lowe argues, that we are "forc[ing] this pseudo-amateurism on players who don’t want it." A lot of players will still choose college, especially if the choice is between college and NBDL or overseas. But pseudo-amateurism remains and that is the issue across the board. So might this be the final straw, the one that makes people push to change a broken system?

2) Ohio State is in some trouble. Their narrative right now is that this is a problem with a few players and the coach and by suspending the players accepting (and perhaps even forcing) Tressel's resignation, the problem has been resolved. But there is an institutional component to this. OSU conducted an investigation that found only six players had received benefits for merchandise, a conclusion contradicted by the Sports Illustrated story, which said as many as 28 players had received similar benefits over the past nine years. This might suggest that the internal investigation was, at best, poorly done, and, at worst, a cover-up. Plus attention is now turning towards other benefits given to players, most notably access to cars. This suggests the issue of players receiving benefits goes much deeper. At what point does this reach the institution--namely AD Gene Smith and President E. Gordon Gee.

3) It is ironic that Gee should be at the heart of a mess like this. He has an enjoyed a great deal of success as an administrator at several universities, including Colorado, Brown, Vanderbilt, and Ohio State twice. He is perhaps best known for eliminating the independent athletics department and the position of athletics director at Vanderbilt, bringing intercollegiate athletics within the Division of Student Life, a move he pushed precisely to ensure greater institutional control over sports teams and the elimination of what he called "semi-autonomous fiefdoms." Controversial at the time, the move has proven to be very successful for Vanderbilt.

Yet when Tressel admitted to lying about his knowledge of the benefits and was suspended in March, Gee responded to the question of whether he had considered firing Tressel by saying "Are you kidding? I'm just hopeful the coach doesn't dismiss me." That reflects a very different--and unfortunate--attitude towards college sports, but one that recognized the realities of OSU, as opposed to Vanderbilt.

If Gee loses his job over this (or even if he doesn't), it will be unfortunate that someone who tried something radical and creative to make the system work, and who recognized that the system needed some creative changes, has been undermined by everything that is wrong with the system.