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IUB SPH-M 333 - M333 Exam 2 Notes

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Exam 2 ReviewChapter 6 and 15Muhammad AliHe went to jail, was sentenced 5 yearsRefused to fight in Vietnam war, stripping him of his heavyweight title and suspended boxing license after refusing to be inducted into US ArmyNot undefeated, lost 5 fightsJan 17, 1942 in Louisville. Discovered by MartinCivil Rights TensionsBeatles and AliInfluences on integration, known for trash talking and work on civil rights3 years he wasn't able to boxJoe Frazer in thriller in ManilaGot his red bike stolen from him, is what started his careerA key person he associated with in 1960’sElijah MuhammadMalcolm XMartin Luther King Jr.John F. KennedyBodak trained Ali for the last four years of his amateur career that culminated with the winning of a Gold Medal for the light-heavyweight competition at the 1960 Summer Olympic Games held in Rome, Italyhe hired Angelo Dundee, whom he had met in February 1957 during Ali's amateur career,[28] to be his trainer. Around this timeJoe LouisRecord 25 title defenseHeld until 1949More reserved, served in the armyGot the countries support for fighting against a German boxerStood for him because of America“The Brown Bomber”Mike Jacobs, 2oth century boxing club, radio sponsorshipWon title in 1937 from James J. BraddockVs. Maxx Schmeling, 19382 min and 4 secondVS Billy Conn, 1941“HE CAN RUN, BUT HE CAN’T HIDE”Forced out retirement to pay IRS billLater became first black golfer in a PGA eventJack Dempsey“The Manassas Mauler”Brutal fighting styleWon title from WillardFirst $1m gateCount was a lot longer than 10 seconds because of new rules more like 15 sec.“the Long count” – Dempsey forgot a new rule requiring him to return while the referee countedOwn restaurant in NY,Acting career, Broadway “the Big Fight”Lieutenant commander in the Coast GuardRanked 2nd to Babe Ruth among greatest American sports icons of 1920’sInduced Boxing Hall of FameRocky MWent undefeated in his career“The Brockton Blockbuster”Beat Jersey Joe Walcott in 195249-0 with 45 knockoutsRetired in 1956Jack JohnsonKnown for taunting his opponentsEndorsed productsDated and married white women“Galveston Giant”First black champ in 1908Patience strategyMatches promoted based on ethnic and racial animositiesThe Reign of Terror and the Great White Hope searchVS.Tommy Burns 1908Stanley Ketchel, 1909James Jeffries, 1910 – “Fight of the Century”Fight white fighters only before 1913Jess Willard, 1915Round 26John Sullivanknown as the Boston Strong Boy, was recognized as the first Heavyweight Champion of gloved boxing from February 7, 1882, to 1892, and is generally recognized as the last heavyweight champion of bare-knuckle boxing under the London Prize Ring Rules. He was the first American athlete to earn over one million dollarsQueensberry RulesMore of a Gentlemen’s sport like in EuropeSPORT MANAGEMENTThe business administration: Sport Management BSKnow first institution to have sports man. Undergrad and gradOhio UniversitySport Man came 1985 to IUFocused on facility, management, marketing, contracts negotiationHelped the program here at IU: Larry FieldingTitle 919721 out of every 27 girls active in 19721999 1 in 3 girls apart of organized sportBabe Dedrickson ZahariasCriticized for being manlyExcelled in many sportsLPGA circuit began under the leadership of her after the second WW1932- media sensation“Babe defined norms. Unmarried, self- supporting, and earning big money, she rejected the economically-dependent status expected of women.”High school star – basketball, softball, volleyball, swimming and diving, and track1932 AAU national meet –(Olympic qualifier)3 hour period – she won six of 10 events setting 5 world recordsOlympic Rules – 3 event max ( for women)2 world records – javelin & 80m hurdlesShould have been 3 – high jump (head first)Ann MeyersFirst women and only women to sign a contract with the NBA team (Pacers)First women to receive scholarship for 4 yearsAttended UCLAMia HammAge 14 attracted attention for her play on Olympic developmental soccer teamAt 15 became the youngest player ever named to the national team, led North Carolina to four consecutive championshipsAge 25 worlds best female soccer playerFace of it and endorsed for Nike and GatoradeLeading score until recently broken by Amy WabashIn commercials with MJ in height of his career, “Anything you can do I can do better”She captured the imagination of the American peopleMichelle KwanIce SkaterHighest paid figure skater 1997-2005Won US championship and world 1996Billy Jean KingWon Battle of the Sexes against Bobby Riggs, said he could beat any top ranked womenWinner takes all $100,000 prizeBiggest thing fought for was equal payFought during and after her career1965 was top-ranked American woman tennis playerWon 4 US Open championshipsWon 72 tournaments, winning $2 mil during her career6 Wimbledon aingle titlesBoxingWhat technology: TV changed whole world of boxingAble to lose some and still win championships, changed with TV had to be undefeatedFlorence Griffith JoynerBY NOW KNOWN TO THE WORLD AS "FLO-JO", GRIFFITH JOYNER WAS THE BIG FAVORITE FOR THE TITLES IN THE SPRINT EVENTS AT THE 1988 SUMMER OLYMPICS. IN THE 100-METER FINAL, SHE RAN A WIND- ASSISTED 10.54, BEATING HER NEAREST RIVAL EVELYN ASHFORD BY 0.30 SECONDS. IN THE 200-METER SEMIFINAL, SHE SET THE WORLD RECORD OF 21.56 SECONDS, AND THEN SHE BROKE THIS RECORD AGAIN IN WINNING IN THE FINALS BY 0.40 SECONDS WITH HER TIME OF 21.34 SEC.1984 LOS ANGELES OLYMPICS• SILVER 200M DASH• 1988 SEOUL OLYMPICS (SOUTH KOREA) • GOLD 100M DASH, 2OOM DASH, 4X100M RELAY & SILVER 4X400M RELAY• ACCUSED OF STEROIDS, BUT NEVER TESTED POSITIVE• DIED OF EPILEPTIC SEIZURE IN 1998 • 38 YEARS OLDJackie Joyner-KerseeHAVING BEEN NAMED BY SPORTS ILLUSTRATED AS THE 'GREATEST FEMALE ATHLETE OF THE 20TH CENTURY', JACKIE JOYNER-KERSEE'S ATHLETIC CREDENTIALS ARE UNQUESTIONABLY AMONG THE BEST EVER, IN ALL OF SPORT. A SIX TIME OLYMPIC MEDALIST, INCLUDING THREE OLYMPIC GOLD MEDALS, JOYNER-KERSEE DOMINATED THE OLYMPIC HEPTATHLON AND LONG JUMP EVENTS THROUGHOUT HER CAREER WHICH SPANNED FOUR OLYMPIC GAMES. WON GOLD MEDALS IN BOTH HEPTATHLON AND LONG JUMP 1988 OLYMPIC GAMES1984 LOS ANGELES OLYMPICS• SILVER HEPTATHLON• 1988 SEOUL OLYMPICS (SOUTH KOREA)GOLD HEPTATHLON & LONG JUMPSFIRST AMERICAN WOMAN TO WIN A GOLD IN LONG JUMPFIRST ATHLETE IN 64 YRS TO WIN GOLD MEDAL IN MULTI EVENT AND A SINGLE EVENSET HEPTATHLON WORLD RECORD – 7291 POINTS• 1992


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IUB SPH-M 333 - M333 Exam 2 Notes

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