Today’s Technology extends over a lot of different components that we are exposed to daily. There are three areas that I will discuss and go into detail on just how much Technology has affected Sports, beginning in the 1800’s. These improvements are more beneficial than just for the fan experience. The areas that I will speak of will point out just how much Technology has brought significant improvements and benefits for the coaches, athletes, referees, fans and venues.
First, technology has helped coaches and players in areas of education, enhancements and quick recovery for athlete injuries. The coaches have upgraded from using white chalkboards to tablets in the locker room increasing the ability to demonstrate and show play by play details of different situations. Coaches have the ability to do side-by-comparisons on athletes that assist with coaching. The high definition digital equipment allows the coaches to get a better view and identify the mistakes with the frame-by-frame option. Athletes are taking advantage of the new technology as well. The new Nike Strobe eyewear is helping athletes get a competitive edge. The Nike Strobe is an integrated method that allows the athlete to improve their sensory skills and the ability to see better. (Newcomb, 2012) The athlete who succumbs to injuries can allow Doctors to use this new technology in Invasive Surgery. The injuries that use to require athletes to have a long recovery are now allowing athletes to have a quicker recovery period.
Equipment has improved greatly in a lot of different areas of sports also. Helmets were introduced into football to prevent skull fractures and subdural hematoma in the early 1900s. They’ve evolved over the past century from l...
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...athletes vision and helps them to focus on what they need to study and work on for better improvement for the athletic performance.
Verentas, Jenny. http://mmqb.si.com/2013/10/22/nfl-helmets-head-injury-concussion/. 22 October 2013. .
This article goes into depth in the new technology updates made for the helmets in football. The head impact sensors are in use now in a lot of helmets. These sensors have the ability to provide information after a serious head impact to sports team doctors of the players status from the impact. The technology that is here today is a big improvement from where the helmets were in the 1900's. There are still studies that are underway to help to prevent head traumas and concussions to players on the field. These advances will also be in studies for other sports where the head would be impacted to serious injury.
2014 Issues Analysis By Dino Nuker Sport Safety: Should headgear be made mandatory for all contact sports? Injuries are common in most sports that have a contact component attached. Whether it’s at a professional level, or a school level, injuries are always bound to occur in contact sport. This analysis will look into the role headgear could, should and would play, and debates whether it should be made mandatory. Olympic sports such as Ice Hockey, Bicycle Riding and Baseball are just some examples that currently require athletes to wear a form of headgear.
For the safety of the players in the present and future, a stricter concussion protocol should be required at all levels of football. Though improvements have been made, the game of football is constantly changing and the protocol needs to keep up with the changes. Today’s athletes are bigger, stronger, and faster than ever before: "Size and physical conditioning techniques in sports at all levels have evolved to create an intense athlete. They 're able to create more force, power and speed than ever before and that leads to harder hits and a greater number of hits" (Neporent). These advances in training have led to a more dangerous sport. The protocol has improved in recent years along with an emphasis on player safety, but the increasing numbers of players with long-term effects of concussions show there is still work to be done.
Football is a sport your mother warns you not to play, but your father is on the other side of the argument, encouraging you to do it because it is a “man’s game”. Even though you don’t want ruin your manhood, your mother is always right. Football is in the top three of most injuries caused in sports (HEALTH GRADES, INC) and a majority of it comes from concussions. A concussion is a temporary unconsciousness caused by a blow to the head. Football helmets are used to prevent that from happening and is still a battle today on creating the perfect helmet to protect these young athletes. The football helmet has undergone significant transformation during the evolution of the game. To find out how this important head gear came to be, you have to
Mihoces, Gary. “More padding the issue of concussions and better helmets.” USA Today Sports. 23 August 2013. Web. 29 November 2013.
Football is one sport that has scientists working around the clock on finding the perfect solution to help decrease concussions. Scientist, Vincent Farrara, created the Xenith X1 Helmet in 2004. Ferrara used to be a quarterback for Harv...
B. Research Questions The research questions being proposed in this paper include but are not limited to the following: How well do helmets prevent concussions from occurring and prevent the development of chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE)? Is there one helmet that is better at protecting players against concussions than the others on the market? Is there any protective equipment besides helmets that football players should be wearing to prevent concussions? What is the current National Football League (NFL) concussion protocol?
One article states a major advancement in football gear would be football helmets with pressure sensors in them that gives the team’s medical staff the ability to tell if a hit could have caused a concussion so the player can be pulled off the field and be examined carefully. ("N.F.L. Players’ Union Weighs the Benefits and the Pitfalls of Helmet Sensors.") This technology helps prevent a player with a concussion that he doesn’t know about from continuing to play during that game and cause more damage to his head that can last forever. Another good advancement is helmets that have a design that uses energy managing materials and a facemask attachment system that disperses energy of frontal impacts. This helps prevent the head from taking the main part of the blow and disperses the energy to lessen the likelihood of becoming seriously injured from a hit. These types of helmets have a certain shelf life meaning you can only use them for so many years before they have to be replaced this is beneficial so that the equipment stays up to the new standards of safety for the players as well as prevents them from becoming stressed over the years and
Concussions have become arguably the #1 most prevalent issue in football today. The number of concussions throughout football has been rising for the past 20-30 years and there seems no way of stopping them. However, the NFL and many private researchers are set on finding a way to conquer this issue. They want to stop these concussions from happening and prevent the diseases resulting from them that have ruined so many football families’ lives. In order to solve this problem, I think that these researchers need to combine all of their knowledge to solve an issue that so many want solved. As soon as we conquer this “illness” we can return to enjoying the game that we love.
Helmets drastically reduce the tremendous number of deaths caused by head injuries as well as reducing the severity of any ...
It also helps the players understand if they could get injured by the way their mechanics work. The Motus website even states this, “ Our unrivaled and ever-growing biomechanical database has provided a wealth of insight into how athletes use their bodies to create power, torque and speed. We have also gained great insight into how over-usage and/or mis-usage often lead to injury. These insights have led to the creation of advanced biomechanical analyses that help athletes, their coaches and trainers prevent injury and improve performance. Motus' expanding line of wearable technology makes our biomechanics services even more accessible.” Motus wants to continue to create products like these and further help athletes across the world.
Football is one of the most popular sports in the world. It is played in a lot of different ways, fashions, and other countries. It can be a very brutal sport with players hitting at the intent to hurt one another. With these intents come great consequences. In recent years the head injuries involved with this brutal game play have been getting uncomfortably high. Many rules have had to be enforced for player safety, because of the increase of head injuries resulting in tragic effects on players both old and new. One of the injuries that have had the most devastating effects is the concussion.
Across numerous sports in the world, helmets are a staple of safety. Assumed to be a benefit, most athletes do not consider the risks of a helmet; both mental and physical risks. Society tells us that no matter what; a helmet will be safer than being exposed to harmful elements. There is also the idea that helmets are beneficial, but the way athletes use them causes more injuries than if a helmet had not been used at all. This culture, using your helmet as a tool, encourages more risky behavior for helmet wearers. Adventure writer and pilot, Lane Wallace argues that football culture is to blame for current helmet use, and that helmets are beneficial in her article “Do Sports Helmets Help or Hurt?” In his article “Disposable Heroes”, Neurologist David Weisman reasons that the worst helmets might be a better solution than better helmets.
Athletic Training plays a big role in the world today. Many people are on the go whether it is for sports or every day activities. Athletic Trainers can help with athletes of any age or industrial workers performing physical tasks or even an average citizen in recreational athletics. They help prevent injuries and help recognize injuries and treat them. They also help rehabilitate injuries that result from physical activity (Athletic Training Association). They are usually first on the scene of an injury (Campus Explorer). Athletic Trainers are health care professionals that work along the side of certified physicians. They also work for other health care professionals, coaches, or parents (Athletic Training Association). While working full time for a sports team, they are faced with tough decisions that could affect the players’ health or career. They must also be able to make fast decisions under pressure. A trainer working for a team can advance their job by switching teams or even becoming an Athletic Training director (Campus Explorer). Athletic Trainers are certified in prevention, clinical evaluation and diagnosis, immediate care, treatment, rehab and reconditioning, organization and administration and professional responsibility (Athletic Training Association). They help athletes prepare for practices, competit...
Athletic Trainers play a crucial part in today’s professional sports. They also help on lower levels of sports in high school, and college level teams. The job of an athletic trainer is simple yet very important, they are charged with treating, and preventing injuries. A trainer does this by developing therapies to reduce pain, and improve mobility (“Athletic Trainer Salaries”). They have to stand for long periods of time, work well with athletes of different sizes, move or carry equipment around, good mobility and communication skills to give instructions (“Athletic Trainer, Healthcare Program”). These trainers serve as a crucial part of an athlete getting back into their sport. Athletic trainers usually work under the direction of a physician, so they are like the Doctor’s healing hands in action.
The ball comes speeding over the net and slams down onto the face of the court landing just beyond the base line, the line running along the back of the court. I had called her winning point... "out." As I turned towards her, I could see the anger building in her eyes. We walked towards each other, and with only the net separating us, she began to confront me. She argued that, as she saw it, the ball was obviously in and that we should replay the point. I wanted this game as much as she did and we were both standing strong. I finally decided that there was no use in fighting. We had to resolve this argument between ourselves because there were no line judges to decide for us. We decided to replay the point and she won. I tried to convince myself that there would be times when a call would be questionable and that I should try not to point fingers. I still went home discouraged that night because I knew that the call I had made was fair.