Showing posts with label sports science. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sports science. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 27, 2022

#wordlesswednesday Why my life could be like the Commonwealth Games

 

Three lions on the bottom; sunburst on the top; trees and lake featured
This one is for everyone who got a cuteness overload for these three lion cubs at the Taronga Zoo
When I tried to draw them they turned out more like Olympic - or Commonwealth - mascots.
[The Birmingham one is Perry the bull].
As for the trees - the TREES!
And, yes, I did miss the date - my fingers temporarily thought it was June. #MissTakes

Curtains up the top; centre bottom a man; centre left; a small boy; centre right a bigger boy. Bottom left hand corner - a cat. The man is reaching out.
That duotone enters into the whole Jumpers and Jazz mood at Warwick [QLD].
I'm about the grey and the purple at any time.

Top left hand corner - woman. Featured top - caravan with diamantes and wheels. Top right - man. Bottom left: bath. Featured: curly-haired man holding/carrying small boy. Bottom right - refrigerator with a door handle
"Shoulders"! I thought - as I remembered Put me on your shoulders.
Turned out our travellers were caravanning and packing and unpacking said caravan.
Stabilo purple and Apple Images have a history of not playing particularly nicely.
The diamond formations and the sheepskin.
You may recognise the swirls from the curtains.
And the stop mat for the back wheels - it is one of those brake/shock absorbers [the latter which were embedded for me from a Science experiment 30 years ago].

Left: diamond and star-like structures. Featured: male and baby
Diamonds are everywhere during this time.
Specifically people finding these mini-diamonds and shaping them into facades.
Also the whole Disney Renaissance Aladdin - diamonds roughened and in the rough.

Volcanic structures feature on the top; sushi in the bottom right hand corner; stairs take up the bottom middle
The colours are so far out on this! It appears RGB Apple does not understand green... #ItsNotEasyBeingGreenIsIt ?
[also this image took a while due to having #TheQueenofMigraines on the 21st and not actually being able to draw anything sensible until the 23rd-24th July

Crowd of people in purple #CommonwealthGames2022 #PeopleAreOurFirstPriority
One person is usually the origin point in these crowd-type scenes.
I focused a lot on their legs and new ways to design their torsos and muscles.
#MindSports #SportsPerformance #SportsScience #CommonwealthGames #AustralianDreams

Long image focusing on part of a caravan; a woman to its left; and a bath below.
I leave you with  a detail from Small boy and the passing parade.
The woman is standing behind/beside the caravan.
Her feet are near the wheels.
And the bath is below after some white space.

Wednesday, April 22, 2020

#wordlesswednesday #thelastdance and sketches from my world




The Wordless Wednesday of 22 April 2020 - one of 6 prompts - is about Game. I think those who have watched the first two episodes of The last dance on Netflix or ESPN would agree that Michael Jordan and the Chicago Bulls of 1984 to 2004 knew how to hustle and they had game. A great exemplar of sports science and sports performance - if not sports management and business management - both of which Jordan is using in his present role as owner of the Charlotte Hornets.

The second episode is about one Scott Pippen. He came five years after Jordan as a rookie [1991 as against Jordan's 1985? 1986?] and he was the first NBA pick.

Other prompts include Justice; MarkSleeping; Rivers and Human.


"Never did the sun go down with a brighter glory on the quiet corner in Soho, than one memorable evening when the Doctor and his daughter sat down under the plane-tree together.
Never did the moon rise with a milder radiance over great London, than on that night when it found them still seated under the tree, and shone upon their faces through its leaves"..
Charles Dickens - A Tale of Two Cities - ONE NIGHT [179: my emphasis].

A few pages/passages later in this same A tale of two cities there is another quote I liked about the moon. It has a very human element and it reflects on justice and the flow of life.

As Lucie found during and after her marriage - she could not step in the same river twice.

In the sad moonlight, she clasped him by the neck, and laid her face upon his breast. In the moonlight - which is always sad, as the light of the sun always is -
as the light of human life is -
at its coming and its going

I watched another movie on Netflix before I watched The last dance.
The movie is BlackKuKluxKlanman

"Meanwhile in Colorado Springs - the first black cop is about to be recruited"

So I drew the superior and then all these red people came by.

In the bottom right hand corner there is a quote from the trailer

Some of us speak English; some of us speak JIVE.

And I had read about Coloured Persons' Time in Rene's Black girl; lost keys which is a great resource for coaching and managing Attention.

This final image was inspired by Diana Mitford and her autobiography A life of contrasts which was published in 1977.

Her sartorial preferences included luxe pink and blue and gold - according to a review of the biography/memoir.

Was so happy to finish my latest reading of The Mitford Girls and I did some critical / ancillary reading that I might not have been necessarily able to do in the early 2000s.




Saturday, October 14, 2017

#31for21 #mentalhealthweek : Rudi Webster's WINNING WAYS IN SEARCH OF YOUR BEST PERFORMANCE [1984]

Grief and ambition can do funny things.

In the 1980s we were so much more positivist than I believe tends to be the case today.

This is nowhere more evident when reading Rudi Webster's Winning ways: in search of your best performance which sportspeople read when they were old and young.

Webster reminds me of two of my favourite characters in Gordon Korman's I want to go home - Rudy Miller, who doesn't want to play any sport at his camp - and Mike Webster who is his foil and boon companion.

The reason I read that book in February 1995 was that I was home from my camp and Maman had had an accident because of my cat on the verandah. I picked it up at the auxiliary that day at the hospital. I also made a bond with Mrs Warry.

And I was introduced to the humour of Korman. He was a literary prodigy who was recognised, nurtured and encouraged in his native Canada.

A lot of sports science comes from Canada especially when Montreal and its Olympiad became the focus. A lot of nations wanted to learn from failure and foster success.

And it was recognised that the old sporting ways did not work.

Fast forward to 2017. Yours truly is tossing a ball and working on an overhead serve.

In the 1990s I had a lot of autoimmune stuff going on which made the conventional way quite dangerous and anxiety-provoking at the very least.

Webster points out that logic and analytical thinking was too much in the minds of the 1980s athlete and coach. So much so that it would inhibit performance.

Another thing which attracted me to Webster were the computer game characters standing on their blocks ready to go on the cover.

Obviously, the interviews with people like Ian and Greg Chappell [you get to learn some underarm secrets and what was happening to put them under pressure in 1981 - 82] were the drawcard as well. Raylene Boyle was interviewed; so was Greg Norman who was starting to be part of the United States Professional Golf Association tour.

Who would have thought that in 2 years Norman would have won the British Open?

Garfield Sobers was great to learn from.

There are Webster's ideas and instructions and then the interviews with fields like Motivation; Pressure; Concentration [this is an important chapter for me]; Self-Confidence [this came up with the view of a 23-year-old who has social anxiety as a big factor due to severe bullying in his school life] and Self-Talk.

I have a feeling that the team in Jane Harper's Force of nature had to work on all this to be who they could be and the best they could be in a family business situation.

Webster was involved in the 1980 Grand Final win of the Richmond Football Club. He was probably one of the few examples of leadership that Richmond players trusted. He was also deeply involved with the Melbourne Football Club.

Geoff Hunt - squash player - is another interesting athlete. His sport is squash, and he had a lot to say about motivation.

Penfield had a really good sketch of the cerebral cortex and everything which happens in it or that depends upon it. That book by that neurologist was made in 1975.

1. Improve skills.

2. Improve fitness

3. Select and execute.

4. Cope with demands

5. Control disruptions and distractions which destroy and limit performance standards

[Rudi Webster on Motivation].

Thinking patterns and self-talk were important.

Some experienced sportspeople in my life did not seem to understand about the importance and role of self-talk until I had mentioned it - before I had read the Webster book.

I am intimately familiar with self-talk.


  • Commands and Demands
  • Awfulizing and Catastrophising
  • Irrational Statements
  • Wanting to please [this of course is extrinsic motivation]
  • Self-damning and self-destructive
Webster used Rational and Emotive Therapy from Ellis - I did too in 2004-05. And, yes, this does help with the thinking part of anxiety and depression.

Webster was originally a Barbados boy and came to Australia somewhere in the 1970s. He studied to be a diagnostic radiologist.

There was a really good weblink about self-acceptance and social anxiety.

https://plus.google.com/102294002018698376746/posts/casqviLmkm5

https://plus.google.com/102294002018698376746/posts/N4QVjX9zMzT [about acceptance and commitment therapy: Evelyn Lewin]

https://plus.google.com/102294002018698376746/posts/b7y4t16mxtT [Happy Maturity with Wendy Squires]

https://plus.google.com/102294002018698376746/posts/eUfPr5t7Dye

https://plus.google.com/102294002018698376746/posts/GBKeabfEE3Q

https://plus.google.com/102294002018698376746/posts/N9qWM5x7VR2 [support the accessible playground from Touched by Olivia and maybe buy a million scones - this is how kids should raise money]

https://plus.google.com/102294002018698376746/posts/UVjJ4xN5gXP

https://plus.google.com/102294002018698376746/posts/b6G71QW7xRj