Poor Sportsmanship

July 27, 2010 by trojanman  
Filed under News

Sportsmanship is the first thing one has to learn when playing sports, at any level. The point of sports is the competition and the fact that there will always be a winner and a loser. While winning is often more gratifying, losing can be overwhelming for some sportsmen. Either way, sports faux pas have been known to happen to both. Much like flipping your box of generic Viagra to you woman after making her orgasm, poor sportsmanship includes both sore losers and winners. What does poor sportsmanship mean after all? Learn more about the sportsmen who have to learn how to lose and those who have proved very good manners throughout their careers.

Learning to lose in sports is as important as learning to win. This is in fact the basis of sportsmanship, especially because we all know that losing is not easy to cope with. Still, sportsmen who lose can keep their integrity as respectful individuals when losing is the right aim. Not every sportsman is able to keep his dignity in the face of defeat. However, no matter what the reason for his loss, poor sportsmanship is never an acceptable trait in a man. Such behaviors are always condemned and often sanctioned by sports bodies. So, if sportsmen are not able to learn the basic rule of practicing a sport on their own, there are ways to teach them on the way by constraining their behavior.

As a general rule, when we think about individuals who practice a sport at high levels, we automatically think about people who are well educated and who, because of the discipline they must follow in practicing their sport, are respectful and fair in a game, no matter the result. A good player is a good loser as well. Usually, people who are good in what they do can easier accept the fact that there is someone better than them. And poor sportsmanship seen in pretty famous sportsmen is so disappointing especially when thinking about the hard work they did to reach high points in their career. And their image can be spoiled in just few seconds. The public doesn’t like sore losers.

Then there are those who know not how to win. Winning a competition is a rewarding experience but one also needs to learn how to be a winner. Sportsmen who are excelling in the sports they are practicing and still show humbleness are perceived as better people by the public. If you want such an example, look at Michael Phelps. After winning the swimming competition at the Olympics from 2009, he hit the water so badly that it would splash on the head of his closest competitor. And if this could be explained from the perspective of excitement, he then shows him the middle finger and that is not the most aggressive thing he did. He, of course, claimed all this was due to the excitement of winning, but still is a very good example of poor sportsmanship.

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