ath·lete
?aTH?le-t/
/noun/
noun: *athlete*; plural noun: *athletes*
a person who is proficient in sports and other forms of physical exercise.
Competitive/professional gaming is called Esports.
sport
spôrt/
/noun/
noun: *sport*; plural noun: *sports*
*1*.
an activity involving physical exertion and skill in which an individual
or team competes against another or others for entertainment.
Using a golf club or a joystic/controller is physical.
esport
Web definitions
Electronic sports is a term for organized video game competitions,
especially between professionals. Other terms include competitive
gaming, professional gaming, and cybersport. ...
Esports is getting bigger and bigger every years. Some guys make some
serious $$$ playing video games.
If a college can profit off it, they will and they will soon offer
scholarships etc. It is about the money nothing else.
Mike W0MU
On 6/28/2014 3:32 PM, David Gilbert wrote:
Radiosport and video games are, however, competition ... with both of
them having elements that are every bit as intense as any athletic
competition. I fully agree that gamers and contesters are not
"athletes" per se, but I think I could argue pretty solidly that
colleges and universities originally created athletic scholarships to
promote competition far more than they did pure athletics (fitness,
etc). If we were to think of these scholarships in that context it
wouldn't sound like nonsense at all.
Not that I expect that radiosport would ever qualify for scholarship
consideration. There isn't enough general interest in what we do for
anybody to pay to watch us do it while video games, on the other hand,
are reaching that point. In places like Korea it is already a very
large spectator sport with top tier players earning upwards of a
hundred thousand dollars per year and having rock star status. I'm
pretty sure that nobody bid on the streaming video rights for WRTC
this year ....
73,
Dave AB7E
On 6/28/2014 12:46 PM, Mike Baker wrote:
Because it's nonsense. Being a gamer or contester doesn't make you an
athlete.
Mike, NT6X
If they can do it for this, why not radiosporting, which is, as everyone
should-but-does-not know, was the worlds First Massive Multiplayer
Online Game.
73,
Steve
NN4X
By John Keilman, Tribune reporter
11:01 p.m. CDT, June 23, 2014
The idea came to Kurt Melcher, not surprisingly, when he was online
searching for video games.
Melcher is associate athletic director at Robert Morris University, a
Chicago-based university that gives out 1,400 athletic and activity
scholarships across its 10 Illinois campuses as a way of recruiting and
retaining students. But it occurred to him that one sport, rapidly
growing in popularity, was missing from the scholarship roster.
After a little research and the blessing of the university's
administration, that's about to change. Robert Morris this fall
evidently will be the first school in the country to offer athletic
scholarships to students who play the video game "League of Legends."
It's a move that seems to stretch the definition of sports and athletes.
"It's a team sport," Melcher said. "There's strategy involved. You have
to know your role in the game. Obviously it's not cardiovascular in any
way, but it's mental. There are elements that go into it that are just
like any other sport."
[ SNIP ]
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