Howdy, Stranger!

It looks like you're new here. Sign in or register to get started.

Are we rushing to premature conclusions about the latest COVID figures? – politicalbetting.com

1234579

Comments

  • SelebianSelebian Posts: 9,266

    Ok then, we’ll call it a European success story.

    You really don’t want to go down that road. Eg, how “British” is the car industry?
    Maybe we can simply call it a success story? (If, indeed, it proves to be a success.)
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,550
    edited July 2021

    Just had a thought: how much has having the pingdemic helped to reduce the number of infections? Did it actually work, and that is why cases are falling? Or (more likely) is it just one of a number of factors?
    It probably did have an impact as it was a defacto lockdown for many....but people will just see it as unfairness, especially as a friend of mine, has had 3 isolations in 5-6 weeks via app and test / trace. They are absolutely hopping mad, as double jabbed, done load of lateral flow and went and got a PCR test and all negative.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,816

    Most of the GOATs of swimming are total human freaks...massive advantage if you have enormous hands and feet, huge disproportionate wingspan, while having a narrow body. If i remember correctly Phelps has the wingspan of somebody who should he over 7ft, packed into a 6ft 4 body.
    It's interesting how breaststroke rather stands alone. Where you have a dominant crawler they often add on the fly too, then that plus various distances, plus all the relays, and lo you're looking at a massive medal haul. Not so much with breaststroke. You do that - and often just the one distance - and that's it. Our guys seem to go this route. We've specialized in the 100m and 200m breaststroke. Wilkie, Goodhew, now Peaty, these guys are great but they don't hoover up the medals like those American crawl/fly water monsters that seem to come along quite frequently.
  • noneoftheabovenoneoftheabove Posts: 24,280
    maaarsh said:

    With randomly allocated horses so an element of luck but also rider skill and not subject to quite as much suggestion of buying the win.
    But if you get the wrong horse a strong medal candidate might not be able to finish in the top 20 even if they perform their best. Hard to train for 4 years and stay motivated when so much luck of the draw.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,601
    maaarsh said:

    Whilst we're correcting Olympic errors, the ROC situation is a joke.

    The argument is you can't punish individual Russian athletes for the crimes of the country at large. Fine. But then they should compete as independants in individual events. Letting them enter team events (and win) and including them as a category on the medals table is just a nonsense which utterly nullifies the so called ban.

    I agree. It's about nations competing and that means individuals suffer if their nation cheats, which one would hope will encourage nations not to cheat. As it is the cheating is worth the risk since you get to compete as a nation anyway.
  • noneoftheabovenoneoftheabove Posts: 24,280
    kinabalu said:

    It's interesting how breaststroke rather stands alone. Where you have a dominant crawler they often add on the fly too, then that plus various distances, plus all the relays, and lo you're looking at a massive medal haul. Not so much with breaststroke. You do that - and often just the one distance - and that's it. Our guys seem to go this route. We've specialized in the 100m and 200m breaststroke. Wilkie, Goodhew, now Peaty, these guys are great but they don't hoover up the medals like those American crawl/fly water monsters that seem to come along quite frequently.
    Optimistic Peaty and Scott end up with 3 golds here!
  • turbotubbsturbotubbs Posts: 18,630
    TOPPING said:

    Seriously? She is a young person, perhaps a role model, affected by mental health.

    These past 18 months have been hugely injurious to the mental wellbeing of in particular young people and children.

    If some of them think - well she is talking about it so can I then it will be fantastic; if they see the sympathetic coverage and think I won't be ridiculed if I share my problems then that will be amazing; if they realise that it is widespread and hence they are not suffering on their own, that will be hugely beneficial.

    Other than that, no idea.

    I have sympathy for her but don’t need the bbc endlessly going on about when actual sport is happening.
  • AlistairMAlistairM Posts: 2,005

    I think Modern Pentathlon has a riding element: jumping I think, so timed?
    I believe they get randomly allocated a horse for the jumping part. A competitor can be, and have been previously, completely ruined by getting a bad horse. Any event which has a major determining factor being an animal is open to question really.
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,550
    edited July 2021

    He's being an arse, but it's true that performance under the greatest pressure is what sport is about. It's not about if you can do XYZ, but can you do it at the point when you have to.

    It's a tricky fine line that people should be looking after their mental health, clearly, and it's an important thing, but elite sport requires that pressure and that stress to also operate.
    And often many of the GOATS perform best when the greatest pressure comes...Woods in golf being a real stand out, its like he needed to pressure unleash the beast.

    If you ever see elite athletes training, under no pressure they are all out of this world, however some can never fully reproduce that when it comes to the crucial moment.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,782
    edited July 2021

    Personally, I'd like to see the Royal Navy adopt a more Iain M. Banks Culture ship naming convention.

    I can just hear HMQ intoning "I name thee Kiss My Ass'...
  • noneoftheabovenoneoftheabove Posts: 24,280

    It probably did have an impact as it was a defacto lockdown for many....but people will just see it as unfairness, especially as a friend of mine, has had 3 isolations in 5-6 weeks via app and test / trace. They are absolutely hopping mad, as double jabbed, done load of lateral flow and went and got a PCR test and all negative.
    There seems little to stop malicious pinging as well. A local taxi firm who know someone who tests positive could get them to name rival firms drivers. The drivers pinged are not told when and where they were in contact so wouldn't know (and can't find out) that the contact was spurious.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,620
    kinabalu said:

    All our ships start with a D then? I didn't realize that. Defender, Diamond, Daring, Dauntless, Dragon and ... fair enough ... Duncan.
    That class was named to follow up after the Daring class of large fleet destroyers built just after WW2. Only one survives, the Aussie Vampire in Sydney.
  • AlistairMAlistairM Posts: 2,005

    Triathlon? Any -athlon?
    The "thlons" mostly (modern pentathlon aside) are all genuine sporting endeavours using higher, faster or further. Now if the triathlon started introducing different events where they had to swim butterfly and ride a unicycle then I think I might lose it.
  • TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 121,686
    The Royals really are hypocrites and parasites.

    The Queen’s lawyers secretly lobbied Scottish ministers to change a draft law to exempt her private land from a major initiative to cut carbon emissions, documents reveal.

    The exemption means the Queen, one of the largest landowners in Scotland, is the only person in the country not required to facilitate the construction of pipelines to heat buildings using renewable energy.

    Her lawyers secured the dispensation from Scotland’s government five months ago by exploiting an obscure parliamentary procedure known as Queen’s consent, which gives the monarch advance sight of legislation.

    The arcane parliamentary mechanism has been borrowed from Westminster, where it has existed as a custom since the 1700s.

    In a series of reports into Queen’s consent in recent months, the Guardian revealed how the Queen repeatedly used her privileged access to draft laws to lobby ministers to change UK legislation to benefit her private interests or reflect her opinions between the late 1960s and the 1980s.

    The new documents, uncovered by Lily Humphreys, a researcher for the Scottish Liberal Democrats using freedom of information laws, disclose how the monarch used her special access to Scottish legislation to intervene in the parliamentary process as recently as February.

    The documents also suggest Nicola Sturgeon’s government failed to disclose the monarch’s lobbying this year when a Scottish politician used a parliamentary debate to query why the Queen was securing an exemption from the green energy bill.

    The move appears at odds with the royal family’s public commitment to tackling the climate crisis, with Prince William recently joining his father, Charles, in campaigning to cut emissions and protect the planet.


    https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2021/jul/28/queen-secretly-lobbied-scottish-ministers-climate-law-exemption
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,816

    Optimistic Peaty and Scott end up with 3 golds here!
    Yes we're doing great. And for me swimming beats rowing and velodrome. I rank it high as a sport.
  • Fysics_TeacherFysics_Teacher Posts: 6,303

    Perhaps they should stop being speciesist and let horses compete in the other events. Put Pumpkin up against Usain Bolt.
    Over a short distance Bolt would win as he would accelerate faster.
    Over a very long distance (into the ultra marathon range) humans would again win: properly fit humans can run down horses eventually. Indeed humans are the fastest runners of all animals if the distance is far enough.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,620

    The Hunt class ships look like the oldest ones still in service (besides Victory).

    Ledbury, Cattistock, etc.

    Minehunters appropriately enough. Clearly an irresistible association.
    PLastic. The previous minesweepers of the Ton class were timber - last of the wooden walls in RN service, apart from Victory of course.
  • CyclefreeCyclefree Posts: 25,651
    As far as I'm concerned, horse dancing is THE Olympic sport. The only one worth watching. Charlotte DuJardin is a legend. As is Carl Hester.

    So there!

  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,550
    edited July 2021
    kinabalu said:

    Yes we're doing great. And for me swimming beats rowing and velodrome. I rank it high as a sport.
    Defund the poshos in the rowing....they can't even row in a straight line!
  • CookieCookie Posts: 14,834
    Sco+Wal+NI Positives / Deaths (Positives last Wed / Deaths last Wed)

    Sco: 1179 / 9 (1686 / 7)
    Wal: 588 / 6 (641 / 1)
    NI: 1600 / 3 (1973 / 1)

    Sco+Wal+NI: 3367 / 18 (4300 / 9)

  • turbotubbsturbotubbs Posts: 18,630

    Over a short distance Bolt would win as he would accelerate faster.
    Over a very long distance (into the ultra marathon range) humans would again win: properly fit humans can run down horses eventually. Indeed humans are the fastest runners of all animals if the distance is far enough.
    The very basis of the race in Wales - man vs horse... Started with a discussion in the pub, now a 20 mile off road race between runners and riders.
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,724

    I have sympathy for her but don’t need the bbc endlessly going on about when actual sport is happening.
    Sounds like the BBC has restricted access to the actual sport - surely they are not discussing her when they should be showing live coverage of the dressage.

    If not and your question is why not talk to competing athletes instead of about her then now is the time when anyone gives a damn about it so makes sense to discuss it now.
  • Big_G_NorthWalesBig_G_NorthWales Posts: 65,030
    HMG confirm vaccinated travellers from the EU and US can travel to England

    Updated now

    From 4.00am on the 2nd August (England only)
  • FlatlanderFlatlander Posts: 4,924
    edited July 2021

    The Royals really are hypocrites and parasites.

    The Queen’s lawyers secretly lobbied Scottish ministers to change a draft law to exempt her private land from a major initiative to cut carbon emissions, documents reveal.

    The exemption means the Queen, one of the largest landowners in Scotland, is the only person in the country not required to facilitate the construction of pipelines to heat buildings using renewable energy.

    Her lawyers secured the dispensation from Scotland’s government five months ago by exploiting an obscure parliamentary procedure known as Queen’s consent, which gives the monarch advance sight of legislation.

    The arcane parliamentary mechanism has been borrowed from Westminster, where it has existed as a custom since the 1700s.

    In a series of reports into Queen’s consent in recent months, the Guardian revealed how the Queen repeatedly used her privileged access to draft laws to lobby ministers to change UK legislation to benefit her private interests or reflect her opinions between the late 1960s and the 1980s.

    The new documents, uncovered by Lily Humphreys, a researcher for the Scottish Liberal Democrats using freedom of information laws, disclose how the monarch used her special access to Scottish legislation to intervene in the parliamentary process as recently as February.

    The documents also suggest Nicola Sturgeon’s government failed to disclose the monarch’s lobbying this year when a Scottish politician used a parliamentary debate to query why the Queen was securing an exemption from the green energy bill.

    The move appears at odds with the royal family’s public commitment to tackling the climate crisis, with Prince William recently joining his father, Charles, in campaigning to cut emissions and protect the planet.


    https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2021/jul/28/queen-secretly-lobbied-scottish-ministers-climate-law-exemption

    When I was last passing through Balmoral, there was a hydro scheme being installed at the Linn of Muick.

    Might have been for Charlie's place at Birkhall tho'
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,724

    But if you get the wrong horse a strong medal candidate might not be able to finish in the top 20 even if they perform their best. Hard to train for 4 years and stay motivated when so much luck of the draw.
    I cannot believe the difference in horse's ability is so marked. They must surely be given horses of a similar disposition/ability, etc?
  • Fysics_TeacherFysics_Teacher Posts: 6,303

    The very basis of the race in Wales - man vs horse... Started with a discussion in the pub, now a 20 mile off road race between runners and riders.
    And even over that distance humans have won a time or two.
  • turbotubbsturbotubbs Posts: 18,630
    TOPPING said:

    Sounds like the BBC has restricted access to the actual sport - surely they are not discussing her when they should be showing live coverage of the dressage.

    If not and your question is why not talk to competing athletes instead of about her then now is the time when anyone gives a damn about it so makes sense to discuss it now.
    No - I wanted them to be showing live sport. They were wittering about her when a simple ‘she has withdrawn’ would have sufficed. There is little enough coverage on bbc, and I understand their limitations, so why waste air time on this?
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,601
    Cyclefree said:

    As far as I'm concerned, horse dancing is THE Olympic sport. The only one worth watching. Charlotte DuJardin is a legend. As is Carl Hester.

    So there!

    I support any sport conducted in traditional Olympic style, that is, in the nude. Otherwise it doesnt count.
  • NickPalmerNickPalmer Posts: 21,677

    HMG confirm vaccinated travellers from the EU and US can travel to England

    Updated now

    From 4.00am on the 2nd August (England only)

    What happens if they try to sneak into Wales or Scotland? Or (if sufficiently insane) Northern Ireland?
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,550
    edited July 2021
    I think an additional problem for the BBC with their coverage is that normally they can fill time with beautiful outside VT of the host city and packages of what a certain country is like. Given how different Japan is culturally to Europe, they could have easily filled hours of time with reports about unique aspects of Japanese life.

    Instead this time it is just 2-3 people filling dead time in a studio.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,601
    TOPPING said:

    I cannot believe the difference in horse's ability is so marked. They must surely be given horses of a similar disposition/ability, etc?
    How easy is it to judge a horses disposition with riders they've never met of variable skill?
  • Big_G_NorthWalesBig_G_NorthWales Posts: 65,030

    What happens if they try to sneak into Wales or Scotland? Or (if sufficiently insane) Northern Ireland?
    I assume Sturgeon and Drakeford will have them arrested and sent back, or more likely do the same a few days later just to be different
  • Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 62,485
    New rowing event ideas:
    triremes over two miles
    dragon ships (possibly coupled with a competitive monastic plundering at the end)
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,601

    Over a short distance Bolt would win as he would accelerate faster.
    Over a very long distance (into the ultra marathon range) humans would again win: properly fit humans can run down horses eventually. Indeed humans are the fastest runners of all animals if the distance is far enough.
    We can cheat by not stopping to have a drink of course.
  • TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 121,686
    On topic, yeah @Leon had it right, this is the hubris virus, just when humanity thinks it has it beaten Covid-19 comes back with something new.

    I think it was the Czechs who held a farewell to Covid-19 party last summer which turned out to be premature.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,620

    New rowing event ideas:
    triremes over two miles
    dragon ships (possibly coupled with a competitive monastic plundering at the end)

    Viking drakars or HK kind?
  • turbotubbsturbotubbs Posts: 18,630

    I think an additional problem for the BBC with their coverage is that normally they can fill time with beautiful outside VT of the host city and packages of what a certain country is like. Given how different Japan is culturally to Europe, they could have easily filled hours of time with reports about unique aspects of Japanese life.

    Instead this time it is just 2-3 people filling dead time in a studio.

    There really needn’t be dead air time. I’m lucky enough to have Eurosport. There are 10ish channels running. There is enough sport.
  • TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 121,686
    edited July 2021
    I mean if hurling is a (winter) Olympic sport then why not skateboarding or horse dancing in the summer Olympiad?
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,550
    12 police officers guarding athletes at the Olympic Village test positive for Covid and 38 more are told to isolate - with all 50 officers aged in their 20s and sharing cramped accommodation
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,724

    No - I wanted them to be showing live sport. They were wittering about her when a simple ‘she has withdrawn’ would have sufficed. There is little enough coverage on bbc, and I understand their limitations, so why waste air time on this?
    Plenty of time for all of it. As for "wittering" about her, as mentioned, it is important for many reasons some of which I articulated earlier that they should spend more time explaining the context.
  • felixfelix Posts: 15,180
    edited July 2021

    I think an additional problem for the BBC with their coverage is that normally they can fill time with beautiful outside VT of the host city and packages of what a certain country is like. Given how different Japan is culturally to Europe, they could have easily filled hours of time with reports about unique aspects of Japanese life.

    Instead this time it is just 2-3 people filling dead time in a studio.

    When i used to have NHK one of my favourites was 'At home with Venetia in Kyoto' an English posh lady who left her family to go on the hippy trail and ended up in Japan. Very posh very herbal and great fun.
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,724

    I think an additional problem for the BBC with their coverage is that normally they can fill time with beautiful outside VT of the host city and packages of what a certain country is like. Given how different Japan is culturally to Europe, they could have easily filled hours of time with reports about unique aspects of Japanese life.

    Instead this time it is just 2-3 people filling dead time in a studio.

    "filling dead time in a studio"

    @turbotubbs thinks every minute they should be showing live sport. It's what he paid his license fee for.
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 59,419
    DougSeal said:

    I was at the Varsity Athletics meeting back in 1994. We had a walker but Cambridge hadn't sent any so our guy just did it on his own - walking round and round the track for half an hour while everyone watched. Felt really sorry for him, but it got him his blue.
    Damn it; if I'd known, I'd have walked for Cambridge and could have gotten a blue (presumably a Half Blue) too.
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,724
    kle4 said:

    How easy is it to judge a horses disposition with riders they've never met of variable skill?
    Nah don't buy this. They know that showjumping is one part of the event hence they will all have trained to a certain standard and can cope with most nags they are presented with.

    And the horses as I said must surely be of a similar ability/temperament so it is an unbiased test of their horsemanship.
  • TheuniondivvieTheuniondivvie Posts: 43,350
    tlg86 said:

    Which one rejected you out of interest?
    Oxbridge art schools weren’t much cop when I were a lad.
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,724

    There really needn’t be dead air time. I’m lucky enough to have Eurosport. There are 10ish channels running. There is enough sport.
    So why are you bleating about the BBC spending time on Simone Biles?
  • StuartDicksonStuartDickson Posts: 12,146

    Late to this nonsense. If you want an eu team, they only get a limited number of athletes in each event. You can’t have it both ways.
    Same goes for a GB “team”.
  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 79,235

    12 police officers guarding athletes at the Olympic Village test positive for Covid and 38 more are told to isolate - with all 50 officers aged in their 20s and sharing cramped accommodation

    All the covid theatre around masks, taking your own medal on the podium but the rather larger risk of 50 police officers all holed up in a few rooms of bunks isn't remotely thought about
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,816
    TOPPING said:

    I cannot believe the difference in horse's ability is so marked. They must surely be given horses of a similar disposition/ability, etc?
    I think it's mainly about the rider. Eg, Lucinda Prior Palmer won Badminton 6 times on 6 different horses. What's the common link there? It's Lucinda Prior Palmer.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,601
    TOPPING said:

    Nah don't buy this. They know that showjumping is one part of the event hence they will all have trained to a certain standard and can cope with most nags they are presented with.

    And the horses as I said must surely be of a similar ability/temperament so it is an unbiased test of their horsemanship.
    I'm not disputing your point I just dont know how easy it is to judge, and the line between will and wont jump is pretty abrupt on very small disposition differences perhaps.
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,724
    Carnyx said:

    Viking drakars or HK kind?
    Perhaps the Duchess of Cambridge could be coaxed out of retirement if the latter.
  • SelebianSelebian Posts: 9,266
    kle4 said:

    I support any sport conducted in traditional Olympic style, that is, in the nude. Otherwise it doesnt count.
    I guess the horses pass on that count? Do we actually need the riders? To be honest, I'd be more impressed if the horses learned their own routines without any human intervention in the final performance.

    Question - do the Team GB horses have to be 'British' as such? Or is it like the cycling where, presumably, it's fine for Team GB to use, e.g., a German made bike?
  • Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 62,485
    Mr. Carnyx, some drakkars, some snekkes.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,601

    Same goes for a GB “team”.
    I dont follow. It is a team that's why each home nation doesnt get individual slots. If you do you're not a team, what am I missing?
  • noneoftheabovenoneoftheabove Posts: 24,280
    TOPPING said:

    I cannot believe the difference in horse's ability is so marked. They must surely be given horses of a similar disposition/ability, etc?
    https://www.nytimes.com/2012/08/11/sports/olympics/in-olympic-pentathlon-riding-horses-theyve-only-just-met.html

    A good article on it if interested.
  • SelebianSelebian Posts: 9,266
    kinabalu said:

    I think it's mainly about the rider. Eg, Lucinda Prior Palmer won Badminton 6 times on 6 different horses. What's the common link there? It's Lucinda Prior Palmer.
    Without stats on the most wins by a horse with different riders, I find that hard to judge.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,601
    Selebian said:

    I guess the horses pass on that count? Do we actually need the riders? To be honest, I'd be more impressed if the horses learned their own routines without any human intervention in the final performance.

    Question - do the Team GB horses have to be 'British' as such? Or is it like the cycling where, presumably, it's fine for Team GB to use, e.g., a German made bike?
    Nope, applies to the horses too.
  • SandyRentoolSandyRentool Posts: 22,695
    AlistairM said:

    The "thlons" mostly (modern pentathlon aside) are all genuine sporting endeavours using higher, faster or further. Now if the triathlon started introducing different events where they had to swim butterfly and ride a unicycle then I think I might lose it.
    Triathlon isn't a test of cycling ability. The good swimmer/runners can just ride behind a domestique or a rival.
  • SandyRentoolSandyRentool Posts: 22,695
    kinabalu said:

    I think it's mainly about the rider. Eg, Lucinda Prior Palmer won Badminton 6 times on 6 different horses. What's the common link there? It's Lucinda Prior Palmer.
    She bought all the best horses?
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,550
    edited July 2021
    The media are laughable in their response...accoridng to Sky News, the UK government saying double vaccinated people from Europe and US can now come is an "embarrassing climb down".

    Although Labour Rayner says we can't have this, too risky, as USA don't have an NHS.
  • NickPalmerNickPalmer Posts: 21,677
    kinabalu said:

    Is it on the left though?
    Sort of. I think it's filling the same sort of space as Bill Gates' personal blogs, which I also read with interest:

    https://institute.global/
    https://www.gatesnotes.com/

    - essentially looking at creative ideas for global problems. Neither of them chew over domestic issues, and to some extent the ideas are free of the usual left-right dimension, but they share a belief in government activism which is more associated with the left.

    As a natural magpie, I also read

    https://thecorbynproject.com/projects/

    which also in my view has interesting projects on international issues. If one takes a step back from all of them personally and just looks at the ideas, it makes a nice change from arguing over Boris Johnson's tweets and similar ephemera.
  • Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 62,485
    Mr. Urquhart, in all honesty I'm very glad to have PB as a resource given the dire state of modern 'news'.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,620

    Mr. Carnyx, some drakkars, some snekkes.

    They could certainly do it from (say) Berwick to Lindisfarne next time London hosts the Olympics.

    Plenty of current sailing/rowing experience at Roskilde Museum in Denmark (one of my covid regrets being not having made time before to go there again and actually have a ride).

    But anent your original post - would not a distance of say 16 stadia be more appropriate for the trireme/trieres race?
  • SandyRentoolSandyRentool Posts: 22,695
    kle4 said:

    I support any sport conducted in traditional Olympic style, that is, in the nude. Otherwise it doesnt count.
    Should be the case with swimming. Take away the benefit of fabric technology.
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,724
    kinabalu said:

    I think it's mainly about the rider. Eg, Lucinda Prior Palmer won Badminton 6 times on 6 different horses. What's the common link there? It's Lucinda Prior Palmer.
    Not relevant to the discussion but thanks for the info.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,620
    kle4 said:

    Nope, applies to the horses too.
    Er, how does one define a Team GB horse? Birth, or residence, or what? Not as if it can have a passport to wave in its hoof.
  • TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 121,686
    kle4 said:

    I dont follow. It is a team that's why each home nation doesnt get individual slots. If you do you're not a team, what am I missing?
    Stuart is talking shite, as usual.
  • TheuniondivvieTheuniondivvie Posts: 43,350
    The silly twat can’t even bring himself to say Catalunya/Catalonia!

    https://twitter.com/paulhutcheon/status/1420358801111326725?s=21
  • CarlottaVanceCarlottaVance Posts: 60,422

    The media are laughable in their response...accoridng to Sky News, the UK government saying double vaccinated people from Europe and US can now come is an "embarrassing climb down".

    Although Labour Rayner says we can't have this, too risky, as USA don't have an NHS.

    Changes of policy can only be "u-turns", "climb downs" or "volte-face" - where's the fun (or mileage?) in "change"?
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,601

    The media are laughable in their response...accoridng to Sky News, the UK government saying double vaccinated people from Europe and US can now come is an "embarrassing climb down".

    Although Labour Rayner says we can't have this, too risky, as USA don't have an NHS.

    Our general attitude to changing position is quite destructive. Some things are humiliating climb downs, but it's hard to find them given any change, even trailed ones, are treated as u turning, which is explicitly treated as being weak. Media and politicians both feed it, it's why gov is so stubborn even on tiny things, but I blame us more - the public support that dramatic view of any change being weakness, even as it is demanded.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,620
    felix said:

    When i used to have NHK one of my favourites was 'At home with Venetia in Kyoto' an English posh lady who left her family to go on the hippy trail and ended up in Japan. Very posh very herbal and great fun.
    Looked that up - not the sort of herbal I expected!

    https://www.telecomstaff.co.jp/en/works/325/
  • maaarshmaaarsh Posts: 3,592

    I mean if hurling is a (winter) Olympic sport then why not skateboarding or horse dancing in the summer Olympiad?

    Luckily hurling isn't an Olympic sport at all as there'd only be 1 entrant.
  • RobDRobD Posts: 60,362
    edited July 2021

    Changes of policy can only be "u-turns", "climb downs" or "volte-face" - where's the fun (or mileage?) in "change"?
    Isn't it just a natural evolution of policy as vaccination nears completion?
  • Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 62,485
    I wonder if we'll get HEMA events one day.

    Anyway, I must be off. Play nicely, my fellow Britons.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,620
    maaarsh said:

    Luckily hurling isn't an Olympic sport at all as there'd only be 1 entrant.
    Er, no. Even without the Scots camanachd, there are plenty of players all over the world. It's not just cricket that got naturalised.
  • TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 121,686

    Mr. Urquhart, in all honesty I'm very glad to have PB as a resource given the dire state of modern 'news'.

    And grateful to me as well for helping filling in the huge gaps in your knowledge of (classical) history.

    There may well be a thread this weekend comparing Boris Johnson to Marcus Antonius.
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,724

    https://www.nytimes.com/2012/08/11/sports/olympics/in-olympic-pentathlon-riding-horses-theyve-only-just-met.html

    A good article on it if interested.
    I am quite interested but couldn't get access to the article - can you summarise?

    My point is that every horse has its foibles and so forth but they aren't going to have horses, one of which is a 2yr old thoroughbred, another a 22yr old cob, a third an arab, etc

    The horses must surely all have a similar level of temperament and ability and be known to be able to jump a course of show jumps.

    Then it is up to the rider.
  • TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 121,686
    maaarsh said:

    Luckily hurling isn't an Olympic sport at all as there'd only be 1 entrant.
    Fecking autocorrect, I meant curling.
  • CookieCookie Posts: 14,834

    Triathlon isn't a test of cycling ability. The good swimmer/runners can just ride behind a domestique or a rival.
    I'm with @AlistairM above here. There are far too many swimming events based on making things unnecessarily difficult for yourself. Medleys is doubly ridiculous. You don't have a 400m medley in which you have to walk the first 100m, run the second 100m backwards, jump the third 100m and run the fourth 100m normally.

    Also anything including points for artistic impression is not a sport e.g ice dancing.

    I'm fairly sceptical of the place of gymnastics to be honest.

    Andwhy no tug of war? That's a proper sport.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,620

    The silly twat can’t even bring himself to say Catalunya/Catalonia!

    https://twitter.com/paulhutcheon/status/1420358801111326725?s=21

    Also, "coalition with Tories? Nothing to do with me, siree".
  • CarlottaVanceCarlottaVance Posts: 60,422
    Paul Waugh
    I understand that the Welsh govt will agree to similar arrangements because of its open border with England, while expressing deep regret at the UK Govt decision.


    https://twitter.com/paulwaugh/status/1420381561518792707?s=20

    "You can come BUT YOU ARE NOT WELCOME IN WALES"

    I bet the Welsh Tourist Board are thrilled....
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,620

    Fecking autocorrect, I meant curling.
    Because it's similar to cricket or footie. It's a ball or rather disc game.
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,550
    edited July 2021

    Changes of policy can only be "u-turns", "climb downs" or "volte-face" - where's the fun (or mileage?) in "change"?
    The thing that makes the outrage meter being tweaked even more ridiculous is in the same report they admit the at the G7 they apparently talked about exactly this approach between the big nations....so I would presume there was informal chat of well when you get your population to this level of vaccination, we can probably change the general policy.

    So it hardly that Boris got up this morning and went huzzzahhhh, U-turn on the border policy lads and ladettes.
  • EndillionEndillion Posts: 4,976
    Cookie said:

    I'm with @AlistairM above here. There are far too many swimming events based on making things unnecessarily difficult for yourself. Medleys is doubly ridiculous. You don't have a 400m medley in which you have to walk the first 100m, run the second 100m backwards, jump the third 100m and run the fourth 100m normally.

    Also anything including points for artistic impression is not a sport e.g ice dancing.

    I'm fairly sceptical of the place of gymnastics to be honest.

    Andwhy no tug of war? That's a proper sport.
    Simple rule: get rid of all "sports" where scores are assigned by judges. If it can't be measured objectively, it's an art form, not a sport.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,816

    Oxbridge art schools weren’t much cop when I were a lad.
    It was possible to mix art and Oxbridge. Anthony Blunt proved that.
  • TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 121,686

    Paul Waugh
    I understand that the Welsh govt will agree to similar arrangements because of its open border with England, while expressing deep regret at the UK Govt decision.


    https://twitter.com/paulwaugh/status/1420381561518792707?s=20

    "You can come BUT YOU ARE NOT WELCOME IN WALES"

    I bet the Welsh Tourist Board are thrilled....

    Who would want to visit Wales?

    Scotland and England yes, but Wales?
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,601

    The Royals really are hypocrites and parasites.

    The Queen’s lawyers secretly lobbied Scottish ministers to change a draft law to exempt her private land from a major initiative to cut carbon emissions, documents reveal.

    The exemption means the Queen, one of the largest landowners in Scotland, is the only person in the country not required to facilitate the construction of pipelines to heat buildings using renewable energy.

    Her lawyers secured the dispensation from Scotland’s government five months ago by exploiting an obscure parliamentary procedure known as Queen’s consent, which gives the monarch advance sight of legislation.

    The arcane parliamentary mechanism has been borrowed from Westminster, where it has existed as a custom since the 1700s.

    In a series of reports into Queen’s consent in recent months, the Guardian revealed how the Queen repeatedly used her privileged access to draft laws to lobby ministers to change UK legislation to benefit her private interests or reflect her opinions between the late 1960s and the 1980s.

    The new documents, uncovered by Lily Humphreys, a researcher for the Scottish Liberal Democrats using freedom of information laws, disclose how the monarch used her special access to Scottish legislation to intervene in the parliamentary process as recently as February.

    The documents also suggest Nicola Sturgeon’s government failed to disclose the monarch’s lobbying this year when a Scottish politician used a parliamentary debate to query why the Queen was securing an exemption from the green energy bill.

    The move appears at odds with the royal family’s public commitment to tackling the climate crisis, with Prince William recently joining his father, Charles, in campaigning to cut emissions and protect the planet.


    https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2021/jul/28/queen-secretly-lobbied-scottish-ministers-climate-law-exemption

    Naughty naughty.

    I am though occasionally struck by what makes a mechanism arcane, or using a procedure being exploiting it (its clearer in this case), as it can be arbitrary.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,620
    kinabalu said:

    It was possible to mix art and Oxbridge. Anthony Blunt proved that.
    Eh? He was a mathematician turned modern linguist.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,620

    Who would want to visit Wales?

    Scotland and England yes, but Wales?
    Laver bread. Yum.
  • EndillionEndillion Posts: 4,976
    Carnyx said:

    Er, how does one define a Team GB horse? Birth, or residence, or what? Not as if it can have a passport to wave in its hoof.
    https://www.bhs.org.uk/advice-and-information/horse-ownership/horse-passports/faqs

    Do all horses need an equine passport?

    Yes. Horses, ponies, donkeys, mules and zebras must have an equine passport, even if they never leave their field.
  • TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 121,686
    kinabalu said:

    It was possible to mix art and Oxbridge. Anthony Blunt proved that.
    One of Blunt's codenames was 'Johnson'.

    Now there's a joke about there currently being a massive Johnson doing Russia's work for them today.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,601
    edited July 2021
    Endillion said:

    Simple rule: get rid of all "sports" where scores are assigned by judges. If it can't be measured objectively, it's an art form, not a sport.
    Hmm, I generally agree, but what about things like boxing and taekwondo? Dont multiple judges have to record the scoring hits?

    Itd be a shame not to have gymnastics or diving etc, but it can be hard to tell sometimes why one is .x better than another.

    I think we'd lose too many.
  • felixfelix Posts: 15,180
    Carnyx said:

    Looked that up - not the sort of herbal I expected!

    https://www.telecomstaff.co.jp/en/works/325/
    She's totally into herbal teas/infusions, etc. She probably was a dope head in her youth - now she's just mellow! :0
  • CookieCookie Posts: 14,834
    edited July 2021
    TOPPING said:

    "filling dead time in a studio"

    @turbotubbs thinks every minute they should be showing live sport. It's what he paid his license fee for.
    I'm with turbotubbs here.
    The BBC - and the highlights programme with Clare Balding in particular - sees sport as a human interest/reality program. Oh, the inanity! They have no faith that people wathcing can be interested in sport for its own sake. Always the interview with the family, always 'look at the emotion', always 'how proud are you?' (one of my particular bugbears - what are they expecting the answer to be, apart from 'very'?) They treat it like the X Factor.
    Clare Balding used to be quite good when all she had to do was enthuse about horses.
    It's the Olympics. Just show some sport! It's really easy telly to make. I don't mid a bit of human interest, but the BBC highlights programme is about 70% human interest to 30% actual sport. They've got the balance way off.

    Hazel Irvine, on the other hand, remains a class act.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,620
    edited July 2021
    Endillion said:

    https://www.bhs.org.uk/advice-and-information/horse-ownership/horse-passports/faqs

    Do all horses need an equine passport?

    Yes. Horses, ponies, donkeys, mules and zebras must have an equine passport, even if they never leave their field.
    I stand corrected, thank you.

    But that's more of a tracing scheme for future Shergarburgers (or not as the case may be). Doesn't define the horse as being e.g. English except by residence. So what do they do in the OLympics?
  • felixfelix Posts: 15,180

    Fecking autocorrect, I meant curling.
    Must admit I thought it was another of your sick jokes..
  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 79,235
    Endillion said:

    https://www.bhs.org.uk/advice-and-information/horse-ownership/horse-passports/faqs

    Do all horses need an equine passport?

    Yes. Horses, ponies, donkeys, mules and zebras must have an equine passport, even if they never leave their field.
    They need up to date vaccinations too.
  • MattWMattW Posts: 26,679

    Defund the poshos in the rowing....they can't even row in a straight line!
    If you defund it, that will prevent the oiks getting in.

    Stop discriminating against poor people.

    People of colour are over-represented amongst poorer people, so you must be a racist as well.

    (Argument copyright D. Butler.)
  • CookieCookie Posts: 14,834

    Fecking autocorrect, I meant curling.
    Because curling is a proper sport where the outcome can be measured objectively.
  • MattWMattW Posts: 26,679
    edited July 2021

    The Royals really are hypocrites and parasites.

    The Queen’s lawyers secretly lobbied Scottish ministers to change a draft law to exempt her private land from a major initiative to cut carbon emissions, documents reveal.

    The exemption means the Queen, one of the largest landowners in Scotland, is the only person in the country not required to facilitate the construction of pipelines to heat buildings using renewable energy.

    Her lawyers secured the dispensation from Scotland’s government five months ago by exploiting an obscure parliamentary procedure known as Queen’s consent, which gives the monarch advance sight of legislation.

    The arcane parliamentary mechanism has been borrowed from Westminster, where it has existed as a custom since the 1700s.

    In a series of reports into Queen’s consent in recent months, the Guardian revealed how the Queen repeatedly used her privileged access to draft laws to lobby ministers to change UK legislation to benefit her private interests or reflect her opinions between the late 1960s and the 1980s.

    The new documents, uncovered by Lily Humphreys, a researcher for the Scottish Liberal Democrats using freedom of information laws, disclose how the monarch used her special access to Scottish legislation to intervene in the parliamentary process as recently as February.

    The documents also suggest Nicola Sturgeon’s government failed to disclose the monarch’s lobbying this year when a Scottish politician used a parliamentary debate to query why the Queen was securing an exemption from the green energy bill.

    The move appears at odds with the royal family’s public commitment to tackling the climate crisis, with Prince William recently joining his father, Charles, in campaigning to cut emissions and protect the planet.


    https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2021/jul/28/queen-secretly-lobbied-scottish-ministers-climate-law-exemption

    It can't be obscure or secret or arcane; the Guardian has published 10+ articles about it in the last several months alone.

    Unless no one reads the Guardian, of course.
This discussion has been closed.