rekrunner wrote:
Armstronglivs wrote:
This is really so much wind. You discount experience as though it can teach nothing of value. Over a life-time I have seen that doing always surpasses theorizing. I have learned this through the many sports I have played, as well as training to be a lawyer and working as a journalist, a broadcaster and a professional musician. Experience is the only thing that confers real understanding. Those that haven't done it know nothing compared to those who have. You're like a guy who thinks he knows better about how music is played than the guys on the bandstand, when he has never done that or even played an instrument. But you've read a book. Good for you. So it is with elite and professional sports. From behind your computer you condescending refer to these athletes as virtual ignoramuses because they haven't read what you have. I've got news for you - sport is not an armchair pursuit - or an academic discipline, as you pretend it is. But you will never get that.
You speak about experience as though you have it, or you have established what the experience of the athletes were.
If you had already provided anything of substance, I would have considered it.
But you haven't. You are arguing from things you do not know.
No, you are. You are discounting the experience of athletes, and you do that without knowledge, data or even experience on your part to support that view. Unlike you, I do not assume they don't really know what they are doing. But that's an armchair expert - which is all you are.