Showing posts with label Recreation and Sports. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Recreation and Sports. Show all posts

Monday, March 4, 2013

History of Racquetball

Racquetball is an active indoor sport played using a hollow rubber ball in a court, which may be indoor or outdoor. In the main, the sport is viewed as similar to tennis and handball because nearly all of such games rules are incorporated into racquetball. All the same, the facts are that this sport is unmatched. How did it originate?

Joe Sobek, a US-based professional handball and tennis player, is credited for inventing the game in 1950. He introduced the game initially during the Greenwich YMCA. During that time, Mr Sobek had still not considered a catchy name for the sport. The development of racquetball was an outcome of his search for a rapid type of sport that was both easy to learn and to play. During that time, racquetball was created as an option to the popular game of tennis.

Two years after, in February 1952, he founded the NPRA or National Paddle Rackets Association. At the same time, Mr Sobek codified the game mechanics and printed them in the sort of a booklet. This new sport was quickly adopted to emerge as a popular indoor sport. Through continuous promotion, the popularity of racquetball further increased. The new game was then supported by up to 40,000 handball courts within the nations JCCs and YMCAs, where racquetball could be formally and appropriately played.

It was in 1969 when the International Racquetball Association was established. The group used a name as coined by professional tennis player Bob McInerney. That same year, the group assumed the roles of the National Paddle Rackets Association. In 1973, US Handball Association president and founder Robert W Kendler had a dispute with the directors of IRA. Mr Kendler then created two other organizations for racquetball. IRA has remained as a dominant establishment promoting the sport.

IRA was recognized by no lower than the US Olympic Committee as the national governing body for racquetball in the land. The sport hit its peak in popularity in 1974. That year, it was estimated that there were up to three million racquetball players in the land alone. At identical year, IRA organized the first ever racquetball professional tournament. The organization then went to become a founding member of the International Racquetball Federation. It marked the spread of the sports popularity from the US to other parts of the planet.

Owing to the growing popularity of racquetball, clubs and courts for the sport have been built and founded. Numerous sporting goods makers have started commercial output of racquetball-specific equipment. The rise and popularity of racquetball went on until the earlier area of the 1980s. However, its prestige diminished in the later step in that decade when racquet clubs started conversion into a healthy body clubs because of shifting preferences of people and changing demands.

Before the start of the 1990s, total number of racquetball players in the US alone has reached to approximately 5.6 million. The sport was warmly accepted by sports fanatics particularly those based in the UK. Thus, racquetball has in a very short space of time become a popular ball sport not just for American citizens but also for British sports aficionados.

Rainbow Trout And Trout Flies

Alaska is home to many wonders of nature not the least of which is the rainbow trout. Trout fishing is a sport enjoyed by many anglers not only in Alaska, but all over the world.

Rainbow trout are known to be quite aggressive and picky to boot. While it may take a long time to get them to bite, once you have them on your line you are in for quite a fight. These fish are quite spirited and can put up quite a battle, which of course, is one reason why anglers love fishing for them.

Trout are very picky eaters and many trout anglers tie their own flies in order to get the best presentation to tempt this finicky fish. Trout flies must be just so in order for the fish to bite so whether you tie them yourself or buy them, you must make sure they closely resemble the natural food source of the fish.

There are two types of flies - dry files and wet flies. The dry flies are supposed to resemble insects floating on top of the water or hatches just emerging. Therefore, they are designed to float. Conversely, wet flies are meant to sink. Either they should go right to the bottom or hang a few inches under the water depending on what insect they are emulating.

Streamers are flies that sink to just a few inches below the water. Their goal is to resemble a minnow swimming up near the top. Another type of fly that sinks just a few inches is called a nymph - this is supposed to resemble insect larvae floating in the current. The nymph can also sink to the bottom as it might in real life.

When selecting or tying flies for rainbow trout fishing, one should always find out what the natural food at the time you will be fishing is in the particular body of water that you want to fish. Make sure your flies resemble whatever the food of that time frame will be.

Fishing can be a great way to get the whole family involved in outdoor sports, you can even plan a fishing vacation and fish for rainbow trout in Alaska. You can find loding ant one of many wonderful lodges and enjoy the Alaskan scenery and culture while you are there. While fishing for trout can be fun for the whole family, you might want to make sure small children stick to something a little less challenging like sunfish!

Extreme Parachuting and B.A.S.E. Jumping Future Concept

Probably the most dangerous sport known to man is BASE Jumping. We have all seen pictures and videos of these daredevils as they purposely jump off a Bridge, Building, Antenna, Cliff or various pieces of infrastructure and then pop their parachute just prior to splatting on the ground. Hello Earth!

In the last few years extreme parachuting and BASE jumping has become a very popular as there are always plenty of spectators to watch the death defying feats and those who dare to deliver the goods are in for the adrenaline rush of their lives. Unfortunately this is a sport, which claims many lives each year and is even more dangerous than being an astronaut or racing NASCAR.

It is for this reason I propose some safety features for those who are getting started in BASE jumping to help with their training as they attempt the sport of extreme parachuting. I propose using the latest cutting edge and state of the art Holographic Technologies, which are getting closer to becoming reality using 3D and 4D projection.

The BASE Jumper would just prior to the attempt turn on his micro projection unit strapped to his chest and match step for step a previous attempt by an expert world-class jumper. This projection would be played as he jumped and when the image in front of him pulled the rip cord so would he and thus be insured that he did not splat on the rocks, water or concrete below. Think on the use of this technology on your next BASE jump!


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