i wish i'd had a country limit and i also wish i'd had an international standard limit but i didn't, so we'll all have to trawl through 1 vote US collegians for the first few days
so my plan is to close voting 12pm GMT next Sunday 18th.
I'm planning on doing no work next week so can concentrate on this and then i'm off to Puerto Rico on xmas day, so i'll either have loads of time to lay in the sun and post lists for you or spend time partying with hot latino boys
[quote="Per Andersen"]Well, I got more than 5 Americans and I even left out Dillard, Oerter, Nehemiah, Stones, Sime, Seagren, Patton, Dumas, Stanfield and Rafer Johnson which for me is a crime [/quote
Replying to Per, yes, from where I sit, leaving Duke's Sime out IS INDEED a crime ! (But he was only 2nd with me.... # 1 was some HJ'er from USSR......)
26mi235 wrote:Five does not make much sense if you take it the way it literally reads. A number of favorite athletes might never have made an international appearance, won or even placed at nationals etc. I was underwater by the time the majority of posters would have recognized anyone (I am sure that Skip Shaeffer was not on anyone's list and I was floored that Deines [and I am still not certain how to spell his name] was). I finally dropped some of the locals to get people that, as I was growing up through the sport that I liked, although I took out a few that I was high on at the time (e.g., MJ).
Besides, a limit of five is more binding on someone from the US that has not gone to a single international meet.
The 1971 RW Marathon Handbook spells it Deines. He was also in Joe Henderson's 1969 book LSD: The Humane Way to Train.
mump boy wrote:i wish i'd had a country limit and i also wish i'd had an international standard limit but i didn't, so we'll all have to trawl through 1 vote US collegians for the first few days :
I really don't know what else you could have expected from such an eclectic group at the web site of an American publication. If you really wanted a list from your favorite athletes, why didn't you just say so.
Skip Shaeffer was not a world or even national class runner, but he was a very classy runner. And not too bad at it. At 44 he ran a PR 2:27 for the marathon; the next year he got cancer and was never really the same. He died a couple of weeks after attending my wedding in a wheel chair. Marlow, he was a ToE.
DrJay wrote: "Did ya put Tim Tebow as one of your choices?!? "
He didn't quite make my top twenty. You think anyone outside the US knows who Tebow is? If it had not been for Marlow raving about him, he would have been nowhere on my radar.
DrJay wrote: "Did ya put Tim Tebow as one of your choices?!? "
He didn't quite make my top twenty. You think anyone outside the US knows who Tebow is? If it had not been for Marlow raving about him, he would have been nowhere on my radar.
Mump/Flump? You getting excited about Tebow?
Literally beside myself with excitement
(have no idea who that is and i'm guessing even less interest in finding out)
mump boy wrote:Some very interesting choices that i am looking forward to hearing about, some choices that are frankly and some which i LOVE
What has over all level of the athlete got to do with being a favourite? If you wanted them from the top level of athletes than you might have stated so.
i didn't mention the over all level of the athelete
the whole point of this thread is to try and create some discussion over the slow winter months, in order to do that we are going to have to discuss each others choices, there may even be some disagreement and debate
You may think some of my choices are ridiculous, i'll be very happy to explain myself, some people may want you to explain your choices, others may think you have wonderful taste, either way i hope you won't take it personally.
Favoritism is an entirely subjective choice for personal reasons.. how can that be debateable? My favorite athletes are the late, lamented Mighty X-Men.183-2-2 over five seasons and no one outside the local soccer league would recognize any of them.
lonewolf wrote:Favoritism is an entirely subjective choice for personal reasons.. how can that be debateable?
Surely subjective choices are more open to debate than objective choices would be?
Unless someone chose an athlete who was a criminal or something similar a favorite is a personal choice. One of my choices was Bob Deines. How do you debate that? He wasn't good enough? That we should only choose famous athletes. And you don't like some of them?
Since " favourite" means somebody preferred to another or others there will be favourites chosen for any number of reasons, some silly, some trite and some for objective reason such as their performances, domination, medals, victories, long time at the top, etc.
Mump never stated what consideration/s you must give for your choice, so we all put up those athletes that we prefer for whatever myriad reasons; personally I enjoyed thinking about excellence, and just deserts for my choices, but it will be of great satisfaction to see who the top ten at least are.
lonewolf wrote:Favoritism is an entirely subjective choice for personal reasons.. how can that be debateable?
Surely subjective choices are more open to debate than objective choices would be?
That's exactly wrong. With "objective" choices, the criteria can at least be put on the table and more or less agreed to--"debate" is therefore meaningful. With subjective choices, there are NO common criteria, no consistent measure of significance. One can only explain ones own choices; there can be no meaningful "critique" of anyone else's choices or comparison from one set of choices to another. The "favorites" list says everything about the person doing the choosing, and far less about the "history of the sport." And that's the point.
LopenUupunut wrote:Surely subjective choices are more open to debate than objective choices would be?
That's exactly wrong. With "objective" choices, the criteria can at least be put on the table and more or less agreed to--"debate" is therefore meaningful. With subjective choices, there are NO common criteria, no consistent measure of significance. One can only explain ones own choices; there can be no meaningful "critique" of anyone else's choices or comparison from one set of choices to another. The "favorites" list says everything about the person doing the choosing, and far less about the "history of the sport." And that's the point.
You're right, it does indeed help a debate if it has some objectivity to give it a framework. But it also needs a huge helping of subjectivity, otherwise the whole thing would die in its cradle.
Imagine a purely objective question, like a Fastest-100m-Woman-of-All-Time "debate"... totally spoiled by the presence of too much objectivity. Everyone "picks" Florence Griffith-Joyner, the objective choice, end of matter. Not only is there no debate, there's no discussion of any kind.
By comparison, look at a Greatest-of-All-Time discussion. Somebody prefers Ashford over Göhr. That's a subjective pick. Another guy prefers Göhr as GOAT. That's also a subjective pick. There's room for a discussion because neither of them is objectively right... page after page after page, year after year. True, they're both objectively sensible picks, but if it wasn't ultimately down to subjectivity the debate would be a lot less interesting.
Or imagine a "best book ever" thread. No common objective criteria whatsoever, but plenty of room for explaining choices, discussing choices, debating the relative merits and upsides of various books. With a bit of luck people might even learn something.
Perhaps this thread has too much of a good thing, but purely subjective picks leave a lot more room for discussion afterwards than purely objective picks would.
LopenUupunut wrote:Surely subjective choices are more open to debate than objective choices would be?
That's exactly wrong. With "objective" choices, the criteria can at least be put on the table and more or less agreed to--"debate" is therefore meaningful. With subjective choices, there are NO common criteria, no consistent measure of significance. One can only explain ones own choices; there can be no meaningful "critique" of anyone else's choices or comparison from one set of choices to another. The "favorites" list says everything about the person doing the choosing, and far less about the "history of the sport." And that's the point.
You're right, it does indeed help a debate if it has some objectivity to give it a framework. But it also needs a huge helping of subjectivity, otherwise the whole thing would die in its cradle.
Imagine a purely objective question, like a Fastest-100m-Woman-of-All-Time "debate"... totally spoiled by the presence of too much objectivity. Everyone "picks" Florence Griffith-Joyner, the objective choice, end of matter. Not only is there no debate, there's no discussion of any kind.
By comparison, look at a Greatest-of-All-Time discussion. Somebody prefers Ashford over Göhr. That's a subjective pick. Another guy prefers Göhr as GOAT. That's also a subjective pick. There's room for a discussion because neither of them is objectively right... page after page after page, year after year. True, they're both objectively sensible picks, but if it wasn't ultimately down to subjectivity the debate would be a lot less interesting.
Or imagine a "best book ever" thread. No common objective criteria whatsoever, but plenty of room for explaining choices, discussing choices, debating the relative merits and upsides of various books. With a bit of luck people might even learn something.
Perhaps this thread has too much of a good thing, but purely subjective picks leave a lot more room for discussion afterwards than purely objective picks would.
I believe you are confusing the realm of "factual questions" with "judgments based on facts." It is a fact that Flojo has history's fastest time. There's no debate or opinion on that fact. There is, however, plenty of debate and opinion on the value or merit of that time, and even more on the question of "the greatest women's 100m runner in history." But even the latter is based on criteria that we can all deal with--won/loss record; longevity; honors won; fastest times; etc.
The question of "who is your favorite women's 100m runner" has no such objective criteria: it could be Flojo, or it could be your college girlfriend. Every choice in this question is "valid" precisely because there is no clear and consistent set of criteria at work.
So there are at least 3 categories at work here: -purely factual matters, defined very narrowly -judgments about relative merit, based on a clear, consistent, and shared set of objective criteria: debate and discussion are completely appropriate here -utterly personal judgments, based on no clear, consistent, or shared criteria: explanations may be in order, but there cannot really be "debate" since there is no common ground for discussion
Whether what is coming up is a discussion, a debate, or a debacle, I'm much looking forward to seeing what 50 lists of favorite track and field athletes produce when compiled. Thanks for this thread, guys.
Someone here does not understand the meaning of the words "subjective" or "favorite". I repeat, no one can logically contest someones else's favorite anything. There are too many elements to what constitutes favoritism. Favoritism can be influence both positively and negatively by quality of performance, good or bad. I think the results will be interesting but totally meaningless. As mump says, just killing time.