300 likes | 314 Views
Explore the importance of honesty, fair play, and respect in sports, from the Olympics to infamous cheating scandals. Learn why integrity is key to true success in sports and life.
E N D
Being a Sport Cheats Never Beat
If we want someone to be fair or to do the right thing we say…. • “Be a sport!”
Cheats Never Beat • We admire sporting superstars • Not only for their ability • But also for being honest and playing fair
Cheats Never Beat • It takes strength of character to play hard and to play within the rules.
Cheats Never Beat • It takes discipline to tackle hard but to tackle fairly.
Cheats Never Beat • It takes commitment to practise your skills and to train hard to be as good as you can be. • To do less is to cheat yourself and to cheat your teammates.
Cheats Never Beat • Practising hard brings its own rewards.
Cheats Never Beat • The best players show respect for opponents before, during and after the game. • Showing respect for opponents shows respect for the game and respect for yourself.
Cheats Never Beat • If you show all these qualities, • everyone will respect you.
Cheats Never Beat • The modern Olympics were created by Pierre de Coubertin • He believed in the spirit of fair competition • Unfortunately ….
Cheats Never Beat • …. not everyone in sport has always lived up to Coubertin’s high standards of honesty.
Cheats Never Beat • Their most famous player was ‘Shoeless’ Joe Jackson.
Cheats Never Beat • In the World Series Final of 1919 Joe and seven other White Sox players took bribes to lose to the Cincinnati Reds.
Cheats Never Beat • The players were found guilty in court. • On their way out, a young boy called to Jackson • “Say it ain’t so, Joe!” • The phrase became one of the most famous in American sports history.
Cheats Never Beat • The hardest race in athletics is the Marathon. • Competitors run for over 26 miles!
Cheats Never Beat • At the St Louis Olympic Games of 1904 • Fred Lorz was the first to cross the finishing line • Before he received his gold medal….
Cheats Never Beat • …it was discovered he had hitched a lift and travelled 11 miles by car! • This is what inspired this cartoon
Cheats Never Beat • Boris Onischenko was an army officer from the Ukraine. • He won a silver medal in the 1972 Olympics in Munich. • He entered the 1976 Olympics in Montreal.
Cheats Never Beat • In a fencing competition • Onischenko wired his sword so that when he touched a trigger, the sword buzzed as if he had made a hit on his opponent.
Cheats Never Beat • Boris Onischenko was discovered and sent home in disgrace.
Cheats Never Beat • At the 1986 World Cup in Mexico • Argentina won the final.
Cheats Never Beat • But in the quarter final against England • Diego Maradona cheated by handling a goal. • He later said: • “It was the hand of God!” • His cheated ‘hand of God’ goal is remembered better than the brilliant goal that he scored later in the same game.
Cheats Never Beat • In the 1988 Seoul Olympics • Ben Johnson broke the world record for the 100 metre sprint.
Cheats Never Beat • Later, a drugs test showed that Johnson had cheated. • He had been taking a banned drug. • The drugs made him run faster… • …but would ruin his health.
Cheats Never Beat • In 1981 the Australian cricketer Trevor Chappell was instructed by his captain (also his brother!) to bowl underarm so that the New Zealand batsman Brian Mackechnie could not hit a six off the last ball of the match.
Cheats Never Beat • Although not against the rules the cricket authorities quickly outlawed underarm bowling to stop unsportsmanlike behaviour.
Cheats Never Beat • In 2009 Harlequins Rugby Union Club faked a blood injury to winger Tom Williams so they could falsely substitute him to bring on a substitute who could kick a winning goal.
Cheats Never Beat • In 1916, B Eastwood of Crosland Moor Bowling Club played badly on purpose. He was trying to lose a bowls match at Dalton so that his friend could win a bet. • He was banned for life from playing bowls in Huddersfield.
Big G says: • “Cheats lose the most important things in life… • …their reputation and their good name!”