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Should Talking About Sports At Work Be Banned Because It Could Offend Women? One Expert Thinks So

. . .Chartered Management Institute head Ann Francke isn’t a big fan of talking about sports in a professional setting, and she made that crystal clear during an interview with the BBC. Two examples BBC mentioned are soccer and cricket.

“A lot of women, in particular, feel left out. They don’t follow those sports and they don’t like either being forced to talk about them or not being included,” Francke explained. . .

“It’s a gateway to more laddish behavior and – if it just goes unchecked – it’s a signal of a more laddish culture. It’s very easy for it to escalate from VAR talk and chat to slapping each other on the back and talking about their conquests at the weekend,” Franke added. . .

This attitude right here is why America has to bail out England whenever the wind blows too hard. Stop talking about sports in the office? (Read more from “Should Talking About Sports At Work Be Banned Because It Could Offend Women? One Expert Thinks So” HERE)

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WATCH: Men Zoom Past Female Runner in World Athletics Championships Mixed Relay

Over the weekend, history was made at the 2019 World Athletics Championships in Doha for its inclusion of the gender-mixed 4×400-meter relay.

As noted by The Telegraph, nations pack their teams with two male and two female runners each. Nearly all participating nations ordered their runners male-female-female-male, strategically placing their two fastest runners to start and end the race.

Poland, however, stacked their two male runners first and second, leaving their two female runners, Iga Baumgart-Witan and Justyna Swiety-Ersetic, to close out the relay.

While Poland gained an advantage off the bat with their male runners, the last leg showcased a top-notch female athlete with a 30-meter lead competing against top-notch male athletes — and the difference was stark.

The female runner was blown out by Michael Cherry, who represented the United States, in the last leg of the relay. All the other male runners, despite being disadvantaged by Swiety-Ersetic’s head start, also beat out the Polish runner.

(Read more from “Watch: Men Zoom Past Female Runner in World Athletics Championships Mixed Relay” HERE)

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‘Worse Than Gymnastics’: Lawsuit Makes Explosive Sex Abuse Allegations Involving USA Diving

By The Blaze. Two former USA Diving athletes have sued the sport’s national governing body, claiming the organization failed to act when the athletes accused a former coach of coercing and forcing them into frequent sex, according to the Indianapolis Star.

The lawsuit focuses on coach Will Bohonyi, who formerly coached at Ohio State University and competed at Indiana University. One of the plaintiffs is a former Ohio State diver, and the other is a former Indiana University diver.

The Ohio State University diving club describes itself as the “second highest ranking junior competitive USA Diving team in the United States,” and the school is named as a defendant in the lawsuit along with Bohonyi and USA Diving.

“Bohonyi psychologically coerced (the woman) into believing that she was required to perform sexual services in exchange for her continued involvement in diving,” the lawsuit read. “He preyed on her age, vulnerability, and dreams of becoming an Olympian, and used the power structure and imbalance of power (coach/athlete) to make her believe she was required to sexually service him in exchange for her involvement in diving for Team USA.” . . .

According to the lawsuit, Bohonyi allegedly began coercing the former Indiana diver into daily sex in 2009 by telling her she owed him in exchange for helping her achieve her athletic goals. (Read more from “‘Worse Than Gymnastics’: Lawsuit Makes Explosive Sex Abuse Allegations Involving USA Diving” HERE)

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‘You Owe Me This’: USA Diving Accused of Ignoring Alleged Sexual Abuse of Divers

By USA Today. A class action lawsuit against Indianapolis-based USA Diving accuses the national governing body of ignoring or obstructing sexual abuse allegations, and the lawyer says the organization is “worse than gymnastics, worse than swimming.”

USA Gymnastics has been in turmoil since an IndyStar investigation that started in 2016. . .

Attorney Jon Little said in an interview with IndyStar that other divers have come forward and “this is just the beginning for USA Diving.”

A spokeswoman for USA Diving said in a statement Monday, “Providing a safe environment for our members is of tremendous importance to USA Diving, and we take these matters very seriously. USA Diving is unable to comment further at this time.” . . .

During a meet in August 2014 in Knoxville, Tenn., the girl’s teammate informed the head coach of the Ohio State Diving Club about the abuse, the lawsuit alleges. The girl, who had just turned 17, was sent home. Bohonyi stayed. (Read more from “‘You Owe Me This’: USA Diving Accused of Ignoring Alleged Sexual Abuse of Divers” HERE)

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Professional Sport Franchises Are Parasites on Their Communities

Shortly before I was born, Milwaukee’s socialist government built a government-financed baseball stadium and enticed the Boston Braves to abandon the East Coast. Eventually, Atlanta would give Milwaukee a taste of its own medicine, and lure the Braves south. All my life, professional sport franchises have been pressuring local governments to share the costs and risks of building their enormously expensive facilities on prime urban real estate.

If you don’t live in a major metropolitan area, you might be breathing a sigh of relief now. But not so fast – due to the municipalities’ ability to issue tax-free bonds, your federal government effectively assumes a large fraction of the cities’ largesse to the sport cartels. Do you live in rural downstate Indiana? We thank you for your support. You helped subsidize Lucas Oil Stadium in Indianapolis by $163 million in federal tax benefits.

Hate the Chicago Bears? Sorry about that, but you’ve subsidized Soldier Field by $205 million. I hope you’re a Yankees fan, because you’re on the hook for $431 million in the Bronx. Oh, and Barack Obama’s favorite rapper Jay Z thanks you too, even though he no longer owns the Barclays Center or its tenant Brooklyn Nets. Just think how much more valuable his stake was, and how much more he could sell it for, when enhanced by a whopping $122 million tax benefit.

Since 2000, 36 new professional sports stadiums have been financed in part by tax-free municipal bonds. According to the Brookings Institution, a Washington think tank, federal taxpayers have absorbed $3.2 billion of the cost of building private sport stadiums during that time. It’s even more ($3.7 billion) if you include the tax benefits to high-income investors who buy the tax-free municipal bonds that build the stadiums.

If you’re bundling up for work in Fairbanks today, you may be wondering why you should guarantee the profitability of a New York City team already valued at $3.4 billion, 4,000 miles away. I can’t help you with that. I don’t even understand why locals should subsidize a privately-owned professional team.

The overall subsidy since 2000, including state and municipal contributions, is a much bigger number, somewhere between $10 billion and $12 billion. You could build a lot of bridges and hospital wings with that kind of money. Maybe cities wouldn’t need to send pink slips to kindergarten teachers and rookie cops if they didn’t give the store away to sport tycoons.

I’ve heard the claims that professional sport franchises are an important driver of economic development. I’ve heard that from Chamber of Commerce go-getters, I’ve heard that from real estate developers. Of course, I’ve heard that from sport tycoons. But guess who I’ve never heard that from? Economists.

“NFL stadiums do not generate significant local economic growth,” Stanford economist Roger Noll said in 2015, “and the incremental tax revenue is not sufficient to cover any significant financial contribution by the city.”

“One should not anticipate,” sports economist Andrew Zimbalist told the Freakonomics blog in 2009, “that a team or facility will by itself either increase employment or raise per capita income in a metropolitan area.”

Economics is a notoriously contentious discipline. Economists disagree a lot. But Wake Forest economist Robert Whaples listed the economic impact of sport stadium subsidies as an area of broad consensus among North American economists in a 2006 article entitled “Do Economists Agree on Anything? Yes!”

His survey indicated that 87 percent of economists agree that “local and state governments in the U.S. should eliminate subsidies to professional sports franchises.”

Of course huge new stadiums generate economic development in their immediate vicinity, in restaurants, bars, condos and office space. Especially if built in a blighted area, a stadium may revitalize its entire neighborhood. The effect of the stadiums’ inspirational architecture has been compared to Old World cathedrals.

Why, then, do most economists throw cold water on the idea of sport stadiums as an engine of a city’s economic development? Because of the concept of opportunity cost. They emphasize net economic development, not gross. Because the revenue that flows to the sport franchise – and to its neighborhood – comes from somewhere.

Most families have finite money available for entertainment. It’s not unlimited. Once they spend it on a professional football game, they can’t spend it on camping, bowling, theater or fishing rods. So while the immediate vicinity of the stadium may look very prosperous, that doesn’t translate into overall economic development for the city or region. It’s mostly a redistribution and a concentration of wealth from elsewhere in the city. How many new drive-in movies have opened since the Colts came to Indianapolis? How many bait shops are left there?

Professor Michael Leeds, chairman of the Temple University economics department, estimates that a major-league baseball team, with 81 home games, has “about the same impact on a community as a midsize department store.” He has also calculated the economic impact if every major professional sports franchise, including the Bears, the Bulls, the Cubs, the White Sox and the Blackhawks were to leave Chicago: less than one percent.

As a Federal Reserve publication observed in May 2017, government money used to subsidize a stadium also has opportunity costs. That’s referring to bridges, schools, hospitals, roads, airports, police, teachers, parks and infrastructure that a community can’t afford anymore because it was too generous with wealthy sport cartels.

These bonds aren’t paid off quickly. St. Louis is still paying off its stadium after the fickle Rams went back to California. Future generations have to pay off our generation’s reckless spending, but they don’t have to build schools or hospitals for their own families. That’s optional. They may or may not be able to do that, because of our adolescent infatuation with mass spectacles and athletic celebrity. Let’s grow up, already.

This Is Why a Champion Teen Runner Was Disqualified After Helping a Teen in Medical Distress

Iowa’s Zachary Hougland smoked the competition.

The cross country runner sprinted across the finish line on October 22 and into the record books as the Davis County High School’s first district champion.

As Zach exchanged high-fives with his coach he turned around and saw one of his rivals struggling to finish the race . . .

So without giving it a moment’s thought, Zach stopped celebrating and rushed to the side of the struggling runner.

Jared Chizek, the assistant director of the Iowa high School Athletic Association, told ABC News that the teen’s act of sportsmanship violated the National Federation of State High School Association race rules. (Read more from “This Is Why a Champion Teen Runner Was Disqualified After Helping a Teen in Medical Distress” HERE)

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Qatar Buying Votes to Suspend Israel From FIFA, Says Diplomats; FIFA Execs Indicted

By Eliezer Sherman. Qatar could be buying votes to suspend Israel from FIFA, Israeli diplomatic sources said on Thursday.

“We suspect that Qatar, about whom claims are circulating that it paid in order to host the 2022 World Cup, is now paying countries to vote in favor of the Palestinians,” diplomatic sources told Israeli newspaper Yedioth Ahronoth.

Israeli diplomats have been working globally behind the scenes to ensure that a vote at the FIFA congress on Friday to suspend Israel from the world soccer federation, spearheaded by the Palestinian Football Association, does not pass.

Although FIFA was racked this week by an explosive corruption scandal instigated by the U.S. indictment of nine FIFA officials and five corporate executives over financial conspiracies, Friday’s congress and the vote to suspend the Israeli Soccer Association were set to move forward. (Read more from “Qatar Might Be Buying Votes to Suspend Israel From FIFA, Israeli Diplomats Say” HERE)
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FIFA Execs Indicted

By Christopher Ingraham. In the end, it only took a $150 million scandal to make Americans care about soccer.

FIFA, the notoriously corrupt and yet seemingly invincible governing body of world soccer, has finally landed itself an indictment that some would say is worthy of its reputation. The charges against a handful of senior FIFA officials include money laundering, racketeering, bribery and fraud. In short, the federal lawsuit alleges what millions of soccer fans have suspected all along: that FIFA officials have been using the organization’s massive influence to line their pocketbooks.

On the surface, it’s just another white collar crime story: rich, powerful men making themselves richer and more powerful. But a closer look suggests that there is a lot of real-world suffering happening as a direct result of FIFA’s decisions.

For the most obvious example of this, look to Qatar. The decision to award the 2022 World Cup to the rich Gulf state with a terrible human rights record was a controversial one right out of the gate. There have been extensive allegations of bribery: why else, some figured, award the Cup to a tiny country with sweltering summer heat and no soccer culture to speak of?

Human rights advocates’ worst fears about Qatar seemed to be confirmed as Qatar began building the infrastructure to host the Cup, and reports of migrant worker deaths started to pile up. The numbers, to the extent that we know them, appear startling: A Guardian investigation last year revealed that Nepalese migrant workers were dying at a rate of one every two days. In sum, the Guardian put the total Qatar death toll of workers from Nepal, India and Bangladesh at 964 in 2012 and 2013. (Read more from this story HERE)
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Corrupt FIFA Donated Tens of Thousands of Dollars to Clinton Foundation, and that’s Not the Only Tie

By Jackie Kucinich. Both Bill Clinton and his family’s charity have been tied to soccer’s governing body, as well as Qatar’s disastrous World Cup bid.

And just like that, another Clinton Foundation donor is in the news.

The Clinton global charity has received between $50,000 and $100,000 from soccer’s governing body and has partnered with the Fédération Internationale de Football Association on several occasions, according to donor listings on the foundation’s website.

Several top FIFA executives were arrested Wednesday in Zurich and face corruption charges stretching back two decades, according to the U.S. Department of Justice.

Involvement with the embattled body extends beyond the foundation to Bill Clinton himself. The former president was an honorary chairman of the bid committee put together to promote the United States as a possible host nation for the 2018 or 2022 World Cup. (Read more from this story HERE).

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