Girls Are Wimps
It's a relatively slow news day in the sports world, especially in Chicago where the hot rumor is that the Cubs are interested in the recently released Jim Edmonds. Oh boy! Why the Cubs would want an aging outfielder who's bat and glove have been deteriorating at an alarming rate, I don't know, but whatever. I don't much care either.
Anyway, I've had to do some reading this morning to find a story I felt like posting about, and I found one over at The Postmen.
Thanks to a groundbreaking study, there's enough evidence out there that suggests girls may be weaker than boys. I'll let that shocker sink in for a second or two.
Okay, got your head wrapped around that one? I know, it took me a few minutes to come to terms with it, but apparently it's true. While Title IX has gone a long way in helping young women play athletics in school, it's also led to an alarming growth in injuries amongst the girls playing the sports. The same types of injuries boys are usually immune to.
It's gotten especially bad for girls when it comes to the most fickle of our knee's ligaments, the ACL.
Playing through pain, rushing back from injury — a warrior-girl ethos — was ingrained in Janelle, just as it is in many young women. The more she was hurt, the more routine the injuries felt. Her first A.C.L. operation, she told me, was “monumental. It felt scary. You know, it’s surgery.” Then she added: “The second one was like, O.K., I know what I need to do, let’s just do it. Let’s have the surgery and rehab and get back out there.”It's at this point I feel that I should point out no woman I know has ever torn her ACL while cooking me dinner. Just sayin..... (I'm kidding!)
By Janelle’s and her mother’s count, her club team, with 18 players, had suffered eight A.C.L. tears — eight — during her high-school years: Janelle’s two, another player’s two and four other girls with one each. A high-school teammate one class above Janelle endured chronic ankle problems and, according to a Miami Herald article, six ankle operations — three in each leg — over the course of her four years on the varsity soccer team.
I'm not sure why this should come as a surprise to anyone, I think it's pretty obvious to anybody who's met a man and a woman, that men are just generally stronger physically. The fact that a man's body is much more adept at avoiding injury should not come as a surprise, but at the same time, if women continue to pursue athletics like this, their bodies will adapt over time as well.
Charles Darwin taught me this. He also taught me how to chug three beers at the same time. Which piece of knowledge to you think I've used more effectively in life? Still, the article is pretty interesting (and very long) so if you have an hour or two to kill at work today, I say go for it.


5 comments:
1) Writing this while you know I am sitting here icing my knee seems.... cruel and unusual. So, thanks, buddy. :)
2) It's not about strength, per se. Men are not "more adept" at avoiding injury. It's physiology. Women's knees are angled differently than men, and the bones are narrower and contoured diffently, thus making their knees more vulnerable to injury. There are many ways to prevent this; unfortunately, docs and coaches tend to have a "one size fits all" approach to training. That needs to change and, I'm guessing, will, over time.
3) As for a chick ever making you dinner? Sorry, pal, Betty Crocker doesn't count.
1) To be fair, you hurt your knee while knitting.
2) So what you're saying is it's about strength?
3) Hey, some people pay hookers for sex, I pay mine to cook for me.
1) No, CROCHETING. Dude, get your facts straight.
2) If you want to thump your chest cuz men have greater bone density than women, then go for it - though, be careful, you might pull a muscle. :)
Besides, this isn't exactly news: men have always been more dense than women.
3) No wonder you're always broke.
Strike 1
Strike 2
Strike 3
Fornelli, you're out!
Oh, yeah! I be The Man!
Post a Comment