one day after major Ironman triathlon events in Australia and is run by members of a distinct subworld within the broader social world of Australian triathletes. The Beer Mile occurs on the periphery of Ironman triathlon events and is unsanctioned by event organizers. This paper examines the language
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When an Ironman Triathlon Isn’t Hard Enough: The Beer Mile as a Subworld Ritual
Matthew Lamont and Sheranne Fairley
Triathlon Magazine Canada and the (Re-)Construction of Female Sporting Bodies
Jesse Couture
This paper provides a critical look at the ways in which the female sporting body is discursively constructed within Triathlon Magazine Canada (TMC), Canada’s only triathlon-exclusive magazine. By exploring both visual and narrative representations of the athletic female sporting body, this paper exposes some of the discursive tensions that seem to persist in this popular triathlon-specific text. Both the sport of triathlon and the bodies of triathletes may each be understood as sites where essentialist ideas about the body can be effectively disrupted or challenged but TMC represents a façade of gender progressivism insofar as it (re)produces many of the same heteronormative representations of gender found in other popular sport magazines.
The Absence of Resistance Training? Exploring the Politics of Health in High Performance Youth Triathlon
Parissa Safai, Jay Johnson, and John Bryans
While research and scholarship on the dynamic interconnections between sport and health has steadily grown in the sociocultural study of sport in the past few decades, this paper focuses more directly on the politics of health within sport. Drawing on a small study of the lived experiences and understandings of health, pain/injury, risk and precaution among 12 male and female high performance youth (16–19 years of age) triathletes and three coaches, we outline the ways in which health becomes depoliticized among high performance athletes as our participants made no connection to health as a political phenomenon—within or outside of sport—or to their own right to health as members of the high performance sport community. We conclude by offering some suggestions as to why health was (and is) rendered apolitical in high performance youth triathlon.
Sex Differences in Athletic Performance
Lynda B. Ransdell and Christine L. Wells
Do women out-perform men in endurance sports? Are women as strong, pound for pound, as men? Many questions have been raised about the ability of women and men to perform physical tasks equally well. The issue of sex differences and similarities in performance has considerable significance today as women seek physically demanding careers in police-work, fire-fighting, the military, industry, and athletics. As more women participate in recreational and career opportunities formerly open only to men, knowledge about sex differences in response to physical exertion and training becomes increasingly important. In this paper we describes differences between the sexes in athletic performance.
Most performance differences are due to variations in morphological (structural) or physiological characteristics typical of women and men (Wells, 1991). Nevertheless, variations in these characteristics are often as large or larger within each sex as they are between the sexes. The same is true of physical performance. Thus, when the entire population is considered, there are extensive differences in performance within each sex, and considerable overlap in performance between the sexes.
We will base our examination of performance differences on the most outstanding performances of each sex: those exemplified by World Records in athletic events. We seek to answer such questions as: How large are sex differences in world record performances? Can existing performance differences be explained entirely by biological differences between the sexes? Or, are a large portion of these performance differ-ences attributable to sociocultural factors?
We will analyze sex differences in performance relative to the human energy system. This system allows an extraordinary range of mechanisms for neuromuscular coordination and metabolism. Because of this, the human has a virtually unlimited movement repertoire and is capable of movements requiring large bursts of energy over very brief periods of time, as well as movements requiring low levels of energy production over very long periods of time. We will progress from sports that require very high intensity and explosive quality movements such as jumping and power lifting, through the “energy spectrum” to feats of endurance such as marathon running, ultra-distance triathlon, and open-water distance swimming.
Due to our desire to focus this paper on a reasonable amount of data, our analysis will be limited as follows:
1) for sex differences in high intensity-brief duration, explosive per-formance, we will discuss the high jump, long jump, and various mea-sures of strength (powerlifting),
2) for sex differences in high intensity-short duration performance, we will present data on sprint running (100m, 400m) and swimming (100m),
3) for sex differences in moderate intensity-moderate duration performance, we will discuss middle-distance running (1500m, 5000m, 10,000m), and swimming (1500m), and
4) for differences in low intensity-long duration performance, we will discuss the marathon, the "Ironman Triathlon," and open ocean distance swimming.
Driving Change? Field Containment of Gender Equality Committees in International Sports Governance
Lucie Schoch and Madeleine Pape
). This is in spite of GECs being among the most widely adopted gender equality interventions in international sport ( Henry & Robinson, 2010 ; Matthews & Piggott, 2021 ). In this study, we examine the GECs of World Triathlon and the International Hockey Federation (FIH), which are the peak governing
“You Always Wanna Be Sore, Because Then You Are Seeing Results”: Exploring Positive Pain in Competitive Swimming
Gareth McNarry, Jacquelyn Allen-Collinson, and Adam B. Evans
conceptualization of pain as positive reverberate with research on other sports and physical cultures. Our research therefore contributes to a sport sociological literature on pain in a range of sports, such as running, ultrarunning, and triathlon ( Allen-Collinson, Jennings, Vaittinen, & Owton, 2019 ; Hanold
Embodiment in Active Sport Tourism: An Autophenomenography of the Tour de France Alpine “Cols”
Matthew Lamont
competitor in endurance sports, including cycle racing and long-distance triathlon, since my mid-teens and have considerable experience traveling domestically and internationally competing in events. From a scholarly perspective, I have been researching sport tourism from a social sciences perspective for
Beyond Health and Happiness: An Exploratory Study Into the Relationship Between Craftsmanship and Meaningfulness of Sport
Noora J. Ronkainen, Michael McDougall, Olli Tikkanen, Niels Feddersen, and Richard Tahtinen
.4%), national (29.5%), and international/top tier professional level (33.1%). The most frequently reported male sports (or clusters of sports) were rugby ( n = 22), ultramarathon/marathon/running (cluster; n = 17), ironman/triathlon/duathlon (cluster; n = 15), martial arts (cluster; n = 13), golf ( n
White Women Smiling? Media Representations of Women at the 2018 Commonwealth Games
Adele Pavlidis, Millicent Kennelly, and Laura Rodriguez Castro
were the most common sportswomen depicted, although the Bulletin ’s cover also featured athletes from weightlifting, triathlon, boxing, and cycling. In contrast the coverage the event received in The Australian was less ubiquitous: GC2018 made the front cover on five occasions but was generally
Key Considerations for Advancing Women in Coaching
Jenessa Banwell, Gretchen Kerr, and Ashley Stirling
, quidditch, ringette, rowing, rugby, (freestyle/cross country/alpine) skiing, skydiving, soccer, softball (fastpitch), speedskating, synchronized swimming, tennis, track and field, trampoline, triathlon, (beach/indoor) volleyball, wrestling Findings are presented across three main themes: 1) Characteristics