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shamateurism การใช้

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  • To his credit, Samaranch did rid the Games of much of their shamateurism.
  • Rather like their Olympic counterparts, Soviet rugby players had a fair degree of shamateurism.
  • Known as " shamateurism ", it became rampant in rugby union, as well as football and baseball.
  • The s閠ois club, before the advent of professionalism in French football, were accused of " shamateurism ".
  • Although concerns about shamateurism were widespread, the abolition of amateurism was actually the result of interaction by two irresistible forces.
  • This ended the practice of " shamateurism ", where players claimed to be amateur but still got irregular payments from their clubs.
  • This may jeopardise their status as amateurs, and if allowed to let slide, may be seen as corruption or cheating rather than as true " shamateurism ."
  • A committee conclusion decided that the only way to end this threat, the hypocrisy of Shamateurism and keep control of rugby union was to make the sport professional.
  • So amateurism has given way to shamateurism : many of those who parade in the stadium owe their running shoes, training facilities and airline tickets to corporate promotional budgets.
  • The Soviet League was for most of its existence amateur, at least in theory ( see shamateurism ), but the Russian League has been professional since its inception.
  • So he campaigned to do away with the final vestiges of " shamateurism " that were left over from de Coubertin's 19th-century fascination with the English leisure class.
  • In his prime, Laver would be banned from 21 Slams because he deigned to properly feed his family instead of pursuing glory during the " shamateurism " period of the 1960s.
  • After the season ended, he and his brother E . M . Grace were called to account by the Gloucestershire membership and a special enquiry was ordered to investigate their blatant " shamateurism ".
  • Billie Jean, perhaps more than any other single athlete, was responsible for forcing tennis to go straight, to drop the " shamateurism " that allowed self-righteous, well-fed officials control through hypocritical rules.
  • During this period Rotherham attracted some criticism for their early adoption of paying players during a period later referred to as " Shamateurism " as most progressive clubs in essence paid their players while keeping up the pretence of being Amateur clubs.
  • Use of " shamateurism " as a term apparently originated during an English tour of Australia in 1887 88, a venture from which certain amateurs, notably George Vernon, Andrew Stoddart and Walter Read, were known to be profiting.
  • One of his first cases in the Court of Appeal was the libel trial of the former Welsh rugby international J . P . R . Williams in relation to " shamateurism " claims in " The Daily Telegraph ".
  • Social change after the Second World War led to a reaction against the cricketing concept of amateurism, often disparaged as " shamateurism ", and in 1963 all first-class cricketers became nominally professional as, in effect, " Players ".
  • In 1967, King criticized the United States Lawn Tennis Association ( USLTA ) in a series of press conferences, denouncing what she called the USLTA's practice of " shamateurism ", where top players were paid under the table to guarantee their entry into tournaments.
  • It was only last week that the National Basketball Shoe Association ended its annual convention and that the Coca-Cola Olympic torch relay ran right through my Manhattan neighborhood, two assurances that discipline and free market forces _ not shamateurism, phony idealism or liberal morality _ are finally cranking the engines of sport.
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