Hey everyone, once again I'm going to go off topic and choose something interesting I saw relating to science this week, I use the term science very loosely. I'm going to push the boundaries on what comes under science, I'm going to discuss the implications of pitching in baseball can have on quarterbacks throwing techniques. It must slip under the science genre, it has physics and stuff in it!
The show 'Sports Science', you know that awesome segment on ESPN that shows how amazing certain sports player are, discussed how being a baseball pitcher in the past has affected two current quarterbacks. They claim two elite quarterbacks, Russell Wilson and Colin Kaepernick, the elite term being very debatable and an argument for another time (all Kaepernick can do is run and kiss his biceps if he gets a touch down (both not in a normal quarterbacks job description).
What Kaepernick does have is a pretty fast arm, in high school he clocked a 92 mph pitch and in the NFL combine he threw the second fastest throw recorded in the past seven combines at 59 mph. This extra speed can be linked to the increased rotation of the shoulder of baseball pitchers, 50% more compared to quarterbacks. Personally Kaepernick should stick to baseball and no that is not a personal opinion caused by what Kaepernick and his running game did to the Packers in the finals in 2012.
Russell Wilson, a far better quarterback than Kaepernick, brings a lot more from his relief pitcher days. Pitchers hold their elbows twice as far back as quarterbacks and cock their elbows 13 degrees less. Wilson holds his elbow quite a lot further back than normal quarterbacks and cocks his elbow five degrees less which creates a longer lever and more torque. Baseball pitchers, and Russell Wilson, hold their shoulders 10 degrees further back than the normal quarterback which creates more distance and therefore a higher traveling velocity on release. Wilson is definitely the better quarterback, all Kaepernick can do is pass faster which is great if the pass actually goes to the right person.
See lots of sciencey words were used like torque so this is obviously a blog about science! Quarterbacks in the pro footballs hall of fame, from both high school and college, are made up of 60% of ex or current baseball pitchers showing pitching can definitely create excellent quarterbacks. Hope you learned a lot today, the main fact being that Kaepernick is overated.
Russell WIlson in mid throw
Pretty much a baseball pitcher right there, ok I lied I
personally see no difference compared to other
quarterbacks but the science is there!
Thanks for reading everyone :)
Sunday, 21 December 2014
Sunday, 14 December 2014
First world problems: Athletes wasting money on stem cells?
Hello everyone, now that first assignment is done we don't have to do anything until the day the second assignment is due (that was a joke so don't worry guys!). This week I'm going to go off track and choose my own topic, this will probably happen every week I get the option.
The use of stem cells to heal injuries in the NFL has resurfaced this week so I thought I'd chuck my two cents in on the topic. Basically hundreds of injured NFL players are spending thousands of dollars, both in the US and overseas, on getting stem cells taken from their own bodies and getting it injected into injured knees, hips etc. The problem is this use of stem cell in injury recovery has never been properly studied so therefore unproven and may not even work. NFL teams refuse to pay the bill and hundreds of NFL players are having to pay for something that may not work.
Many are coming out and arguing that the NFL should fund a study on the affects this procedure has on athletes much like they did on the use of steroids and the long term affects of concussions and head trauma. This is much different to the other examples though, no one is suggesting harm can come through stem cell injection. The only issue is on the NFL players wallets which doesn't seem like much of a problem. These players get millions of dollars a year to train and play a handful of games so it's easy to dismiss the issue but still I wouldn't like to go to the doctor, and spend the same percentage of my wage, and be given orange peels to heal my broken leg (I'm assuming this doesn't work but maybe I've just come across a new cure for broken legs!).
With such a competitive sport any period on the sideline can lead to losing your starting job or even losing your spot in the team because some other player has shined in your role which is why this new procedure has got so many trying it. There are even rumors that Peyton Manning, yes the Peyton Manning arguably the best quarterback playing at the moment (a stupid argument because Aaron Rodgers is clearly number 1), had stem cells injected into his neck which had kept him out of the 2011 season. It seems anyone will give this new procedure a go in the right circumstances but I don't know if a loss in money for athletes is enough of a reason for the NFL to pay for an extensive study into the issue.
Above is of course the infamous Johnny Football doing his
money symbol, thought it was relevant here
That's my rant over
Bye bye for now everyone
The use of stem cells to heal injuries in the NFL has resurfaced this week so I thought I'd chuck my two cents in on the topic. Basically hundreds of injured NFL players are spending thousands of dollars, both in the US and overseas, on getting stem cells taken from their own bodies and getting it injected into injured knees, hips etc. The problem is this use of stem cell in injury recovery has never been properly studied so therefore unproven and may not even work. NFL teams refuse to pay the bill and hundreds of NFL players are having to pay for something that may not work.
Many are coming out and arguing that the NFL should fund a study on the affects this procedure has on athletes much like they did on the use of steroids and the long term affects of concussions and head trauma. This is much different to the other examples though, no one is suggesting harm can come through stem cell injection. The only issue is on the NFL players wallets which doesn't seem like much of a problem. These players get millions of dollars a year to train and play a handful of games so it's easy to dismiss the issue but still I wouldn't like to go to the doctor, and spend the same percentage of my wage, and be given orange peels to heal my broken leg (I'm assuming this doesn't work but maybe I've just come across a new cure for broken legs!).
With such a competitive sport any period on the sideline can lead to losing your starting job or even losing your spot in the team because some other player has shined in your role which is why this new procedure has got so many trying it. There are even rumors that Peyton Manning, yes the Peyton Manning arguably the best quarterback playing at the moment (a stupid argument because Aaron Rodgers is clearly number 1), had stem cells injected into his neck which had kept him out of the 2011 season. It seems anyone will give this new procedure a go in the right circumstances but I don't know if a loss in money for athletes is enough of a reason for the NFL to pay for an extensive study into the issue.
Above is of course the infamous Johnny Football doing his
money symbol, thought it was relevant here
That's my rant over
Bye bye for now everyone
Sunday, 7 December 2014
Lets get ready to RUMBLE
Hello and welcome to a much awaited blog post, a blog
post pitting a water fluoridation enthusiast against a water fluoridation
opposition. We’ll call this blog post ‘Rumble in the Water System’ (I feel like
only boxing enthusiasts will get that one). Both have heavy weight arguments in this
controversial topic. In the anti-corner we have Barry Groves wearing the scholarly
work ‘Fluoride: Drinking Ourselves to Death?: The Scientific Argument Against
Water Fluoridation’ and in the black corner we have Bernard Turnock wearing the
scholarly work ‘Public Health: What It Is and How It Works’.
Groves, from the anti-corner, comes out strong with an immediate
heavy right hook arguing that the problem with fluoridated water does not come
from the consuming of drinking water containing fluoride but instead the extra
absorption from bathing and consumption of beverages and food created using
fluoridated water (Groves, 2001). He follows this up
with a speedy one-two combo referring to Dr Julian Andelman, a professor of
water chemistry, who found that more fluoride is absorbed through showering and
the washing of clothes than through drinking it (Groves, 2001). He backs this one-two combo up with a
body shot stating that the US EPA have found similar results but have not
commissioned a published study (Groves, 2001). The bell rings and
the first round is over, a solid first round performance from the anti-corner (Groves, 2001). Barry Groves is
obviously fighting for the anti-corner with a belief that the extra absorption
of fluoride through other means rather than just drinking the water is a problem greatly overlooked and damaging to health.
Turnock, from the pro-corner, comes out to begin the
second quarter with a strong bolo punch arguing that fluoridated water positively affects
those of lower socioeconomic statuses (Turnock, 2009). He follows this up
with a check hook stating that people with a low socioeconomic statuses benefit
from having to pay less dental care services with fluoridated water. He
counters the argument that some communities get enough fluoride through
consuming beverages and foods created in pro fluoride communities with a quick jab
arguing that people of the poorer classes
do not consume as much of those products as people from the middle class due to having less money. He was stunned by a counter argument but came back strong in
the second half of the round. He obviously views fluoridation of water as a pro due to the positive affects on those who are less well off economically.
This one is to tough to call we'll have to go to the judges on this one (the judges are you guys, there weren't actually people judging these arguments).
Groves, B. (2001). Fluoride: Drinking Ourselves to
Death?: The Scientific Argument Against Water Fluoridation . Dublin: Gill
& Macmillan Ltd.
Turnock, B. (2009). Public Health: What It Is and
How It Works. Burlington: Jones & Bartlett Publishers.
Thanks for coming to this heavy weight blog, hope you enjoyed yourself
Bye bye now :)
Bye bye now :)
Sunday, 30 November 2014
Week 2- The Research Begins
HELLO!
Welcome to week 2 of this amazing blog, the discussion
being on the riveting topic of my search for information for assignment 1 for
this course. I’m going to be arrogant and act like my research for the
information was almost perfect, which is not far from the truth (awkward if I
don’t do well in this assignment).
To be honest I have the research of information sussed, I
wish I had a cool acronym for my process but the lack of vowels ruin it! I looked
through all the normal areas, Google Scholar, Jstor, and Google Books, Google
Books of course being my favorite. You don’t know how many research papers I’ve
done just using Google Books, naughty I know.
I found a lot of relevant information in both google
scholar and Jstor using simple search terms. It wasn’t until I started diving
into all those viciously long google books though that I find the amazing
stuff, I use the word amazing loosely I am talking about fluoridation after all.
From there I went back to Goggle Scholar and Jstor and used more refined search
terms to find more information. I also utilised normal google in search for
further information on sites like Wikipedia which I could use to search more
thoroughly among scholarly work. My normal strategy thrived with such a researched
topic as fluoridation.
What I could’ve done better is not go through so many
articles and books in search for information; I wasted a good hour of tv
watching time on that, ok I lied I was watching tv the whole time. I’ll give
you a tip I’ve learned of when going through copious amounts of sources and
that is when your researching about fluoridation and all of a sudden the
sources are about the effects of mandarins on gorillas you know you’ve gone too
far (for anyone unsure that didn’t actually happen in my research but you get
my point).
It’s time to say goodbye from me as it’s time for me to
sort my fantasy basketball team for tomorrow.
Bye bye now,
Joel
Thursday, 20 November 2014
An introductory into the amazing life of Joel Toon
Hey everyone, my names Joel and this is of course my blog for
Communications in Science (summer school edition). Each week this blog will
provide you with intriguing blogs on my
thoughts about the science world, I'm actually quite jealous you guys get to
read such an amazing blog every week! This week is an introduction to the one and only me.
I'm 22 years of age and a male, hence the boy name. Originally born in
Auckland, I eventually graced Palmerston North with my presence as a young
chap, and when I say young I was a little kid with no choice in the matter. Of
course I still kept my sport affiliations with the Auckland sports teams
though, no offense to Hurricane supporters but Blues are just so much better.
I've lived in Palmerston North ever since bar a two year absence when I did law
in Wellington, which I absolutely hated hence the change in degree.
I love my sports and even though this information is not relevant and
no one reading this blog is actually going to care I'm going to list my sports
teams anyway. I'm a big fan of the Greenbay Packers, LA Kings, Boston Celtics,
Essendon Bombers, Wests Tigers, of course the Blues and any New Zealand
national side but namely All Blacks and the Kiwis. And if anyone doesn't like
those teams, in the words of Chris Brown,
"Haters keep on hating, cause somebody's gotta do it."
I'm not a
Chris Brown fan I just googled 'quotes about haters' if anyone was about to
make conclusions about my musical tastes.
Now onto the serious stuff, I'm currently studying Health Science with
a major in Sports and Exercise with the intent of doing a Physio degree after I
finish. I love the gym and love the idea of helping people with serious health
issues live a normal life. I've loved the gym ever since I lied about
frequenting the gym to get a job eventually making my self go all the time, mostly
at ridiculous hours of the morning.
If I'm going to be honest I only took this paper because a
communication paper is required for my degree but as I started to look at the course
content I realised this this course will at least help me in future science courses. Communication in general will be vital in my
planned future career with constant communication with patients a must. I would say my communication skills are average with no obvious
strengths or weaknesses. That being said I really don't like public speaking but can still do it if absolutely necessary.
Bye bye until next week. Remember if you miss this blog that much you
can just reread it over and over again!
Thanks for reading everyone.
Joel Toon signing out, that sounded so much cooler in my head!
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