• Shuffle
    Toggle On
    Toggle Off
  • Alphabetize
    Toggle On
    Toggle Off
  • Front First
    Toggle On
    Toggle Off
  • Both Sides
    Toggle On
    Toggle Off
  • Read
    Toggle On
    Toggle Off
Reading...
Front

Card Range To Study

through

image

Play button

image

Play button

image

Progress

1/62

Click to flip

Use LEFT and RIGHT arrow keys to navigate between flashcards;

Use UP and DOWN arrow keys to flip the card;

H to show hint;

A reads text to speech;

62 Cards in this Set

  • Front
  • Back

Who was Canada's leading team captain in 1972 summit series?

Phil Esposito
Who scored the winning goal in the last 34 seconds of the final game on Sept 28 (summit series)?
Paul Henderson
What is considered NHL's "Goon" style of play?
During this time Canda could send in their best professional players to represent them. So Canada had to build an amateur team that hit anything that moved. It was Canada's reputation, like Don Cherries "Rock'em Sock'em"
One of the first western leaders to cross the Iron Curtain?
Pierre Trudeau

( He wanted sport to strengthen and unity nations and visited the USSR to use sport as a door for cultural exchange)

Who was Canada's media coverage for CBC Sports?

Foster Hewitt

Professional sport rose to dominance as the commercial sport model and professionalism replaced amateurism during this time era.
Between WW1 and WW2
The first national association for hockey, that had reps from different provinces and was considered an umbrella org in 1886?
Amateur Hockey Association of Canada
Who donated a trophy in 1893 as a challenge cup for amateurs?
Governor Lord Standley

What was AAUC;s strict amateur code in 1909?

Gentlemanly conduct of play without pay. Once a pro, always a pro
What were the two models of hockey

1) Community not-for-profit Teams
-amateur
2) Full-Market Capitalist Teams
-professional,profit-driven, players as wage

How did they brand NHL Hockey?

1) Media and Communication:
-instill fan loyalty as consumers
-attracted market like the Maple leaf gardens to sell tickets

2) Training camps

3) Indoor arenas:
-artificail ice= extended hockey season
4) expansion:
-NHL took hold of the Standley cup
-Boston, NY, Pittsburgh, detroit, and Chicogo stepped up

5) Rule changes:
- sped up game for spectator excitement
-playoffs for Stanley Cup

6) The media voice:
-Foster Hewitt, hockey night in canada

Who was the IOC president during 1952-1972. Who developed a rigid system that defined the amateur status (Purist Amateurism).
Avery Brundage
This Athlete had to give up a huge gift (car) from her admirer's so that she couldn't give up her amateur status.
Barbra Anne Scott
Was the IOC president during 1972-1980 who felt that athletes could make endorsements, but still prohibited pro players from the olympics?
Lord Killanin
This athlete won the Boston Marathon, and there was controversy from collapsing during an event.
Tom Longboat
One of Canada's leading athlete's of his time. Won Gold in 100, 200m in Amsterdam 1928
Percy Williams
Women's athletics was on probation with the IOC during which Olympics?
Amsterdam Olympics 1928
This champion athlete figure skater reflected ideologies of femininity and was represented more for her beauty than her talent.

Barbara Ann Scott

This female athlete was celebrated as Canada's Athlete of the century. Also a big ski promoter in BC and was endorsed/sponsored for.
Nancy Greene
This Olympics, hosted by Canada was know for its horrible over spending and budgeting that caused many generations to pay for the debt.
Montreal 1976

A sport model based on socialism, class solidarity, egalitarianism,& inclusive participation. hoped that it would help build workers' culture and achieve reform.

Workers' Sport

Termed the "Red Olympics"
-Inclusive age, sex, and ability levels
-revolutionary pageantry
-mass gymnastics
-cultural groups
- united in solidarity and strength
-based on socialist ideologies and goals
What is the WSAC?
Workers' Sports Association of Canada
-national umbrella for working class, -was renamed the Canadian Amateur Sports Federation
What was the Asahi's style of play in baseball?
Brain ball
-strategy
-skill
-played like a chess master
- would bunt the ball because they couldn't hit, and were very fast.
Ethnocentrism
seeing the world within ones own cultural sphere, judgment from that as well, which could lead to many misunderstandings. Termed by Franz Boas
-means the opposite of cultural relativism
Cultural Relativism

To promote seeing each culture as unique and value differences, which takes a willingness to go beyond owns understanding in order to break barriers.

The nuclear family

-parents were friends with their children
-family togetherness
-father had a more prominent role rearing children and giving advice along with mothers
The typical leave it to Beaver family

A doctor during the baby boom generation who thought that playing and treating your child as individuals was necessary and good fostering for a healthy generation
Dr. Spock
who was the founder of WAAF
Alexandrine Gibb
voted against women participating in the olympics.

Arthur Stanley Lamb

Coach of the edmonton grads
John Percy page or father page
Heroe for women in the 1920's for track and field events, placed 1st in the 100 and 200 event. One of six women to compete in the 1928 amsterdam olympics
Bobby rosenfelt
first time supporter of men sport, and he promoted the edmonton grads. became their business man
Deacon White
edmonton grads were the best basketball team to ever set foot on a basketball court
james naismith
took on the IOC for international olympics, formed own organization to have women play sports.
ellis milliot
what were some significant post war demographics during the baby boom?

1. accelerated birthrate
2. Play in the suburb- children
3. Childrens health- iron lung helped them breathe, better health care, and dental hygiene.
4. Television- focused leisure time around tv. Strategically aimed at children
5. Rise of new consumer goods? child market, mass advertising aimed at youth.
6. organized sport and rec

explain how and why baby boomers had different experiences of health, sport and leisure than their parents generation.
health, iron lung with children which helped children breath due to polio outbreak, pt and ot. Organized sport and recreation due to fear to juvenile deliquency and huge population increase. Leisure parents and kids both had more free time. Play in the suburbs, t.v.
How did dads role change after the baby boom for families
dads now pals to kids, played more role in household. Assumed the role of bbq'er. now considered manly
how did healthcare change the death rate per birth change during the baby boom change.
went from 1-4 deaths to 1-1000
how many women were pregnant during the baby boom?
1 in 5 ages 20-29
how many canoes, men, and provinces/territories represented in may 24 to sep 4th of 1967.

10 canoes, 100 men, 8 prov, 2 territories.

How long was the canoe trip?
104 days, 3300+ miles
what were the 2 types of state involvement before ww11?

high performance sport- legalization of competitive boxing
promote mass fitness and health- bc pro rec promoting mass participation in sports, and aerobics, and ontario putting money towards community halls and sports fields for activity.

examples of states involvment today?
participaction- federal
kinsmen- municipal
own the podium- federal
phys ed in schools
who invented the welfare state concept and what is it?
john meynard keynes, positive state intervention: emphasis of spending to get more productivity which would lead to consumers spending more. priming pump
what was the theme in 1967 for canadian olympics games

unity through sport
-voyageur
-mountaineers

designed advertisement and commercialized the winter carnival.
frank abbott

Welfare State

A Welfare State is a concept of government in which the state plays a key role in the protection and promotion of the economic and social well-being of its citizens

Richard riots

Riot in 1955 in Montreal named after Maurice Richard following a violent altercation where he hit a linesmen and was suspended for the season; claimed to be motivated by his French Canadian ethnicity

Hilda Ranscombe

Dominated womens hockey in the 1930s (won 350 games, lost 3)

The Matchless Six

Bobby Rosenfeld, Jane Thompson, Ethel Smith, Myrtle Cook, Ethel Catherwood, Jane Bell

Myrtle Cook establish and led these organizations

Toronto Ladies Athletic Club, Canadian Ladies Athletic Club (Director of Athletics), formed Mercury Athletics Club, Journalist for Montreal Star and on every British Empire Games Committee and Olympic Committee from 1932 to 1972

Jesse Owens

Black man who won 4 gold medals at the berlin games (tore down previous assumptions of inferiority toward his race)

WAAF first president

Alexandrine Gibb

Golden Age (4)

Age of time where positive triumphs for women and african americans happened. 1932 IOC had a vote of 16-6 in favor of female competition; Ellis Milliot and the FSFI (internation women's sporting federation) won the right to compete in track and field in 1936; Occured post WW1 and Pre WW2; WAAF established system of medical supervision for all women athletes

Why was 1910 an important year for hockey

Players and teams signed reservation contracts binding them to teams and cemented professionalism in hockey; legitimized professional sport (created sense of moral responsibility

When and where did the first world championship take place?

Montreal winter carnival 1883

What did the upper class do to exploit Winter Carnivals?

Helped them disguise social inequality and carefully reshaped the reputation of the city; also brought in lots of money

What did France, US, and Canada try to do at the 1936 Olympics?

Tried to boycott the Berlin Olympics in reaction to the propaganda and militarization of Germany

What did the Edmonton Grads achieve?

North American sports team with the best winning percentage of all time; won first women's world title for basketball in 1924; Declared a national historic event in 1976; women's sport rights

WAAF 4 points

Formed in 1926; to make possible new opportunities (particularly in international competition); worked to rebut sterotype that vigorous physical activity and intense competition was "unwomanly"; set up a system of medical supervision for all women atheltes and forged alliances with supportive men who dominated the AAUC

When was track and field first introduced (on a trial basis)?

1928 Olympics in Amsterdam