Recent Surveys: 1) Who do you think is the greatest mix martial arts fighter of all time? 2) How do you feel about Capital Punishment?
more) more surveys by clo8275... Recent Comments: | Jump to Survey | I used to. As a matter of fact, I once loved it. It consumed me to the point I couldn't bear to miss a single lap every Sunday. But it has gotten so commercialized. And the rules and guidelines have changed so dramasticly in the last 5 years that I do not care about it what so ever now. In fact, I haven't watched so much as a lap since Rusty Wallace retired. I never imagined the sport would change so much to change my opinion the way it has. I used to be a die hard Davey Allison fan. When he died I started pulling for Rusty Wallace. The only reason I watched any racing after it went to Nextel Cup was Rusty. If he had a DNF, I turned it off. The sport I once loved started dying on February 18, 2001. If Dale Earnhardt were here, the sport would still be worth watching. Because he believed in true, fender-banging, wide open, hardcore racing. And he was the first to buck up when they would try to change any rules that might take something away from that. Yes, I'm a true Rusty fan. And yes, most of the ninety's I maliciously despised Earnhardt. ( Any fans from that era knows the extent of that rivalry ). But, as much as that rivalry meant to me, Earnhardt was the best. And the suits upstairs payed attention to his views. And he fought hard for the true sport of NASCAR. I will not only record in my little history book that Feb. 18, 2001 was the day Earnhardt died, but the day NASCAR died! | | Jump to Survey | 1. Mixed Martial Arts
2. College Football
3. NFL Football
I used to like NASCAR, but it's become so commercialized, and all the new rules and guidelines have caused it to become a different sport than the one I used to love. I haven't watched so much as a lap in 3 years. Plus, I missed the days when the driver would pull into the garage and climb under the car and work on it himself. Todays drivers probably couldn't change the oil | | Jump to Survey | Yes. A sport is a sport, regardless of the player/players gender. It's not that womens' sports are not recognized any less, it's just not been promoted as much. Plus, it's not been around as long. I'm glad organized sport's that allow women to compete at all levels are growing. I'm sure it's just as fun and challenging to women. Now, they are getting more opportunity. |
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