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Has anyone ever used one while officiating? AND, does anyone know where I would be able to get one before the start of next year?
I would like to wear one while officiating to see how many miles a night it is wunnin up and down the floor.
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1-2-3 points I gotta get across, 1)Don't 2)Make me 3)Go off! |
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Believe it or not, WalMart carries pedometers as well as any local running shop. Many sporting goods stores sell them as well.
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"Golf is deceptively simple and endlessly complicated. It satisfies the soul and frustrates the intellect. It is at the same time rewarding and maddening-it is without a doubt the greatest game mankind has ever invented." Arnold Palmer |
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I'd bet that thest things would be horribily inaccurate for reffing.
I beleive that most, if not all, of them work by counting strides and mulitplying by the length of your stride (a setting that you give it). For runners, walkers, and joggers, that is probably a close assumption. For officiating, the stride would vary so much, you could be 2-3x off. |
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How about a GPS? Actually, for soccer it might work, but basketball courts are too small, and GPSs don't really work inside.
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It is hard enough to remember my opinions, without also remembering my reasons for them! - Friedrich Nietzsche - |
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I did it once. I don't remember what the mileage was, but I remember that it was quite a bit less than the 5 miles somebody in my association was suggesting. (I believe Earl Stromm implied that distance in his book, as well).
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"It is not enough to do your best; you must know what to do, and then do your best." - W. Edwards Deming |
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I may still try it. I will keep you all informed. Heck, they may not even think it is a worthy research project.
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1-2-3 points I gotta get across, 1)Don't 2)Make me 3)Go off! |
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I dunno - that (or some version, perhaps sans pedometer) seems like a pretty darn good research topic to me. I definately need to lose some weight, and obviously reffing helps. However, basketball is often something along the lines of: sprint to new lead, stop, walk across the lane, call a foul, stop, jog to the table, jog to C, stand for a minute to watch free throws, run down to new C, stop . . . it's not the very model of a modern aerobic exercise. I'd be interested in seeing if reffing is, indeed, an aerobic activity (wireless pulse monitors, perhaps) and, if not, how much of an impact on health does it have.
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"To win the game is great. To play the game is greater. But to love the game is the greatest of all." |
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Agreed
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Here is the sad news, all that running and have you really gone anywhere? |
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The technology varies, bus most pedometers use some type of "g" sensor to measure the number of steps or strides you take. You then multiply this by the length of your normal stride to get approximate distance.
I tried wearing my wife's pedometer for several games this season & averaged roughly 3500 strides per game. It takes me an average of 12 strides to make a lead/trail transition or vice versa, which on an average court is approx. 60 feet - translating into 5 feet per stride. Say I knock off 500 walking strides for misc. activities not in transition, this works out to approx. 15,000 feet, or just under 3 miles per game - 90% of which is done in sprints. Add to that the 500 strides at a normal gait of 2.5 feet and you get almost another 1/4 mile. Not a bad workout for 75-90 minutes....now I know why those double-headers wear me out! |
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