OT Pet peeve shot/discus

Husker.Wed._rivals

All-Conference
Feb 13, 2004
17,648
3,699
98
I don't think most sports writers know that in field events the discus, hammer and javelin are "thrown" and the shot is "put". The events are officially hammer throw, javelin throw, discus throw and shot put. So in the articles about our football recruits who also do field events they need to either say he throws the discus so many feet and puts the shot so many feet, or they need to say discus so many feet and shot so many feet. But mixing the two by saying discus so many feet and "shot put" so many feet tells me the author doesn't understand track and field terminology.
 

Huskerfan2112

All-Conference
Dec 7, 2009
2,677
2,004
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Thank you. I would of and could of said the same thing. Irregardless, its prolly a mute point.
 

HUSKERFAN66

All-Conference
Dec 8, 2004
21,194
3,546
113
Imagine that. Go to any track meet indoor or outdoor and they really don't cover field events but all the running events have announcers for even prelims. All they do is report the results of field events. But field events win a lot of team meets
 

RBigredMax

Redshirt
Mar 23, 2023
4,700
2
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And field events are more exciting and require more skill.
More exciting than the 100 or 4x100 relay? I think it’s tougher to be more exciting when they aren’t competing in the same moment? Rather they throw … measure … announce … next guy up.
 

Spartanhusker

All-Conference
May 29, 2001
22,566
1,856
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I will offer this up...for years, the BEST sporting event I attended each year is the Kansas State High School Track meet at the monstrosity called Cessna Stadium...6 classes, non stop action, so much energy...and I'm NOT a track guy...:)
 
Aug 27, 2006
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I will offer this up...for years, the BEST sporting event I attended each year is the Kansas State High School Track meet at the monstrosity called Cessna Stadium...6 classes, non stop action, so much energy...and I'm NOT a track guy...:)


 

MargotDeeper

Freshman
Feb 27, 2017
2,272
72
0
I don't think most sports writers know that in field events the discus, hammer and javelin are "thrown" and the shot is "put". The events are officially hammer throw, javelin throw, discus throw and shot put. So in the articles about our football recruits who also do field events they need to either say he throws the discus so many feet and puts the shot so many feet, or they need to say discus so many feet and shot so many feet. But mixing the two by saying discus so many feet and "shot put" so many feet tells me the author doesn't understand track and field terminology.
Hey OP, how's it going?


Here's another sentence using "put" I like to use to make these mothrfluckas understand.