london2012.blogs.nytimes.com/.../
“We never go to opening ceremonies,” Phelps said, “because you are standing for so many hours. Being on your feet for five to six hours takes a lot out of you, and it does take days to recover.”
Between them, Michael Phelps and Natalie Coughlin have appeared in seven Olympics and not a single opening ceremony. Blame the schedule; the first swimming events take place the morning after the long night’s march.
In Beijing in 2008, participating athletes were required to line up hours before the 8 p.m. start, and Phelps and Coughlin, like most swimmers, are conditioned to stay off their feet the day before they race.
It must have been a liberal arts college. Any college worth its salt has Medieval Siege Engines as a required course. How else will you know the difference between a mangonel, onager, ballista and trebuchet?
:lmao: Well, my degree was from San Diego State University... :D
Thanks, Rob. :bitching: Now I have to look up what the heck a "mangonel", "onager", and "ballista" is. :bolt:
It must have been a liberal arts college. Any college worth its salt has Medieval Siege Engines as a required course. How else will you know the difference between a mangonel, onager, ballista and trebuchet?
:lmao: Well, my degree was from San Diego State University... :D
Thanks, Rob. :bitching: Now I have to look up what the heck a "mangonel", "onager", and "ballista" is. :bolt: