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Most Skilled Sport...


DDBowdoin
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I'd say hockey. They play 2-3 games a week getting hit full force while ice skating. Not to mention having to be aware of where everyone is on the ice at all times.

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909D3 with 10.5 degrees of loft and a 45 inch Fujikura Rombax 6Z08, x-flex
909F3 15* with a stock Diamana Blue
FT 18* with an Aldila NV
X-forged ('07), 3-PW with Project X 6.0 CG12, 53/11, and 58* with DSG Red X2, 33"All with Lamkin Crossline Full Cord. (except the putter of...

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Must say I agree with you. I'm a good athlete that can play a lot of sports well and I grew up playing pond hockey in Michigan and to this day it's the most difficult sport for me. Tennis on a hot day could be considered, especially when you consider most guys are burnt out at the tender age of 26 or 27. Gymnastics maybe. Not rugby or football in my opinion, it takes a high level of athleticism but nothing too 'difficult' about any of the specific movements or skills.

Driver - TaylorMade R7 425
3-Wood - Callaway Original Steelhead
Irons - Ben Hogan 3-PW Apex FTX, Rifle 6.5
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Putter - Scotty 2004 Newport Beach 1.5

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the strongest dude pound for pound to walk thru stanford now wears red on sundays

Driver: Adams 9015 proto (ozik matrix shaft)
3w: TM V-Steel 15* grafalloy blue (42 inches)
3-pw: Miura Tournament Blades w/ rifle 5.5
wedges: 588 Clevelands 47* 51* 56*
putter: Scotty Cameron oil can (97)

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the strongest dude pound for pound to walk thru stanford now wears red on sundays

What's your point, exactly?

^See what I did there, with the capital letters and completed words?
Whats in the bag:

Driver: Nike Ignite 460cc 10.5* Fujikura Ignite reg flex
Fairway woods: Howson tour master power series 3,5 woods
Irons: MacGregor M675 3-PW DG S300 Wedges: Mizuno MP-R Black Nickel 54.10, 60.05Putter: Pinfire Golf P4Ball: Titleist NXT TourHome Course:http://www.golfarmagh.co.uk/...
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Every sport is skillful in a certian way, so the question needs to be changed. Other than golf, what is the sport most difficult to turn pro in? Which the obvious answer would be tennis. Baseball you could rely on defense and speed, football you could rely on strength or good hands, hockey you could rely on defense, but tennis is very similar to golf. There are way too many shots you need to be able to perform at any given time, drop shots, top spin smashes, cross court winners, overheads, lobs, etc, and with some one like roger federer on the other side of the court, you might as well go back to bed.

Whats in the bag?
909 D3 8.5* UST Mamiya Tour Green X
909 F3 13* UST ATTAS X
909 F3 18* UST ATTAS X
909 H 21* DG S300 735cm chrome 5-PW DG S300 54.08 SM 58.04 SM 64.07 SM Studio Select Newport 2 Sonic Blue Dot...

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  • 3 weeks later...
baseball - hitting a curve ball,

mix martial arts requires endurance, taking punishments, technique, power, quickness and aggressiveness.

Basketball making a 3 point jump shot under pressure or at the buzzard.

Golf I pick golfer just watch this video

Titleist 910 D2 9.5 Driver
Titleist 910 F15 & 21 degree fairway wood
Titleist 910 hybrid 24 degree
Mizuno Mp33 5 - PW
52/1056/1160/5

"Yonex ADX Blade putter, odyssey two ball blade putter, both  33"

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What's your point, exactly?

yea whats ur point? g2g ttyl

Driver: Adams 9015 proto (ozik matrix shaft)
3w: TM V-Steel 15* grafalloy blue (42 inches)
3-pw: Miura Tournament Blades w/ rifle 5.5
wedges: 588 Clevelands 47* 51* 56*
putter: Scotty Cameron oil can (97)

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It has to be golf.
If it was easy, anyone could practice on their own without the need for a team to support them, organise their own schedule, rely on ones self and then go out and make 3 or 4 million a year. Easy. You don't have to be 6 foot 6 or weigh 20 stone.

In the race of life, always back self-interest. At least you know it's trying.

 

 

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I believe it was said on the first page, but I believe the modern pentathlon is it. This includes shooting, fencing, a 200 meter freestyle swim, show jumping, and a cross-country run. The only event that you are competing against someone else is fencing, the rest of it is you against the course, each requiring varied skills.

In the bag:
Driver: Rapture V2, 9 degree, stiff shaft
Fairway Woods: X-Hot 3 wood
Hybrid: 3H
Irons: J36 PC 4-PW Project X 6.0 Shafts, FlightedWedges: CG14, 50 54 and 58 degree Putter: Guerin Rife 2 Bar with Winn grip B330S Pro V1x

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I believe it was said on the first page, but I believe the modern pentathlon is it. This includes shooting, fencing, a 200 meter freestyle swim, show jumping, and a cross-country run. The only event that you are competing against someone else is fencing, the rest of it is you against the course, each requiring varied skills.

True - and you can compete against the other seventeen people on the planet who do it, not the tens of millions who play golf.

To be one of the world's best golfesr you have to be better than many millions. To be the 100th best pole-vaulter in the world you might be the better than maybe only thousands, if that many.

In the race of life, always back self-interest. At least you know it's trying.

 

 

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SO besides golf, because that is the obvious answer, what is the most technically skilled sport in the world.

True - and you can compete against the other seventeen people on the planet who do it, not the tens of millions who play golf.

Shorty, the OP eliminated Golf from the list, so it wasn't even a consideration with my post.

In the bag:
Driver: Rapture V2, 9 degree, stiff shaft
Fairway Woods: X-Hot 3 wood
Hybrid: 3H
Irons: J36 PC 4-PW Project X 6.0 Shafts, FlightedWedges: CG14, 50 54 and 58 degree Putter: Guerin Rife 2 Bar with Winn grip B330S Pro V1x

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Shorty, the OP eliminated Golf from the list, so it wasn't even a consideration with my post.

No worries, mate.

I only mentioned golf because it helps underscore how hard our game is, despite how difficult others might be and the variety of skills needed to do them

In the race of life, always back self-interest. At least you know it's trying.

 

 

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My fellow coworkers and I were having a heated debate at lunch around this tricky topic.

I think the best answer is not a single sport but an "event"--the decathalon, which is a combination of various track and field events, as we all know. For years, the decathalon Champion in the Olympics has been hailed as the "World's Greatest Athlete", for this reason---it tests all physical skills and strenths in a competition with others. For a single sport, hockey is not a bad choice, but I have to recommend my favorite sport---basketball, with this proviso---it is a great physical test, especially for those who do not play "under the basket", like Shaq. Take players like LeBron or Kobe and you have real athletes, who have to possess leaping ability, speed, quickness, stamina, and intelligence. Some may quibble with that last item, but let me tell you, basketball requires constant awareness and the ability to adjust, at a split second, to changing conditions on the floor. That is why I love "March Madness"!

Mitch Pezdek------Dash Aficionado and Legend in My Own Mind

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I'm gonna say hitting a baseball is the hardest thing in sports. You can teach anyone to play golf but not everyone can hit a baseball. To the op, isn't hitting a golf ball i single skill also, yea, putting and chipping are slightly different but your still hitting a ball. Plus, there are a lot of fat golfers too. I'm just trying to say that if you would have put golf one, i don't understand why you wouldn't put baseball as number 2.

Back in their day, Bryon Nelson and Joe DiMaggio had discussions about what was more difficut---hitting a golf ball that just sits there and waits for you to get ready and swing or baseball, where the ball comes in dancing and spinning and daring you to "guess right" as to what it is finally going to do when it gets to homeplate. Byron made it clear that he thought hitting a baseball was much more difficult. Joe made it clear that trying to make the little golf ball go where you want to is plenty difficult, and frustrating---"you have to go and play your foul balls in golf". They shook hands and agreed that both were really difficult to be good at----the man who hit safely in 56 consecutive games, and the Texan with the "caddy dip"golf swing who won 11 consecutive PGA Tour tournaments. Both of those records, of course, stand to this day. If they came to that mutual agreement, who am I to argue with their conclusion?

Mitch Pezdek------Dash Aficionado and Legend in My Own Mind

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Hockey, Lacrosse... both extremely fast paced, require great conditioning and ability to anticipate the action.

Golf... so many different things to learn... 1 person aspect, so precise.

the debate could go on... we'll all never agree

someone made a good argument for surfing...
My Clubs: Callaway FT-i Tour LCG 9.5° w/ Matrix Ozik Xcon 6 stiff; Sonartec GS Tour 14° w/ Graphite Design Red Ice 70 stiff; Adams Idea Pro 2h(18°) & 3h(20°) w/ Aldila VS Proto 80 stiff; Adams Idea Pro Forged 4-PW w/ TT Black Gold stiff; Cleveland CG12 DSG RTG 52°-10° & 58°-10°; Odyssey...
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Anyone mention tennis? Your all by yourself like golf, you need to be in top shape, make sure your mind is mentally though, make the right split second decisions, and execute. Its alot harder when your in a match too, just like golf.
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Back in their day, Bryon Nelson and Joe DiMaggio had discussions about what was more difficut---hitting a golf ball that just sits there and waits for you to get ready and swing or baseball, where the ball comes in dancing and spinning and daring you to "guess right" as to what it is finally going to do when it gets to homeplate. Byron made it clear that he thought hitting a baseball was much more difficult. Joe made it clear that trying to make the little golf ball go where you want to is plenty difficult, and frustrating---"you have to go and play your foul balls in golf". They shook hands and agreed that both were really difficult to be good at----the man who hit safely in 56 consecutive games, and the Texan with the "caddy dip"golf swing who won 11 consecutive PGA Tour tournaments. Both of those records, of course, stand to this day. If they came to that mutual agreement, who am I to argue with their conclusion?

Nice story, i never heard it before.

Anyway, my comment was in reference to the OP. He said, "I think that hitting a baseball at MLB speeds is the single most difficult activity in sports but its a singular skill only. You can be overweight in baseball and still be a star, Ortiz and Fielder and good examples. Baseball players can also be specialists and its ok if you falter in some areas." Your story helped support my case. If the OP thinks golf is the sport that requires the most skill, then askes which sport besides golf takes the most skill, i'd say he almost has to pick baseball. Rulling out baseball because of some fat players like Ortiz is the same as ruling out golf because of John Daley. Thats pretty much what i was trying to say.
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