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  2. List of podcasts hosted by professional athletes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_podcasts_hosted_by...

    In the mid-to-late 2010s, professional athletes began to host their own podcasts, often covering the sports they played and leagues they were involved in. Sometimes, these player-hosts were still active upon the launch of their podcasts. Professional athlete-hosted podcasts began to become more widespread in the 2020s.

  3. Podcasts hosted by professional athletes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Podcasts_hosted_by...

    The New York Times writer Jeremy Gordon commented that "the premise of so many athlete-run podcasts" involves how the podcasts "demystify what these people do, allowing talented figures to break down their talent-utilization processes", citing various examples (including Green's podcast, Redick's The Old Man and the Three, Matt Barnes and Stephen Jackson's All the Smoke, and Brandon Marshall ...

  4. Sports podcast - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sports_podcast

    In October 2004, Sam Coutin began The Sports Pod and shortly after he launched the My Sports Radio podcast network. [1] [2] By 2006, shows on Coutin's network were achieving 500,000 downloads each month. [2] ESPN was an early adopter of the podcast format, launching their first in 2005. [3]

  5. History of physical training and fitness - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_physical...

    Athletes of Ancient Greece widely practiced physical training. However, after the original Olympic Games were banned by the Romans in 394, such culturally significant athletic competitions were not held again until the 19th Century. In 1896 the Olympic Games revived after a gap of some 1,500 years.

  6. Running in Ancient Greece - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Running_in_Ancient_Greece

    Attic kylix with athlete cleansing himself with a strigil, 430-20 BC. The ancient Greeks also valued rest after exercising. After a workout, athletes used their aryballos, a special bottle of oil, and a strigil, which is a curved stick. They would rub the oil on their skin and then scrape it off using the strigil.

  7. Leonidas of Rhodes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leonidas_of_Rhodes

    Competing in the Olympic Games of the 154th Olympiad in 164 BC, the last of the "golden age" of the ancient Games, [4] Leonidas captured the crown in three separate foot races: the stadion, the diaulos, and the hoplitodromos. He repeated this feat in the three subsequent Olympics, in 160 BC, in 156 BC, and finally in 152 BC at the age of 36.

  8. Sostratus of Sicyon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sostratus_of_Sicyon

    Sostratus of Sicyon (Ancient Greek: Σώστρατος, Sostratos) was an Olympic athlete and pankratiast from Sicyon in Ancient Greece, known for his style of fighting, bending or breaking his opponents fingers. He won the pankration crown at three successive Olympiads in 364, 360 and 356 BC.

  9. Theagenes of Thasos - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Theagenes_of_Thasos

    The Olympian: A Tale of Ancient Hellas by E.S. Kraay, ISBN 1439201676; The Pugilist at Rest: stories by Thom Jones, ISBN 0-316-47302-2; In the 2011 film Warrior (Dir. Gavin O'Connor) Tom Hardy’s character of Tommy Conlon is said to have tried to surpass Theagenes’ record of fighting victories.