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  2. List of largest sports contracts - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_largest_sports...

    This is a list of the largest sports contracts. These figures include signing bonuses but exclude options, buyouts , and the endorsement deals. This list does not reflect the highest annual salaries or career earnings, only the top 100 largest contracts and thus is largely limited to athletes in team sports and auto racing .

  3. Sports medicine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sports_medicine

    Sports medicine is a branch of medicine that deals with physical fitness and the treatment and prevention of injuries related to sports and exercise. Although most sports teams have employed team physicians for many years, it is only since the late 20th century that sports medicine emerged as a distinct field of health care.

  4. Reserve clause - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reserve_clause

    To control player salary demands, team owners used a standardized contract for the players, in which the major variable was salary. The players unsuccessfully tried to fight the growing reserve system by forming a union, the Brotherhood, and founding their own Players' League in 1890, but the Player's League lasted just one season.

  5. Orthopaedic sports medicine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Orthopaedic_sports_medicine

    Orthopedic Sports Medicine is a subspecialty of orthopedic medicine and sports medicine. The word orthopaedic derives from "ortho" which is the Greek root for "straight" and "pais" which is the Greek root for child. During the early history of orthopaedic medicine, orthopaedists used braces, among other things, to make a child "straight." [1]

  6. Substitution (sport) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Substitution_(sport)

    Free substitution or rolling substitution is a rule in some sports that allows players to enter and leave the game for other players many times during the course of a game, generally during a time-out or other break in live play; and for coaches to bring in and take out players an unlimited number of times.

  7. Substitution - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Substitution

    Substitution (law), the replacement of a judge; Substitution (sport), where a sports team is able to change one player for another during a match; Substitution therapy or opiate replacement therapy; Import substitution industrialization, a trade and economic policy; Penal substitution, a theory of the atonement within Christian theology

  8. Orthopedic surgery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Orthopedic_surgery

    In the United States, orthopedic surgeons have typically completed four years of undergraduate education and four years of medical school and earned either a Doctor of Medicine (MD) or Doctor of Osteopathic Medicine (DO) degree. Subsequently, these medical school graduates undergo residency training in orthopedic surgery. The five-year ...

  9. Salary cap - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Salary_cap

    Prior to the resolution of the 2004–05 lockout, the NHL was the only major North American professional sports league that had no luxury tax, very limited revenue sharing and no salary cap. During the Original Six era through to the early years of the expansion era , the NHL's strict reserve clause negated the need for a salary cap.