Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Well, in India, people just don't place that importance on sports. Most middle/upper middle class people aren't willing to put in the time commitment equivalent of travel sports in the US, so you just aren't going to see that many elite athletes. For better or worse, they are putting that time into extra tutoring or other academic endeavors. It is only recently that people started placing importance on physical activity at all.
Unless it's cricket. And the Summer Olympics isn't long enough to finish a game of cricket.
Cricket will be a sport in LA 2028.
Cricket is an imperialist / oppressor sport. It should never have even been considered.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Well, in India, people just don't place that importance on sports. Most middle/upper middle class people aren't willing to put in the time commitment equivalent of travel sports in the US, so you just aren't going to see that many elite athletes. For better or worse, they are putting that time into extra tutoring or other academic endeavors. It is only recently that people started placing importance on physical activity at all.
Unless it's cricket. And the Summer Olympics isn't long enough to finish a game of cricket.
Cricket will be a sport in LA 2028.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wealth and culture. India has wealth but their culture doesn't value sports or arts. They very much so look down on professionals in those spaces.
India is a poor country. Many African countries have some billionaires and millionaires but we do not call them rich due to the abject poverty much if not the majority of the populations live in, India is no different.
I don’t know, it’s the fifth largest economy in the World, predicted be a top three economy in next ten years. So, I guess at some point west will have to face that fact and stop calling them poor at every opportunity.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wealth and culture. India has wealth but their culture doesn't value sports or arts. They very much so look down on professionals in those spaces.
India is a poor country. Many African countries have some billionaires and millionaires but we do not call them rich due to the abject poverty much if not the majority of the populations live in, India is no different.
Anonymous wrote:Wealth and culture. India has wealth but their culture doesn't value sports or arts. They very much so look down on professionals in those spaces.
Anonymous wrote:Just speculation:
A lot of the poorer countries who send a disproportionate number of athletes to the Olympics are populated with people who have genetics that are extremely conducive to athletic excellence, and they compete in sports that aren't expensive. Like So a lot of running, not a lot of water polo. And countries who are poor and don't have these genetics get left in the dust.
Also soccer culture is just way more prevalent in Brasil than India.
Anonymous wrote:The money explanation doesn't make sense. Brazil has 277 athletes and it isn't a rich country. India has plenty of middle class and rich people.
And even Latin American teams have plenty of women participating. Not sure who thinks it is only men playing soccer. Mexico has women participating in the following Olympic sports: boxing, kayaking, cycling, diving, gymnastics, golf, judo, pentathlon, rowing, sailing, table tennis, tae-kwon-do, triathlon, and weight lifting .
Anonymous wrote:Majority-Muslim countries do not promote women’s sports. Those societies even discourage women from sports and even fitness (Saudi Arabia, for one).
Anonymous wrote:Aussies love sports and the best trainers in the world want to work there due to the weather and culture.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Well, in India, people just don't place that importance on sports. Most middle/upper middle class people aren't willing to put in the time commitment equivalent of travel sports in the US, so you just aren't going to see that many elite athletes. For better or worse, they are putting that time into extra tutoring or other academic endeavors. It is only recently that people started placing importance on physical activity at all.
Unless it's cricket. And the Summer Olympics isn't long enough to finish a game of cricket.