D-Weaver 99027 wrote:I stick to my suggestion of jogging.
Is there competitive jogging out there? Anywhere? If there was, it would turn into 'running' along the way...![]()
Replace "jogging" with "walking"

Actually the sport "walking" is pretty difficult.
Matthew wrote:I once got a blowjob from a girl winning that
Mate, you can't even make a post without getting over excited. You probably blew before she even got your pants off.
No offense or anything, but you don't really seem like the kind of person any girl would be interested in. Ever.
Jae wrote:No offense or anything, but you don't really seem like the kind of person any girl would be interested in. Ever.
Jae wrote:No offense or anything, but you don't really seem like the kind of person any girl would be interested in. Ever.
Boxing
matmat8 wrote:Actually the sport "walking" is pretty difficult.
You have to walk very quickly and since you have to always be touching the ground (unless its running...) it takes some skills.
Also you look stupid.
IndyPacers67 wrote:I'd say the easiest sport is Nascar racing. I know it has its difficult aspects but those cars are so souped up...
Boyk wrote:Jae wrote:No offense or anything, but you don't really seem like the kind of person any girl would be interested in. Ever.
lol![]()
you can talk..............
![]()
considering i have a girl atm, thats pretty funny to me.
I'd say the easiest sport is Nascar racing. I know it has its difficult aspects but those cars are so souped up...
*DreamWeaver* wrote:Easiest sport to play on a professional level... I'd say baseball.
No way. It is widely regarded that the single most difficult specific skill in American pro sports is to hit a 100 mph fast ball with a swinging bat at the right time and with the proper angle so that you at least do not screw up your team's offense. Not to mention that an even slighly less than perfect pitch can easily cost a team two or more hours' worth of effort.
If we're talking about a sport in a professional level
I don't know. I feel that it's all based on the correlation between hitters and pitchers. For example, you have casual community league teams throwing 30 mph pitches and causal players slugging away, and then the more skilled the sluggers are, the more skilled the pitchers are. If the pitchers practice their throwing skills till they can shoot 100 mph fastballs, then I'm sure that the sluggers will practice to the point where they can adapt to hitting 100 mph fastballs heading their way. It's a skill that takes practice, but I don't think it would make the sport itself the most difficult when it just requires a lot of practice that's centered on a specific move (swinging, running or throwing)... as for soccer, you have not just running, but an incredible amount of technique, footwork, and demanding decision making abilities, imo. Other than that, I'll stick to chess as the most difficult, professionally.
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