John McEnroe has recently stated that while he believes Serena Williams is the greatest women's tennis player ever, she wouldn't be able to compete on the men's circuit. He has further stated, "if she played the men's circuit she'd be like 700 in the world."
McEnroe qualified his comments by suggesting Williams could beat some men's players because of her mental fortitude, but that he doesn't think she's athletic enough to beat the majority of men on the professional circuit. He also offered this remark: "Maybe at some point a women's tennis player can be better than anybody. I just haven't seen it in any other sport, and I haven't seen it in tennis. I suppose anything's possible at some stage."
On previous occasions, McEnroe has called Serena "arguably the greatest athlete of the last 100 years" and "the greatest player to ever play the game."
Is there any truth to John McEnroe's statements? Is there anything wrong with what he said apart from whether or not the statements are true? What were his motivations and are those motivations relevant to judgments about the propriety of making such statements? — geospiza
I actually second this. It does look ugly. The purpose of art is to depict beauty and ideals, not ugliness. The fact these "artists" create "art" for political purposes is simply a defilement of art. You can say something ugly looks beautiful till you're blue in the face, it ain't going to make it true. I'm never going to think that image is beautiful. You can force me to say it is for political reasons, but I'll never think so, regardless of what you do.Looks ugly to me, does that make me sexist and/or racist? — Heister Eggcart
Yes, but those depictions certainly did not mean to illustrate beauty. The pregnant woman's body is not supposed to be beautiful, but rather nourishing, protective and other qualities. That Serena picture actually wants to tell us that she's proud of her body - as if anyone gave a damn. She is indeed quite smug, and the idiots are paying money for this.I mean, depictions of pregnant women are probably the oldest expressions of art in human history, but I'd rather consider a 5,000 year old mother goddesses carved from stone instead of tennis player. *shrug* — Heister Eggcart
The human body is the most beautiful thing in existence. Lets me grown ups, and criticize people on substantial, rather than superficial and self-centered fronts. — Wosret
I don't think men or women are physically that much different, but the culture of physical training has changed them dramatically. — Cavacava
It would never make biological sense to make the females more risk taking, regardless of any gaps in competence. — Wosret
My point is that a woman's top time today would have won a big margin against top male runners back in the day, look at the time difference. — Cavacava
Are you suggesting that he has some hidden motivation for pointing out the difference between male and female tennis athletes?
Are you suggesting that his statements are somehow improper because of his motivations?
It's uncontroversially true that male athletes have a rather large advantage in just about any sport which requires physical strength to play at a high level. — VagabondSpectre
Yes, but those depictions certainly did not mean to illustrate beauty. The pregnant woman's body is not supposed to be beautiful, but rather nourishing, protective and other qualities. That Serena picture actually wants to tell us that she's proud of her body - as if anyone gave a damn. She is indeed quite smug, and the idiots are paying money for this. — Agustino
The beauty in the photo, to me, is found in its candour about the female body. — geospiza
Pair-bonding species tend to have low sexual dimorphism and "tournament species" tend to have high degrees of sexual dimorphism. — VagabondSpectre
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