Suppose you're an Olympic athlete and you hear that the only person who has a chance to beat you is ill and may have to withdraw.
Are you overjoyed at your good luck or disappointed that you won't be able to compete against the very best?
You ought to be disappointed. Olympian John Naber, winner of four gold medals in swimming, says a true sportsman wants to compete against his best competitor on his best day. Although that makes winning more difficult and less likely, it also makes the event more exciting and a victory more meaningful.
Being declared a winner is not real victory; being the best is.
In any sport, what's more fun: to play against someone you easily dominate or against someone who forces you to be your best and makes every point an exciting challenge? The aim of sports is to have fun trying to win and to love the game enough that you can enjoy yourself whether you win or not.
Athletic competition is not a form of war.
The people you compete against are also the people you play with.
They aren't enemies.
The word "competition" comes from the Latin root competere, which means "to strive together, not against each other."
Be thankful for quality competitors who push you to your limit.
You'll find sports more healthy and enjoyable when you respect and like your opponents rather than hate them.
When you compete against someone as good as or better than you, you may not always win, but you never lose.
-character counts
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