Pink (Victoria's Secret) - Victoria Secret Sports Bra

Pink (Victoria's Secret)  - victoria secret sports bra

Pink (stylized PINK), a subsidiary of L Brands, is a lingerie line by Victoria's Secret targeting younger women than their main line. The target demographic consists of youth, ages 13 to 30.

Pink (Victoria's Secret)  - victoria secret sports bra
History

On October 16, 2002, Victoria's Secret announced the launch of Pink, a new product line targeted to 13-30 year-olds. The strategy driving Victoria's Secret's launch of Pink is to introduce the teenage girls to Victoria's Secret stores. Pink sells underwear, swimsuits, sleepwear, loungewear, beauty products, and accessories, with the intent to transition buyers into more adult product lines, such as Angels, Very Sexy, and Body by Victoria.

Pink's competition in the lingerie market for the youth demographic includes Abercrombie & Fitch and Aerie by American Eagle. Pink's pajamas and sweat pants were popular within the teenage and preteen set from 2006. On November 1, 2009, Pink established its first stand-alone store in Canada, prior to the main Victoria's Secret brand opening its first store on August 12, 2010. In 2010, sales at Pink reached $1 billion.

Pink has a college line that focuses brand recognition through public university athletics. Promotions for the line come from college tours, tie-ins with the music channel MTV, and social media such as Facebook and MySpace. In 2011, the line announced a partnership with all 32 NFL teams and began selling apparel containing NFL team logos and names. The partnership is part of a marketing strategy for the NFL to market to teenage girls and college-aged women. It remains available for some teams as of 2017.

Pink (Victoria's Secret)  - victoria secret sports bra
Controversy

In March 2013, the company mounted a marketing campaign for sexy underwear titled "Bright Young Things" directed at teen and pre-teen girls that drew considerable negative attention. The underwear contained wording including "call me", "feeling lucky", and "wild". The company was accused of "sexualising" teenage girls. When the ad campaign was launched, Victoria's Secret chief financial officer Stuart Burgdoerfer said that the line of underwear allowed "15 or 16 years old... to be older, and they want to be cool like the girl in college". After the criticism increased, Victoria's Secret removed the items from the company's website and said that the ad campaign was meant for college-age women.

Kylie Bisutti, a former Victoria's Secret model, headlined the two "Pink to Purpose" campus events in 2013 and 2014. This campaign, unrelated to the retailer, describes itself as an encouragement for women "to leave the PINK lifestyle to find PURPOSE!" Bisutti perceives her past as "being at the pinnacle of the PINK lifestyle of fake, broken relationships".

Pink (Victoria's Secret)  - victoria secret sports bra
Marketing

Spokesmodels

Pink has its own spokesmodels, the first one being Alessandra Ambrosio, followed by Miranda Kerr.

PINK has partnered with both the MLB and the NFL for lines launched by Prinsloo as well as then Angels Chanel Iman, Erin Heatherton and Candice Swanepoel. Since then, various spokesmodels, including Hosk and Jessica Hart have attended sports events to promote those joint ventures.

Each year since 2010, the brand has hosted spring break parties to promote its collegiate collection, usually hosted by two female models (having included Behati Prinsloo, Chanel Iman, Elsa Hosk, Rachel Hilbert, Sara Sampaio, Gigi Hadid and Devon Windsor) and a male guest such as Alexander Ludwig, Nick Jonas, Cody Simpson, or Diego Boneta They have also held campus bashes. Zuri Tibby became the brand's first spokesmodel of color in 2016.

Other models, such as Taylor Marie Hill, Emily Didonato, and Jessica Strother as well as numerous celebrities (including Ashlee Simpson) have appeared at events for the brand.

Victoria's Secret Fashion Show

There has been segment in the annual Victoria's Secret Fashion Show since 2006. In 2007, the brand held an event featuring spokesmodel Miranda Kerr, alongside Jessica Stam and Rosie Huntington Whiteley. A spot in the 2007 fashion show was given to Katie Wile after she won a contest called "Pink Road Trip to the Runway." Segments that aired in the 2000s only featured recorded music. Katy Perry was the first live performer for the Pink runway at Victoria's Secret Fashion Show 2010, performing a medley from her Teenage Dream album that she recently released at the time, in addition to performing "Firework" from the album in a segment for the main Victoria's Secret brand. Since then, the Pink runways consists exclusively of live performances where the artist may or may not also sing for the main VS brand.

PINK also sponsors fashion show viewing parties when the show airs.

Pink runway history

Pink (Victoria's Secret)  - victoria secret sports bra
References

Pink (Victoria's Secret)  - victoria secret sports bra
External links

  • Official website
Learn more »

NBC Sports - Nbc Sport

NBC Sports  - nbc sport

NBC Sports is the programming division of the American broadcast network NBC, owned by the NBCUniversal Television Group division of NBCUniversal, that is responsible for sports broadcasts on the network, and its dedicated national sports cable channels. Formerly operating as "a service of NBC News", it broadcasts a diverse array of sports events, including the Olympic Games, the NFL, NASCAR, the NHL, Notre Dame football, the PGA Tour, the IndyCar Series, the Premier League and the Triple Crown, among others. Other programming from outside producers â€" such as coverage of the Ironman Triathlon â€" is also presented on the network through NBC Sports. With Comcast's acquisition of NBCUniversal, its own cable sports networks were aligned with NBC Sports into a part of the divis ion known as the NBC Sports Group.

NBC Sports  - nbc sport
History

Early years

2000s

In 2000, NBC declined to renew its broadcast agreement with Major League Baseball. In 2002, it was additionally outbid by ESPN and ABC for the NBA's new broadcast contract, ending the league's twelve-year run on NBC.

During this era, NBC experimented with broadcasting emerging sports. In 2001, the network partnered with the World Wrestling Federation (WWF) to establish the XFL â€" a new football league which introduced modified rules and debuted to tremendous, but short-lived fanfare, only lasting one season (NBC shared broadcast rights to the league's games, which were mainly held on Saturday nights, with UPN). In 2003, NBC obtained the broadcast rights and a minority interest in the Arena Football League. The network televised weekly games on a regional basis, as well as the entire playoffs. The deal lasted four years, after which the league and NBC parted ways.

Beginning with the 1999 Pennzoil 400, NBC began its foray into NASCAR. NBC, along with Fox, FX and TNT, obtained the broadcast rights of the top two series â€" the Winston Cup and Busch Series â€" in a six-year deal, beginning in 2001. NBC televised the second half of the season and alternated coverage of the Daytona 500 with Fox. In December 2005, NBC announced that it would not renew its agreement with NASCAR. In 2001, NBC obtained the broadcast rights to horse racing's Triple Crown in a five-year deal.

In 2004, NBC reached a broadcast agreement with the National Hockey League (NHL). The revenue-sharing deal called for the two sides to split advertising revenue after the network recouped the expenses. Games were supposed to begin airing on the network during the 2004â€"05 season, however a league lockout that resulted in the cancellation of that season delayed the start of the contract until the second half of the 2005â€"06 season. NBC televised regular season games at first on Saturday afternoons before moving the telecast to Sundays, Saturday and Sunday afternoon playoff games, and up to five games of the Stanley Cup Final. Additionally in 2008, NBC broadcast the first Winter Classic, an outdoor NHL game played on New Year's Day at Ralph Wilson Stadium, a success in attendance and television ratings. The following year's Winter Classic would become the most-watched regular season game in 34 years. In addition to this regular season success, Game 7 of the 2009 St anley Cup Final was watched by an average of 8 million viewers, the highest ratings for an NHL game in 36 years.

The NFL also returned to NBC in 2006 after an eight-year hiatus, broadcasting the league's new flagship Sunday Night Football game, along with select postseason games and Super Bowls XLIII, XLVI, XLIX and LII.

NBC Sports Group

In January 2011, Comcast finalized its acquisition of a majority share in NBC Universal. As a result of the merger, the operations of Comcast's existing sports networks, such as Golf Channel and Versus, were merged into an entity known as the NBC Sports Group. NBC Sports' senior vice president Mike McCarley additionally became Golf Channel's new head. NBC Sports' golf production unit was merged with Golf Channel, along with NBC's on-air staff, with that unit rebranding under the banner "Golf Channel on NBC", while Versus was reformatted toward a more mainstream audience, renamed the NBC Sports Network and eventually rebranded as NBCSN.

The merger also helped influence an extension of NBC Sports' contract with the NHL; the 10-year deal â€" valued at close to $2 billion, unified the cable and broadcast television rights to the league and introduced a new "Black Friday" Thanksgiving Showdown game on NBC, along with national coverage for every game in the Stanley Cup playoffs. On July 3, 2011, ESPN obtained the exclusive broadcast rights to Wimbledon in a 12-year deal, ending NBC's television relationship with The Championships after 42 years.

On August 10, 2011, NBC Sports also announced a new three-year broadcasting contract with Major League Soccer to produce games for the 2012 season on NBC and the NBC Sports Network. This included the broadcast of two regular season games, two playoff games, and two national team matches on NBC and 38 regular season games, three playoff games, and two national team matches on NBC Sports Network. On October 28, 2012, NBC Sports also announced a three-year, $250 million deal to televise Premier League soccer in English (primarily on NBCSN) and Spanish (on Telemundo and mun2) beginning with the 2013â€"14 season, replacing ESPN and Fox Soccer as the league's U.S. broadcasters.

On October 15, 2012, NBC Sports announced that it had acquired broadcast rights to the Formula One World Championship (formerly held by Speed and Fox Sports) in a four-year deal with the series. The majority of its coverage (including much of the season, along with qualifying and practice sessions) would air on NBCSN, while NBC would air the Monaco Grand Prix, Canadian Grand Prix and the final two races of the season, which include the United States Grand Prix. All races will also be streamed online and through the NBC Sports Live Extra mobile app.

On March 18, 2013, nearly all of the operations for NBC Sports and NBCSN began to be based out of a purpose-built facility in Stamford, Connecticut. The move was made mainly to take advantage of tax credits given by the state of Connecticut, which NBC has taken advantage of previously with the daytime talk shows of its sister broadcast syndication division. Only Football Night in America remained in New York City, at Studio 8G in Rockefeller Center, until September 7, 2014, when production of that program also moved to Stamford.

In July 2013, NBC Sports reached a 10-year deal to restore NASCAR coverage to its properties for the first time since 2006. Beginning in the 2015 season, NBC and NBCSN televise coverage of the final 20 races of the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, and the final 19 races of the NASCAR Nationwide Series. While no specific financial details were disclosed, NBC reportedly paid 50% more than ESPN and TNT (who took over the portion of the season previously held by NBC) combined under the previous deal.

In May 2015, NBCUniversal announced the formation of NBC Deportes, which will serve as a Spanish-language branch of NBC Sports for Telemundo and NBC Universo.

On June 7, 2015, NBC Sports and The R&A agreed to a twelve-year deal to televise The Open Championship, Senior Open Championship, and Women's British Open on NBC and Golf Channel, beginning in 2017. The move came a year after NBC lost the rights to USGA tournaments to Fox Sports. The R&A's deal with ESPN had been through 2017, but the broadcaster opted out of the final year of their agreement.

Universal Sports Network ceased operations in November 2015. NBCUniversal acquired the rights to the content that was previously held by Universal Sports Network. Much of the programming moved to Universal HD, with the rest of the programming moving to NBCSN and NBC Sports Live Extra.

On March 7, 2016 NBC Sports and England's Premiership Rugby agreed an initial three-year deal to televise the Aviva Premiership from the following season. Up to 24 regularly scheduled Game of the Week programs for each round of the premiership will air on NBCSN and up to 50 other games will also be streamed live throughout the season on NBC Sports Live Extra. NBC's first live match was on March 12, 2016 when London Irish hosted Saracens at the Red Bull Arena in New Jersey. Live on NBCSN.

NBC Sports  - nbc sport
Olympics

In 1964, NBC televised the Summer Olympics in Tokyo; in 1972, NBC televised the Winter Olympic Games for the first time. 1980 would prove to be a stinging disappointment for the network; after contentious negotiations, NBC won the broadcast rights to the Summer Games in Moscow. After the Soviet Union invaded Afghanistan, the United States and 64 other countries boycotted the event. NBC substantially scaled back its coverage and lost heavily in advertising revenue. In 1988, NBC televised the Summer Olympics in Seoul. Since then, it has branded itself as "America's Olympic Network", televising every Summer Olympic Games since the Seoul event, as well as having televised every Winter Olympics since 2002. In total, NBC has aired 13 Summer and Winter Olympics, the most by any one U.S. network; the Olympic Games have also become an integral part of the network, despite some recurring controversy over its method of tape delaying events in part to take advantage of a wider national audien ce in prime time. In 1998, Ebersol was named president of NBC Sports and Olympics. The 2010 Games in Vancouver were watched by a total of 190 million viewers, including 27.6 million viewers of the Gold Medal Game in men's hockey.

During the 2014 Winter Olympics in Sochi, Russia, over 500 hours of the games were broadcast across five NBC-owned television channels (NBC, NBCSN, CNBC, MSNBC and USA Network) with 1,000 hours being streamed digitally. In January, the company announced some exclusive digital-only streaming of the 2014 Olympics via the NBCOlympics.com website and the NBC Sports Live Extra app for Android and iOS, including exclusive content such as Gold Zone, Olympic Ice and NBC's Olympic News Desk.

NBC Sports  - nbc sport
Programs throughout the years

Current programs

  • NFL on NBC: 1955â€"1963 (NFL Championship Game), 1970â€"1997 (AFC), 2006â€"present (NBC Sunday Night Football), 2016â€"present (Thursday Night Football)
    • Super Bowl: I (shared with CBS), III, V, VII, IX, XI, XIII, XV, XVII, XX, XXIII, XXVII, XXVIII, XXX, XXXII, XLIII, XLVI, XLIX, LII and LV
    • Pre-game show: Grandstand (1975â€"1976), NFL 77, 78, et al. (1977â€"1986), NFL Live! (1987â€"1994), NFL on NBC (1995â€"1997), Football Night in America (2006â€"present)
    • American Football League (1965â€"1969)
  • College football (1946â€"1965, 1991â€"present)
    • Notre Dame Football on NBC (1991â€"present)
    • U.S. Army All-American Bowl (2004â€"present)
  • Olympics on NBC
    • Olympic Summer Games (1964, 1980, 1988, 1992, 1996, 2000, 2004, 2008, 2012, 2016, 2020, 2024, 2028, 2032)
    • Olympic Winter Games (1972, 2002, 2006, 2010, 2014, 2018, 2022, 2026, 2030)
  • NASCAR on NBC (1999â€"2006, 2015â€"present)
  • Golf Channel on NBC (1964â€"present)
    • Ryder Cup (1991â€"present)
    • Presidents Cup (2000â€"present)
    • Senior PGA Championship (1990â€"present)
    • Women's PGA Championship (2015â€"present)
    • The Open Championship (2016â€"present)
    • Senior Open Championship (2016â€"present)
    • Women's British Open (2016â€"present)
  • NHL on NBC: 1966, 1972â€"1975, 1990â€"1994 (All Star Game), 2005â€"present
  • Thoroughbred Racing on NBC (1981â€"present)
    • Kentucky Derby (2001â€"present)
    • Preakness Stakes (2001â€"present)
    • Belmont Stakes (1950â€"1952, 2001â€"2005, 2011â€"present)
    • Breeders' Cup (1984â€"2005, 2012â€"present)
    • Haskell Invitational Stakes (2014â€"present)
    • Santa Anita Derby (2009â€"present)
    • Pegasus World Cup (2017-present)
    • Royal Ascot (2017-present)
  • French Open (1983â€"present)
  • Tour de France (2011â€"present)
  • IndyCar Series on NBC (2009â€"present)
  • Premier League (2013â€"present)
  • Formula One (2013â€"present)
  • IAAF World Championships
  • USA Track & Field
  • U.S. Figure Skating Championships (2008â€"present)
  • ISU Grand Prix of Figure Skating (2004â€"present)
  • Four Continents Figure Skating Championships
  • FIS Alpine Ski World Cup
  • Bobsleigh World Cup
  • Skeleton World Cup
  • Red Bull Global Rallycross (2014â€"present)
  • Fencing World Cup
  • FINA Diving World Cup
  • FIVB Beach Volleyball World Tour
  • World Marathon Majors
  • Rugby
    • Collegiate Rugby Championship (2010â€"present)
    • Rugby World Cup (2011, 2015)
    • USA Sevens (2011â€"present)
    • English Premiership (2016â€"present)
  • Premier Boxing Champions (2015â€"present)

Former programs

  • Major League Baseball on NBC: World Series presented by The Gillette Company (1947â€"1965), NBC Game of the Week (1956â€"1964, 1966â€"1989), Baseball Night in America (1994â€"1995), Major League Baseball on NBC (1996â€"2000)
    • World Series: 1947 (Games 1 & 5), 1948â€"1976, 1978, 1980, 1982, 1984, 1986, 1988, 1995 (Games 2, 3, & 6), 1997, 1999
    • Major League Baseball: An Inside Look (1979â€"1989)
  • NBA on NBC (1955â€"1962, 1990â€"2002)
    • WNBA on NBC (1997â€"2002)
    • 2002 FIBA World Championship
  • Rose Bowl (1952â€"1988)
  • Sugar Bowl (1959â€"1969)
  • Orange Bowl (1965â€"1995)
  • Fiesta Bowl (1978â€"1995)
  • Cotton Bowl Classic (1953â€"1957, 1993â€"1995)
  • Gator Bowl (1996â€"2006)
  • Hall of Fame Bowl (1988â€"1992)
  • Citrus Bowl (1984â€"1985)
  • Armyâ€"Navy Game (1945â€"1953, 1955â€"1959, 1964â€"1965)
  • USGA Championships (1995â€"2014)
  • College Basketball on NBC (1969â€"1998)
    • NCAA Tournament (1969â€"1981)
  • Wimbledon (1969â€"2011)
  • NBC SportsWorld (1978â€"1992)
  • Championship Auto Racing Teams (1979â€"1990, 1994, 2005â€"2007)
  • American Le Mans Series (1999â€"2004, 2007â€"2008)
  • Gillette Cavalcade of Sports (1946â€"1960)
  • Michael Jordan Celebrity Golf Classic (1990s)
  • Thoroughbred Racing on NBC
    • Budweiser Million (1981â€"1986)
    • Wood Memorial Stakes (2005, 2008, 2010)
    • Hambletonian (2007â€"2012)
  • Soccer
    • FIFA World Cup (1966, 1986)
    • MLS on NBC (2012â€"2014)
  • The Superstars (1985â€"1990)
  • XFL (2001)
  • AFL on NBC (2003â€"2006)
  • CFL on NBC (1954, 1982, 2012â€"2013)
  • PBA Fall Tour (1984â€"1991)
  • AVP Tour (1990â€"2009)

NBC Sports  - nbc sport
Notable personalities

Present

Play-by-play

  • NBC Sunday Night Football - Al Michaels, Mike Tirico
  • Thursday Night Football - Al Michaels, Mike Tirico
  • Notre Dame Football on NBC â€" Dan Hicks, Mike Tirico
  • NHL on NBC â€" Mike Emrick, Kenny Albert, Gord Miller, John Forslund, Chris Cuthbert, Randy Hahn
  • Tennis on NBC â€" Ted Robinson
  • Golf Channel on NBC â€" Dan Hicks, Mike Tirico, Terry Gannon
  • Olympics on NBC â€" Mike Emrick, Tom Hammond, Dan Hicks, Mike Tirico, Ted Robinson, Al Trautwig, Arlo White, JP Dellacamera, Sebastian Salazar
  • Premier League â€"Arlo White, Steve Bower, Peter Drury, Jim Proudfoot, Jon Champion
  • NASCAR on NBC â€" Rick Allen, Leigh Diffey, Ralph Sheheen, Dave Burns
  • IndyCar Series on NBC â€" Leigh Diffey, Brian Till, Kevin Lee
  • Formula One on NBC â€" Leigh Diffey
  • IAAF/USATF â€" Rick Allen, Tom Hammond, Todd Harris
  • Red Bull Global Rallycross â€" Leigh Diffey, Toby Moody
  • Rugby World Cup â€" Bill Seward

Analysts

  • NBC Sunday Night Football â€" Cris Collinsworth
  • Thursday Night Football â€" Cris Collinsworth, Doug Flutie, Tony Dungy
  • Notre Dame Football on NBC â€" Doug Flutie
  • Tennis on NBC â€" John McEnroe, Mary Carillo
  • Golf Channel on NBC â€" Gary Koch, Peter Jacobsen, Johnny Miller
  • NHL on NBC â€" Eddie Olczyk, Brian Boucher, Jamie Baker, Joe Micheletti
  • Premier League â€" Lee Dixon, Graeme Le Saux, Jim Beglin, Phil Neville, Tim Howard, Geoff Cameron, Kevin Kilbane
  • NASCAR on NBC â€" Steve Letarte, Jeff Burton, Dale Jarrett, Frank Stoddard
  • IndyCar Series on NBC â€" Paul Tracy, Steve Matchett, Townsend Bell
  • IAAF/USATF â€" Ato Boldon, Sanya Richards-Ross
  • Formula One on NBC â€" David Hobbs, Steve Matchett
  • Red Bull Global Rallycross â€" Townsend Bell

Reporters

  • NBC Sunday Night Football â€" Michele Tafoya
  • Thursday Night Football â€" Heather Cox
  • Notre Dame Football on NBC â€" Kathryn Tappen
  • Golf Channel on NBC â€" Roger Maltbie, Mark Rolfing, Notah Begay III, Steve Sands
  • NHL on NBC â€" Pierre McGuire, Brian Engblom
  • Olympics on NBC â€" Andrea Joyce, Michele Tafoya, Heather Cox
  • Formula One on NBC â€" Will Buxton, Kelli Stavast
  • NASCAR on NBC â€" Marty Snider, Kelli Stavast, Mike Massaro, Dave Burns, Alex Hayden, Jim Noble, Parker Kligerman, Ralph Sheheen
  • Red Bull Global Rallycross â€" Kristen Kenney

Studio hosts

  • NBC Sunday Night Football â€" Mike Tirico, Dan Patrick, Liam McHugh
  • Thursday Night Football â€" Mike Tirico, Rich Eisen, Liam McHugh, Chris Rose
  • Notre Dame Fighting Irish â€" Liam McHugh
  • NHL on NBC â€" Liam McHugh, Kathryn Tappen
  • Golf Channel on NBC â€" Jimmy Roberts, Mike Tirico
  • Olympics on NBC â€" Peter Alexander, Mary Carillo, Alex Flanagan, Lester Holt, Al Michaels, Dan Patrick, Jimmy Roberts, Mike Tirico
  • Premier League â€" Rebecca Lowe, Arlo White, Steve Bower, Gary Lineker, Sebastian Salazar
  • NASCAR on NBC â€" Krista Voda

Studio analysts

  • NBC Sunday Night Football â€" Tony Dungy, Mike Florio, Rodney Harrison, Peter King
  • Thursday Night Football â€" Tony Dungy, Rodney Harrison, Michael Irvin, Steve Mariucci, Marshall Faulk, Willie McGinest, LaDanian Tomlinson
  • Notre Dame Football on NBC â€" Jonathan Vilma
  • NHL on NBC â€" Mike Milbury, Keith Jones, Jeremy Roenick
  • Premier League â€" Phil Neville, Robbie Mustoe, Robbie Earle, Kyle Martino
  • NASCAR on NBC â€" Kyle Petty, Dale Jarrett, Ray Evernham

Former

Play-by-play

  • NBA on NBC â€" Marv Albert, Mike Breen, Bob Costas, Don Criqui, Dick Enberg, Greg Gumbel, Tom Hammond
  • NFL on NBC â€" Marv Albert, Don Criqui, Dick Enberg, Marty Glickman, Curt Gowdy, Charlie Jones, Jim Simpson
  • NHL on NBC â€" Tim Ryan, Jim Simpson, Dave Strader
  • Major League Baseball on NBC â€" Mel Allen, Bob Costas, Dick Enberg, Joe Garagiola, Sr., Curt Gowdy, Bryant Gumbel, Lindsey Nelson, Vin Scully, Bob Wolff
  • Triple Crown â€" Tom Durkin
  • The Championships, Wimbledon â€" Dick Enberg
  • Notre Dame Football on NBC â€" Don Criqui, Dick Enberg, Tom Hammond
  • NBC SportsWorld â€" Paul Page
  • NASCAR on NBC â€" Bill Weber, Allen Bestwick
  • IndyCar Series on NBC â€" Bob Jenkins, Mike King
  • MLS on NBC â€" John Strong, Steve Cangialosi, Richard Fleming

Analysts

  • NHL on NBC â€" Ted Lindsay, Bill Clement, John Davidson
  • NFL on NBC â€" Merlin Olsen, Paul Maguire, Phil Simms, Bob Trumpy
  • NBC Sunday Night Football â€" John Madden
  • Major League Baseball on NBC â€" Joe Garagiola, Sr., Tony Kubek, Joe Morgan, Tom Seaver
  • NBA on NBC â€" Julius Erving, Doug Collins, Mike Fratello, Matt Guokas, Magic Johnson, Steve "Snapper" Jones, Peter Vecsey, Bill Walton
  • Notre Dame Football on NBC â€" Pat Haden, Mike Mayock
  • College Basketball on NBC â€" Al McGuire, Billy Packer
  • NASCAR on NBC â€" Benny Parsons, Wally Dallenbach, Jr.
  • MLS on NBC â€" Brian Dunseth, Stuart Holden, Shep Messing, Robbie Russell

Reporters

  • The Championships, Wimbledon â€" Bud Collins
  • Major League Baseball on NBC â€" Bob Costas, Jim Gray, Tony Kubek, Hannah Storm
  • Olympics on NBC â€" Melissa Stark, Lesley Visser, Chris Wragge, Craig Sager, Marty Snider
  • NBA on NBC â€" Jim Gray, Ahmad Rashad
  • NFL on NBC â€" Ahmad Rashad, O.J. Simpson
  • NBC Sunday Night Football â€" Andrea Kremer
  • Notre Dame Football on NBC â€" Lewis Johnson, Alex Flanagan, John Dockery
  • French Open â€" Bud Collins

Studio hosts

  • Olympics on NBC â€" Bob Costas, Curt Gowdy, Dick Enberg, Gayle Gardner, Bryant Gumbel, Greg Gumbel, Jim Lampley, Hannah Storm
  • NFL on NBC â€" Gayle Gardner, Bryant Gumbel, Greg Gumbel, Jim Lampley
  • NBC Sunday Night Football - Bob Costas
  • Thursday Night Football - Bob Costas
  • Major League Baseball on NBC â€" Bill Macatee
  • Notre Dame Football on NBC â€" Hannah Storm
  • NBA on NBC â€" Bob Costas, Hannah Storm
  • NASCAR on NBC â€" Bill Weber, Brian Williams
  • NHL on NBC â€" Russ Thaler
  • MLS on NBC â€" Russ Thaler
  • Premier League â€" Russ Thaler

Telemundo personalities

  • Andres Cantor
  • Alejandro Blanco

NBC Sports  - nbc sport
Presidents and chairmen

  • Chet Simmons (1977â€"1979)
  • Arthur Watson (1979â€"1989)
  • Dick Ebersol (1989â€"2011)
  • Ken Schanzer (1998â€"2011)
  • Jon Miller (2011â€"present)

NBC Sports  - nbc sport
Main competitors

NBC Sports / NBC Sports Group
  • ESPN on ABC / ESPN, Inc.
  • Fox Sports / Fox Sports Media Group
  • CBS Sports

NBC Sports  - nbc sport
References

NBC Sports  - nbc sport
External links

  • Official website (Mobile)
Learn more »

Lesgaft National State University Of Physical Education, Sport And ... - Sports And Health

Lesgaft National State University of Physical Education, Sport and ... - sports and health
Learn more »

SMS Audio - Sport Headphones

SMS Audio  - sport headphones

SMS Audio is an American consumer electronics company that primarily manufactures and markets headphones. The company was founded by 50 Cent in 2011 and acquired Kono Audio that same year.

SMS Audio  - sport headphones
History

SMS Audio was founded in 2011 by rapper and entrepreneur Curtis Jackson, also known as 50 Cent. SMS stands for “Studio Mastered Sound.” Jackson acquired KonoAudio that August for an undisclosed amount in order to rebrand it using his name. KonoAudio's President, Brian Nohe, who founded KonoAudio in 2007, became President of SMS Audio. 50 Cent and former KonoAudio President Brian Nohe designed SMS Audio's first line of headphones in late 2011 and early 2012. In January 2012, DJ Pauly D announced via Twitter that he was partnering with SMS Audio and 50 Cent to develop a new line of headphones. Music artist Timbaland became an investor in SMS Audio in January 2013, which was followed by investments from NBA player Carmelo Anthony in December 2013.

SMS Audio  - sport headphones
Products

In October 2012 the "STREET by 50" line of in-ear, over-ear and on-ear headphones were introduced. The wireless SYNC by 50 communicates using proprietary Kleer Wireless Technology, which claims to provide 16-bit CD quality sound with lossless audio, rather than the standard Bluetooth, and can connect to up to four devices within 50 feet.

In late 2013, a STREET by 50 ANC (Active Noise Cancellation) version was introduced, which was followed by a wireless, portable speaker called SYNC by 50 Portable that November. In January 2014, an Audio Sport lineup of headphones were released in collaboration with professional basketball player Carmelo Anthony and a Star Wars themed set of headphones were introduced in partnership with LucasFilm.

In August 2014, SMS Audio announced the BioSport In-Ear wired earbuds that have "embedded biometric sensors that collect fitness data, including heart rate, without the need for regular charges." SMS Audio is collaborating with Intel for the project.

According to the company website, it also sells SMS Audio-branded apparel and accessories.

SMS Audio  - sport headphones
Sponsorships

In December 2011, Curtis Jackson announced that a portion of each headphone sold domestically on the SMS Audio website would be donated to the Feeding America initiative. In February 2014, SMS Audio became one of the sponsors of the NASCAR racing team, Swan Racing, which features the SMS Audio logo on its racing cars and on the jackets of some of its racers.

SMS Audio  - sport headphones
References

SMS Audio  - sport headphones
External links

  • Official website
Learn more »

Sports Illustrated Swimsuit Issue - Sports Illustrated Swimsuit Edition

Sports Illustrated Swimsuit Issue  - sports illustrated swimsuit edition

The Sports Illustrated Swimsuit Issue is published annually by American Sports Illustrated magazine. The cover photograph features fashion models wearing swimwear in exotic locales. All models featured on the cover of the swimsuit issue in the magazine's history have been women. According to some, the magazine is the arbiter of supermodel succession. The swimsuit issue of the magazine carries advertising that, in 2005 amounted to US$35 million in value. New issues come out around the middle of February or later. First published in 1964, it is credited with making the bikini, invented in 1946, a legitimate piece of app arel. The issue that got the most letters was the 1978 issue. The best selling issue was the 25th Anniversary Issue with Kathy Ireland on the cover in 1989.

Through the years, many models, such as Cheryl Tiegs, Christie Brinkley, Paulina Porizkova, Elle Macpherson, Rachel Hunter, Rebecca Romijn, Petra Nemcova, Valeria Mazza, Heidi Klum, Tyra Banks, and Marisa Miller, have been featured on the cover. Other models within its pages, but not on its cover, include Cindy Crawford, Stephanie Seymour, Niki Taylor, Angie Everhart, and Naomi Campbell. The eight models featured on the cover of the 2006 issue were featured in a coffee-table book called Sports Illustrated: Exposure. Photographed by Raphael Mazzucco and produced by Diane Smith, the unprecedented "reunion shoot" featured 139 pages of previously-unpublished images. In 2006, the issue expanded publishing to handheld devices. In 2007, the swimsuit issue was first available in China.

Sports Illustrated Swimsuit Issue  - sports illustrated swimsuit edition
History

The swimsuit issue was invented by Sports Illustrated editor Andre Laguerre to fill the winter months, a typically slow point in the sporting calendar. He asked fashion reporter Jule Campbell to go on a shoot to fill space, including the cover, with a beautiful model. The first issue, released in 1964, entailed a cover featuring Babette March and a five-page layout. Campbell soon became a powerful figure in modeling and molded the issue into a media phenomenon by featuring "bigger and healthier" California women and printing the names of the models with their photos, beginning a new supermodel era. However, the issue did not exclusively feature models until 1997. In the 1950s a few women appeared on the cover of Sports Illustrated, but the 1964 issue is considered to be the beginning of the current format known as the Swimsuit Issue. In 1997, Tyra Banks was the first black woman on the cover. That year's issue was the first that was a stand-alone edition, separate fr om the regular weekly magazine.

Sports Illustrated Swimsuit Issue  - sports illustrated swimsuit edition
Non-models in the magazine

Female athletes have appeared in swimsuit shoots. Steffi Graf appeared in 1997. In the 2003 issue, tennis player Serena Williams and figure skater Ekaterina Gordeeva were featured inside the magazine. In 2016, UFC fighter Ronda Rousey became the first female athlete to appear on the cover. However, Anna Kournikova appeared in an inset on the 2004 cover, and had a photo spread within its pages.

In 2005, Olympic gold medalists Amanda Beard and Jennie Finch, along with Lauren Jackson and Venus Williams, were featured. Maria Sharapova appeared in an inset on the 2006 cover and had a spread inside. In spring 2006, Sports Illustrated chose music as the theme for the 2007 issue. Swimsuit editor Diane Smith wanted Grammy-winner Beyoncé Knowles to pose. In 2006, Beyoncé launched a swimsuit line under her House of Deréon clothing label. Beyoncé Knowles became the first singer, and first non-model, to appear on the cover in 2007.

In 2008, NFL cheerleaders appeared for the first time. Teams include the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, San Diego Chargers, Dallas Cowboys, Miami Dolphins, Philadelphia Eagles, Atlanta Falcons, Jacksonville Jaguars, New England Patriots, Oakland Raiders, Washington Redskins and Houston Texans.

Race car driver Danica Patrick appeared in 2008. She was featured in a four-page spread set in Singer Island, Florida.

For the 2010 issue, four female Winter Olympians appeared in swimsuits: Clair Bidez, Lacy Schnoor, Hannah Teter, and Lindsey Vonn as well as Ana Ivanovic. Criticism of Ivanovic's appearance in the magazine shortly surfaced, as the Serb was suffering a decline in form and confidence and subsequently dropped out of the WTA's Top 50 a month after appearing in the magazine. However, since November 2010 Ivanovic has re-entered the World's Top 20 and regained her old form and confidence.

Australian hurdler Michelle Jenneke appeared in the 2013 issue after having gained notoriety for her warm-up dance routine which went viral on YouTube.

Danish tennis player Caroline Wozniacki appeared in the 2015 issue. She is an active player, formerly world number one, and was photographed at Captiva Island in the Gulf of Mexico by Walter Iooss, Jr.

Sports Illustrated Swimsuit Issue  - sports illustrated swimsuit edition
Reception

To some people, the magazine is an acceptable exhibition of female sexuality not out of place on a coffee table. The swimsuit edition is controversial both with moralists who subscribe for sports news content as well as with those who feel that the focus on fashion and swimsuit modeling is inappropriate for a sports magazine. Feminists have expressed that "the Swimsuit Issue promotes the harmful and dehumanizing concept that women are a product for male consumption."

At times, subscriptions have been cancelled by subscribers. The 1978 edition, remembered for its fishnet bathing suit made famous by Cheryl Tiegs, resulted in 340 cancellations. Sports Illustrated makes the controversy a form of entertainment with the issue two weeks after the swimsuit edition packed with complainants such as shocked parents and troubled librarians. Recently, the number of cancellations has declined. Nonetheless, to avoid controversy, Sports Illustrated has, since 2007, offered its subscribers the option of skipping the swimsuit edition for a one issue credit to extend their subscription by a week.

Sports Illustrated Swimsuit Issue  - sports illustrated swimsuit edition
On the cover

The 2008â€"2013 covergirls were announced on Late Show with David Letterman. The 2014 and 2017 covergirls were announced on Jimmy Kimmel Live!. The 2015 cover model was announced on The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon.

Sports Illustrated Swimsuit Issue  - sports illustrated swimsuit edition
Cover history

Sports Illustrated Swimsuit Issue  - sports illustrated swimsuit edition
Locations

The swimsuit issue was once predominantly shot in one country per year. As the issue has grown in size, the number of locations has also risen.

Sports Illustrated Swimsuit Issue  - sports illustrated swimsuit edition
Swimsuit Video, the Swimsuit Issue on video and in television specials

Beginning in the late 1980s, Sports Illustrated allowed television specials to be aired which were later released as video versions of its Swimsuit Issue. The first releases were available on VHS or Laser Disc (LD), and later releases have been available on DVD.

In 1989, The Making of the Sports Illustrated 25th Anniversary Swimsuit Issue was a television documentary by Home Box Office (HBO) which later became available on VHS by Maysles Films. In 1992, a behind-the-scenes made-for-HBO special documentary was released on VHS as the Sports Illustrated Behind the Scenes: Official Swimsuit Video. In 1993, Sports Illustrated: The 1993 Swimsuit Video was released by HBO films. The next year, Sports Illustrated 1994 Swimsuit Issue Video was released on video by Dakota North Entertainment. Since then, the annual video version of the Sports Illustrated Swimsuit Issue has been called the Swimsuit Video. In 1995, Sports Illustrated began distributing television specials based on the issue, titled '[Year] Sports Illustrated Swimsuit Special'. The hour-long specials have aired on Spike TV and TNT and Minisodes of several specials from 2002 to 2004 are available on Crackle. In 2004, the Sports Illustrated 4 0th Anniversary Swimsuit Special: American Beauty featured videos of the swimsuit beauties at various US locations, some of which are not usually thought of as beaches: e.g., the host Melissa Keller and Marisa Miller at the grain elevator in Bouton, Iowa, and on a farm near Perry, Iowa. The more recent videos have included some "uncensored" scenes.

For January 2005, NBC produced the Sports Illustrated Swimsuit Model Search, a reality TV show documenting twelve previously unknown fashion models as they competed against one another over five weeks for the grand prize: a pictorial in the 2005 edition of the Swimsuit Issue and a modeling contract with NEXT Model Management worth one million US dollars. Alicia Hall won the competition.

Prior to the release of the 2011 issue, DirectTV aired a preview special on the 101 Network, revealing the models in that year's edition. The show was hosted by Dan Patrick and Mallory Snyder.

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Milwaukee Badgers - Badger Sports Park

Milwaukee Badgers  - badger sports park

The Milwaukee Badgers were a professional American football team, based in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, that played in the National Football League from 1922 to 1926. The team played its home games at Athletic Park, later known as Borchert Field, on Milwaukee's north side. The team was notable for having a large number of African-American players for the time.

After the team folded following the 1926 season (largely due to being left broke because of a $500 fine by the NFL for using four high-school players in a 1925 game against the Chicago Cardinals, a game arranged after the Badgers had disbanded for the season), many of its members played for the independent semi-pro Milwaukee Eagles. A few of the players from this team went on to play for the NFL's Pittsburgh Pirates in 1933. This has led some to mistakenly believe that either the Badgers or Eagles became the Steelers.

The Milwaukee market is now claimed by the Green Bay Packers, who played three or four regular season games there from 1933â€"94, including the 1939 NFL Championship Game and a 1967 playoff game. The Packers still reserve two games a season for their old Milwaukee season ticket holders, and have their flagship radio station there as well.

Milwaukee Badgers  - badger sports park
History

Origins

The Milwaukee Badgers were founded by two Chicago sporting promoters, Joe Plunkett and Ambrose McGuirk. The pair saw the city as a great prospect for a professional football club. In order to create a team that could compete immediately in the early National Football League, the men scoured the East Coast college ranks, signing multiple All-Americans in hopes of building a team of all-stars that could rival the Green Bay Packers for state supremacy. The team's first major signing was Fritz Pollard, who had been a player-coach the previous year for the Akron Pros. Pollard was also the first black man to coach whites in American professional sports. Two other African-Americans played for the Badgers in 1922, Paul Robeson and Duke Slater.

First years

The Badgers played their first home game on October 15, 1922, in which they defeated the Racine Legion 20-0 in front of 6,000 fans at Athletic Park. However injuries and team disunity caught up with the Badgers, as they finished the season with just two wins, four defeats and three ties, resulting in 11th place in the standings.

The next season, the Badgers fielded an all-white team, ending their brief experiment with integration. However the 1923 season would be the high point in the franchise's short history, as they placed third in the league with a 7-2-3 record. However both of the Badgers' losses that season came to the Packers, who keep them a distant second in popularity among Wisconsin's professional football fans. Even worse the Badgers struggled to even outdraw local semi-professional and factory teams. Games between those squads could draw as many as 9,000 spectators, while the Badgers rarely attracted around 4,500. In 1924, the Badgers went 5-8, before losing all six of their games in 1925 and being outscored 191-7. Meanwhile, Milwaukee citizens held so little interest in the club, that the team played just one home game.

However while interest in Badgers dwindled at home, several interested parties within the Chicago Cardinals began to take notice of them.

1925 high school players scandal

In 1925, the Chicago Cardinals were in need of two easy wins to help keep up with the Pottsville Maroons and stay in the hunt of the 1925 NFL Championship. As a result, the Cardinals had planned two extra games were scheduled against the Badgers and Hammond Pros, who were both losing teams in that season. The Pros and the Badgers were both NFL teams, but had ended their season. The Badgers, owned by Ambrose McGuirk, agreed to a game against the Cardinals. However, McGuirk lived in Chicago, and had a tough time putting a team together to play the Cardinals. So Art Folz, a substitute quarterback for the Cardinals, convinced four players from Chicago's Englewood High School into joining the Badgers for the game under assumed names, thereby ensuring that the Cardinals' opponent was not a pro caliber club. The high schoolers were reported to be William Thompson, Jack Daniels, Charles Richardson and J. Snyder.

However NFL President Joseph Carr later learned that high school players had been used in an NFL game. He then stated that the 59-0 Cardinals win would be stricken from the record. However, the league had never got around to removing it. The game is still a part of the NFL records. Cardinals' owner Chris O'Brien was also fined $1,000 by Carr for allowing his team play the game. Meanwhile, McGuirk was ordered to sell his Milwaukee franchise within 90 days. Folz, for his role, was barred from football for life. However, by 1926, Carr toned down his punishment for each party involved in the scandal. Folz's lifetime ban was lifted, probably to prevent him from going the first American Football League, however he chose not to return to pro football. The $1,000 fine against O'Brien was rescinded, probably since the amount would have put the Cardinals out of business. McGuirk though had already sold his Badgers franchise to Johnny Bryan, a fullback with the Chicago Bears. The Englewood p layers were also forgiven, and two of them, William Thompson and Charles Richardson, earned high school all-star recognition at the end of the season. Folz reportedly told the high schoolers that the game was a "practice game" and would in no part affect their amateur status.

This game would also be used to state that the Pottsville Maroons should have won the 1925 NFL Championship.

Decline

Bryan took an aggressive approach to rebuilding the team, even ditching the club's familiar orange sweaters for bright red. While a 2-2 start gave the team hope, but they dropped the last five games of the season and folded the following summer due to a lack of money. In ten games against the rival Packers, the Badgers were winless, managing only a scoreless tie in their first meeting.

Milwaukee Badgers  - badger sports park
Players

Pro Football Hall of Famers

Jimmy Conzelman, Class of 1964
Johnny "Blood" McNally, Class of 1963 (inaugural member)
Fritz Pollard, Class of 2005

Other players

LaVern Dilweg
Frank Morrissey
Paul Robeson
Roy Vassau

Milwaukee Badgers  - badger sports park
Season records

Milwaukee Badgers  - badger sports park
References

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Motorcycle Helmet - Dual Sport Helmet

Motorcycle helmet  - dual sport helmet

A motorcycle helmet is a type of helmet used by motorcycle riders. The primary goal of a motorcycle helmet is motorcycle safety - to protect the rider's head during impact, thus preventing or reducing head injury and saving the rider's life. Some helmets provide additional conveniences, such as ventilation, face shields, ear protection, intercom etc.

Motorcyclists are at high risk in traffic crashes. A 2008 systematic review examined studies on motorcycle riders who had crashed and looked at helmet use as an intervention. The review concluded that helmets reduce the risk of head injury by around 69% and death by around 42%. Although it was once speculated that wearing a motorcycle helmet increased neck and spinal injuries in a crash, recent evidence has shown the opposite to be the case, that helmets protect against cervical spine injury, and that an often-cited small study dating to the mid-1980s, "used flawed statistical reasoning".

Motorcycle helmet  - dual sport helmet
Origins

The origins of the crash helmet date back to the Brooklands race track in early 1914 where the medical officer, a Dr Eric Gardner, noticed he was seeing a motor cyclist with head injuries about every 2 weeks. He got a Mr Moss of Bethnal Green to make canvas and shellac helmets stiff enough to stand a heavy blow and smooth enough to glance off any projections it encountered. He presented the design to the Auto-Cycle Union where it was initially condemned, but they later converted to the idea and made them compulsory for the 1914 Isle of Man TT races, although there was resistance from riders. Gardner took 94 of these helmets with him to the Isle of Man, and one rider who hit a gate with a glancing blow was saved by the helmet. Dr Gardner received a letter later from the Isle of Man medical officer stating that after the T.T. they normally had "several interesting concussion cases" but that in 1914 there was none.

In May 1935, T. E. Lawrence (known as Lawrence of Arabia) had a crash on a Brough Superior SS100 on a narrow road near his cottage near Wareham. The accident occurred because a dip in the road obstructed his view of two boys on bicycles. Swerving to avoid them, Lawrence lost control and was thrown over the handlebars. He was not wearing a helmet, and suffered serious head injuries which left him in a coma; he died after six days in hospital. One of the doctors attending him was Hugh Cairns, a neurosurgeon, who after Lawrence's death began a long study of what he saw as the unnecessary loss of life by motorcycle despatch riders through head injuries. Cairns' research led to the increased use of crash helmets by both military and civilian motorcyclists.

Motorcycle helmet  - dual sport helmet
Basic types

There are five basic types of helmets intended for motorcycling, and others not intended for motorcycling but which are used by some riders. All of these types of helmets are secured by a chin strap, and their protective benefits are greatly reduced, if not eliminated, if the chin strap is not securely fastened so as to maintain a snug fit.

From most to least protective, as generally accepted by riders and manufacturers, the helmet types are:

Full face

A full face helmet covers the entire head, with a rear that covers the base of the skull, and a protective section over the front of the chin. Such helmets have an open cutout in a band across the eyes and nose, and often include a clear or tinted transparent plastic face shield, known as a visor, that generally swivels up and down to allow access to the face. Many full face helmets include vents to increase the airflow to the rider. The significant attraction of these helmets is their protectiveness. Some wearers dislike the increased heat, sense of isolation, lack of wind, and reduced hearing of such helmets. Full-face helmets intended for off-road or motocross use sometimes omit the face shield, but extend the visor and chin portions to increase ventilation, since riding off-road is a very strenuous activity. Studies have shown that full face helmets offer the most protection to motorcycle riders because 35% of all crashes showed major impact on the chin-bar area. Wearing a hel met with less coverage eliminates that protection â€" the less coverage the helmet offers, the less protection for the rider.

Off-road / motocross

The motocross and off-road helmet has clearly elongated chin and visor portions, a chin bar, and partially open face to give the rider extra protection while wearing goggles and to allow the unhindered flow of air during the physical exertion typical of this type of riding. The visor allows the rider to dip his or her head and provide further protection from flying debris during off road riding. It also serves the obvious purpose of shielding the wearer's eyes from the sun.

Originally, off-road helmets did not include a chin bar, with riders using helmets very similar to modern open face street helmets, and using a face mask to fend off dirt and debris from the nose and mouth. Modern off-road helmets include a (typically angular, rather than round) chin bar to provide some facial impact protection in addition to protection from flying dirt and debris. When properly combined with goggles, the result provides most of the same protective features of full face street helmets.

Modular or "flip-up"

A hybrid between full face and open face helmets for street use is the modular or "flip-up" helmet, also sometimes termed "convertible" or "flip-face". When fully assembled and closed, they resemble full face helmets by bearing a chin bar for absorbing face impacts. Its chin bar may be pivoted upwards (or, in some cases, may be removed) by a special lever to allow access to most of the face, as in an open face helmet. The rider may thus eat, drink or have a conversation without unfastening the chinstrap and removing the helmet, making them popular among motor officers. It is also popular with people who use eyeglasses as it allows them to fit a helmet without removing their glasses.

Many modular helmets are designed to be worn only in the closed position for riding, as the movable chin bar is designed as a convenience feature, useful while not actively riding. The curved shape of an open chin bar and face shield section can cause increased wind drag during riding, as air will not flow around an open modular helmet in the same way as a three-quarters helmet. Since the chin bar section also protrudes further from the forehead than a three-quarters visor, riding with the helmet in the open position may pose increased risk of neck injury in a crash. Some modular helmets are dual certified as full face and open face helmet. The chin bar of those helmets offer real protection and they can be used in the "open" position while riding. An example of such a helmet would be the Shark Evoline.

As of 2008, there have not been wide scientific studies of modular helmets to assess how protective the pivoting or removable chin bars are. Observation and unofficial testing suggest that significantly greater protection exists beyond that for an open face helmet, and may be enough to pass full-face helmet standardized tests, but the extent of protection is not fully established by all standards bodies.

The DOT standard does not require chin bar testing. The Snell Memorial Foundation recently certified a flip-up helmet for the first time. ECE 22.05 allows certification of modular helmets with or without chin bar tests, distinguished by -P (protective lower face cover) and -NP (non-protective) suffixes to the certification number, and additional warning text for non-certified chin bars.

Open face or 3/4 helmet

The open face, or "three-quarters", helmet covers the ears, cheeks, and back of the head, but lacks the lower chin bar of the full face helmet. Many offer snap-on visors that may be used by the rider to reduce sunlight glare. An open face helmet provides the same rear protection as a full face helmet, but little protection to the face, even from non-crash events.

Bugs, dust, or even wind to the face and eyes can cause rider discomfort or injury. As a result, it is not uncommon (and in some U.S. states, is required by law) for riders to wear wrap-around sunglasses or goggles to supplement eye protection with these helmets. Alternatively, many open face helmets include, or can be fitted with, a face shield, which is more effective in stopping flying insects from entering the helmet.

Half helmet

The half helmet, also referred to as a "Shorty" in the USA and "Pudding Basin" or TT helmet in the UK and popular with Rockers and road racers of the 1960s in the British Isles. It has essentially the same front design as an open face helmet but without a lowered rear in the shape of a bowl. The half helmet provides the minimum coverage generally allowed by law in the USA, and British Standards 2001:1956.

As with the open face, it is not uncommon to augment this helmet's eye protection through other means such as goggles. Because of their inferiority compared to other helmet styles, some Motorcycle Safety Foundations prohibit the use of half helmets now. Notable UK manufacturers included Everoak, Chas Owens and, currently, Davida.

Headwear not intended for motorcycling

There are other types of headwear often called "beanies," "brain buckets", or "novelty helmets", a term which arose since they are uncertified and cannot legally be called motorcycle helmets in some jurisdictions. Such items are often smaller and lighter than helmets made to U.S. Department of Transportation (DOT) standards, and are unsuitable for crash protection because they lack the energy-absorbing foam that protects the brain by allowing it to come to a gradual stop during an impact. A "novelty helmet" can protect the scalp against sunburn while riding and - if it stays on during a crash - might protect the scalp against abrasion, but it has no capability to protect the skull or brain from an impact.

Motorcycle helmet  - dual sport helmet
Conflicting findings on color visibility

Although black helmets are popular among motorcyclists, one study determined they offer the least visibility to motorists. Riders wearing a plain white helmet rather than a black one were associated with a 24% lower risk of suffering a motorcycle accident injury or death. This study also notes "Riders wearing high visibility clothing and white helmets are likely to be more safety conscious than other riders."

However, the MAIDS report did not back up the claims that helmet color makes any difference in accident frequency, and that in fact motorcycles painted white were actually over-represented in the accident sample compared to the exposure data. While recognizing how much riders need to be seen, the MAIDS report documented that riders' clothing usually fails to do so, saying that "in 65.3% of all cases, the clothing made no contribution to the conspicuity of the rider or the PTW [powered two-wheeler, i.e. motorcycle]. There were very few cases found in which the bright clothing of the PTW rider enhanced the PTW’s overall conspicuity (46 cases). There were more cases in which the use of dark clothing decreased the conspicuity of the rider and the PTW (120 cases)." The MAIDS report was unable to recommend specific items of clothing or colors to make riders better seen.

Motorcycle helmet  - dual sport helmet
Construction

Modern helmets are constructed from plastics. Premium price helmets are made with fiberglass reinforced with Kevlar or carbon fiber. They generally have fabric and foam interiors for both comfort and protection. Motorcycle helmets are generally designed to distort in a crash (thus expending the energy otherwise destined for the wearer's skull), so they provide little protection at the site of their first impact, but continued protection over the remainder of the helmet.

Helmets are constructed from an inner EPS “Expanded Polystyrene foam” and an outer shell to protect the EPS. The density and the thickness of the EPS is designed to cushion or crush on impact to help prevent head injuries. Some manufacturers even offer different densities to offer better protection. The outer shell can be made of plastics or fiber materials. Some of the plastics offer very good protection from penetration as in lexan (bulletproof glass) but will not crush on impact, so the outer shell will look undamaged but the inner EPS will be crushed. Fiberglass is less expensive than lexan but is heavy and very labor-intensive. Fiberglass or fiber shells will crush on impact offering better protection. Some manufacturers will use Kevlar or carbon fiber to help reduce the amount of fiberglass but in the process it will make the helmet lighter and offer more protection from penetration but still crushing on impact. But this can be very expensive.

Motorcycle helmet  - dual sport helmet
Function

The conventional motorcycle helmet has two principal protective components: a thin, hard, outer shell typically made from polycarbonate plastic, fiberglass, or Kevlar and a soft, thick, inner liner usually made of expanded polystyrene or polypropylene "EPS" foam. The purpose of the hard outer shell is:

  1. to prevent penetration of the helmet by a pointed object that might otherwise puncture the skull, and
  2. to provide structure to the inner liner so it does not disintegrate upon abrasive contact with pavement. This is important because the foams used have very little resistance to penetration and abrasion.

The purpose of the foam liner is to crush during an impact, thereby increasing the distance and period of time over which the head stops and reducing its deceleration.

To understand the action of a helmet, it is first necessary to understand the mechanism of head injury. The common perception that a helmet's purpose is to save the rider's head from splitting open is misleading. Skull fractures are usually not life-threatening unless the fracture is depressed and impinges on the brain beneath and bone fractures usually heal over a relatively short period. Brain injuries are much more serious. They frequently result in death, permanent disability or personality change and, unlike bone, neurological tissue has very limited ability to recover after an injury. Therefore, the primary purpose of a helmet is to prevent traumatic brain injury while skull and face injuries are a significant secondary concern.

The most common type of head injury in motorcycle accidents is closed head injury, meaning injury in which the skull is not broken as distinct from an open head injury like a bullet wound. Closed head injury results from violent acceleration of the head, which causes the brain to move around inside the skull. During an impact to the front of the head, the brain lurches forwards inside the skull, squeezing the tissue near the impact site and stretching the tissue on the opposite side of the head. Then the brain rebounds in the opposite direction, stretching the tissue near the impact site and squeezing the tissue on the other side of the head. Blood vessels linking the brain to the inside of the skull may also break during this process, causing dangerous bleeding.

Another hazard, susceptibility of the brain to shearing forces, plays a role primarily in injuries that involve rapid and forceful movements of the head, such as in motor vehicle accidents. In these situations rotational forces such as might occur in whiplash-type injuries are particularly important. These forces, associated with the rapid acceleration and deceleration of the head, are smallest at the point of rotation of the brain near the lower end of the brain stem and successively increase at increasing distances from this point. The resulting shearing forces cause different levels in the brain to move relative to one another. This movement produces stretching and tearing of axons (diffuse axonal injury) and the insulating myelin sheath, injuries which are the major cause of loss of consciousness in a head trauma. Small blood vessels are also damaged causing bleeding (petechial hemorrhages) deep within the brain.

It is important that the liner in a motorcycle helmet is soft and thick so the head decelerates at a gentle rate as it sinks into it. The helmet quickly becomes impractical if the liner is more than 1â€"2 inches (2.5â€"5.1 cm) thick. This implies a limit to how soft the liner can be. If the liner is too soft, the head will crush it completely upon impact without coming to a stop. Outside the liner is a hard plastic shell and beyond that is whatever the helmet is hitting, which is usually an unyielding surface, like concrete pavement. Consequently, the head cannot move any further, so after crushing the liner it comes suddenly to an abrupt stop, causing high accelerations that injure the brain.

Therefore, an ideal helmet liner is stiff enough to decelerate the impacting head to an abrupt stop in a smooth uniform manner just before it completely crushes the liner and no stiffer. The required stiffness depends on the impact speed of the head, which is unknown at the time of manufacture of the helmet. The result is that the manufacturer must choose a likely speed of impact and optimize the helmet for that impact speed. If the helmet is in a real impact that is slower than the one for which it was designed, it will still help but the head will be decelerated a little more violently than was actually necessary given the available space between the inside and outside of the helmet, although that deceleration will still be much less than what it would have been in the absence of the helmet. If the impact is faster than the one the helmet was designed for, the head will completely crush the liner and slow down but not stop in the process. When the crush space of the liner runs o ut, the head will stop suddenly which is not ideal. However, in the absence of the helmet, the head would have been brought to a sudden stop from a higher speed causing more injury. Still, a helmet with a stiffer foam that stopped the head before the liner crush space ran out would have done a better job. So helmets help most in impacts at the speeds they were designed for, and continue to help but not as much in impacts that are at different speeds. In practice, motorcycle helmet manufacturers choose the impact speed they will design for based on the speed used in standard helmet tests. Most standard helmet tests use speeds between 4 and 7 m/s (8.9 and 15.7 mph; 14 and 25 km/h).

Motorcycle helmet  - dual sport helmet
Laws and standards

Motorcycle helmets greatly reduce injuries and fatalities in motorcycle accidents, thus many countries have laws requiring acceptable helmets to be worn by motorcycle riders. These laws vary considerably, often exempting mopeds and other small-displacement bikes. In some countries, most notably the USA and India, there is some opposition to compulsory helmet use (see Helmet Law Defense League); not all USA states have a compulsory helmet law.

Worldwide, many countries have defined their own sets of standards that are used to judge the effectiveness of a motorcycle helmet in an accident, and define the minimal acceptable standard thereof. Among them are:

  • ACU gold or silver badge (Auto-Cycle Union, UK)
  • AS/NZS 1698, (Australia and New Zealand)
  • BSI 6658 (British Standards Institute, UK)
  • CMVSS (Canada)
  • CRASH (Consumer Rating and Assessment of Safety Helmets, Australia)
  • CSA CAN3-D230-M85 (Canadian Standards Association, they no longer certify motorcycle helmets since)
  • DOT FMVSS 218 (USA)
  • ECE Regulation 22 (Europe)
  • GOST R 41.22-2001 (Ð"ОСТ Р 41.22-2001, based on ECE 22.05, Russia)
  • ICC, (Import Commodity Clearance, Philippines)
  • IS 4151 (Indian Standard, Bureau of Indian Standards, India)
  • JIS T 8133:2000 (Japanese Industrial Standards, Japan)
  • MS 1:2011(Previously MS 1:1996. Revised standard based on ECE 22 but with added penetration test. Department of Standards Malaysia, Malaysia)
  • NBR 7471 (Norma Brasileira by Associação Brasileira de Normas Técnicas, Brazil)
  • SHARP (UK)
  • Snell M2005 & M2010 (USA)
  • SNI (Standar Nasional Indonesia)
  • TCVN 5756:2001 (test and certify by QUATEST 3) (Vietnam)

The Snell Memorial Foundation has developed stricter requirements and testing procedures for motorcycle helmets with racing in mind, as well as helmets for other activities (e.g. drag racing, bicycling, horseback riding), and many riders in North America consider Snell certification a benefit when considering buying a helmet while others note that its standards allow for more force (g's) to be transferred to a rider's head than the U.S. Department of Transportation (DOT) standard. However, the DOT standard does not test the chin bar of helmets with them, while the Snell (and ECE) standards do for fullface type only.

In the United Kingdom, many riders choose helmets bearing an Auto-Cycle Union (ACU) Gold sticker as it defines a stricter standard than the legal minimum ECE 22.05 specification. Helmets with an ACU Gold sticker are the only ones allowed to be worn in competition, or at track days.

Motorcycle helmet  - dual sport helmet
Standards testing

Most motorcycle helmet standards use impacts at speeds between 4â€"7 m/s (9â€"16 mph). While motorcyclists frequently ride at speeds higher than 20 m/s (45 mph), the perpendicular impact speed of the helmet is usually not the same as the road speed of the motorcycle, and the severity of the impact is determined not only by the speed of the head but also by the surface it hits and the angle of impact. Since the surface of the road is almost parallel to the direction a motorcyclist moves while driving, only a small component of their velocity is directed perpendicularly (though other surfaces may be perpendicular to the motorcyclist's velocity, such as trees, walls, and the sides of other vehicles). The severity of an impact is also influenced by the nature of the surface struck. The sheet metal wall of a car door may bend inwards to a depth of 7.5â€"10 cm (3.0â€"3.9 in) during a helmeted-head impact, allowing more stopping distance for the rider's head than the helmet itself. A perpendicular impact against a flat steel anvil at 5 m/s (11 mph) may be of approximate severity to an oblique impact against a concrete surface at 30 m/s (67 mph) or a perpendicular impact against a sheet metal car door or windscreen at 30 m/s. Since there is a wide range of severity in the impacts that could happen in a motorcycle accident, some will be more severe than the impacts used in the standard tests and some will be less.

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