In my sport, we're measured in millimeters and fractions of millimeters.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
Everybody that has a measurement, whether it's in teaching or whether it's in your job, you're always worried how you will be measured.
Sport's hard: the margin between winning and losing is tiny.
There are many things you shouldn't measure. Don't, for example, try to measure how much you love your wife!
In this sport luck and tragedy are only a few hundredths of seconds apart from each other.
Thus the metric system did not really catch on in the States, unless you count the increasing popularity of the nine-millimeter bullet.
You can't really measure your game. You can shoot seven under and lose and you can shoot even and win.
Sports don't define us; it is not what we live for.
There are many things that you can't measure. But the great fun of what I do for a living is figuring out ways to measure things that people previously considered intangible.
You're measured by championships no matter what.
Baseball is a game of inches.