I think sportsmanship is knowing that it is a game, that we are only as a good as our opponents, and whether you win or lose, to always give 100 percent.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
Sometimes I think sportsmanship is a little bit forgotten in place of the individual attention.
Sportsmanship and easygoing methods are all right, but it is the prospect of a hot fight that brings out the crowds.
It is fair to say that insofar as sport is taken seriously by those who play it, then to that extent their conduct in play - their ability to deal with loss or victory, their ability to meld strategic thinking and brute force - can be taken as a small-scale model of how they, or others like them, might behave in life.
One man practicing sportsmanship is far better than a hundred teaching it.
The Boys and Girls Club taught me a lot about sportsmanship, humility, self-respect.
When you're representing a sport, people are more likely to judge and comment as, unlike other fields, sport permits every viewer to participate to a certain level.
As a sportsman, you always play to win. Having said that, it's not possible to win every day. There will be days when you will do well and there will be days you won't.
You try to hide your emotions, so as not to show weaknesses to others. I believe it's the same for every sportsman.
There is no such thing as sportsmanship.
Professionalism is not sportsmanship. If you don't succeed, you won't be in your profession for long. In our society, it's not about good or bad. It's about who's on top.