Maryland Leader
MarylandLeader.com Thursday 29th July 2010 Issue 305/2010
  • More Breaking Sports News

  • Tendulkar gets his fifth double ton after six years
  • Abbas overlooked for Pakistan's CWG and Asian Games squads
  • Tendulkar, Raina help India take lead
  • Scoreboard: India vs. Sri Lanka, Day 4, Second Test
  • India end fourth day at 669/9, take 27 runs lead
  • Mani Shankar Aiyar mum on Commonwealth Games
  • Tendulkar double century takes India to safety
  • Mushtaq tells PCB to stick with Salman-Waqar combination
  • Tea scoreboard: India vs. Sri Lanka, Day 4, Second Test
  • Tendulkar hits double ton as India make 589/5
  • Australia set to host 2015 Asian Cup football finals
  • Debutant Raina hits century as India avoid follow-on
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    Gerrard believes football is a science
    Maryland Leader
    Wednesday 10th March, 2010  
    (ANI)


    England and Liverpool FC captain Steven Gerrard has described football as a science that requires years of understanding and practice.

    Opening a sports science facility at a Merseyside university, The Telegraph quoted Gerrard as saying.

    ''Thanks to the university developing the UK's first Sports Science degree, football and other sports are no longer seen as only a game but as a science.''

    Named after the UK's first Professor of Sports Science, the Tom Reilly Building houses world-class equipment, including a scanner for measuring body fat, muscles and bone density, physiology suites with treadmills and bicycles, and machines for monitoring the heart, brain, joints and tissue.

    Students at the university can read Science and Football as a bachelor's degree.

    As well as being home to LJMU's School of Sports and Exercise Sciences, the building also houses the School of Natural Sciences and Psychology.

    It contains hi-tech machines for analysing eating disorders, lie detectors, eye-tracking equipment and one-way mirrors like those used in police line-ups. Its neuroscience labs can analyse the changing states of the brain.

    The centre, which 8,000 students will use, has a driving simulator which analyses the causes of road rage and the effects alcohol, and a chamber, which recreates conditions where oxygen is restricted, such as at high altitudes.

    The Liverpool captain toured the new 25.5 million pound centre at Liverpool John Moores University (LJMU).

    He said: ''This is a fantastic facility which will further enhance Liverpool's reputation as a city of sporting and academic excellence, and I'm delighted to be here today to help the university celebrate its opening."

    Gerrard, who wore the captain's armband in England's last match, added: ''It's a great privilege to be launching the building named in honour of Professor Tom Reilly. Like me, his two great passions in life were football and family." (ANI)

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