Peter Roby

Peter Roby
Peter P. Robyis the current athletic director of Northeastern University. Roby was introduced as the ninth athletic director of the university in June 2007. In 2007 Roby was named as one of the 100 Most Influential Sports Educators...
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I think it's a slippery slope. With advances in technology and science, there are going to be situations where you will know just about anything and everything about someone in terms of what they put in their bodies and their history and what their future medical life will be. ... It's important for people on both sides of the argument to work together.
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People have come to understand that they can influence the sports or the outcome of a game by the behavior that they initiate in the stands or in public. If it's done in a positive way, rooting for your team, that's well and good.
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I'm not overly concerned about it. If it were to really catch on, it would be a good thing in terms of encouraging people to participate in physical activity.
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The more that connection is made, the more dangerous it is. A lot of young kids can't make the distinction between what they see on TV and what's happening off TV with online gambling.
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But when it comes to being negative or intimidating the opposition, that's where it becomes negative.
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The importance of sport has grown in our society, especially in attention from the media and corporate advertisers,
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On the other hand, you have an organization that wants to make sure they can do all they can to protect their interests and investments before they commit upwards of $60 million to a player. So I can understand why they would want to use every possible means to investigate that.
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It's peer pressure. They look at the other kid's talent and what's our kid doing? Sports is so big, so much attention is paid to it. When you walk into a high school, what's the first thing you see? A trophy case and pictures of the athletes. You don't see pictures of average students.
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We don't want people to assume that athletes on team sports are going to be more predisposed to a certain way of looking at life than those that aren't on team sports.
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When a young person grows up with a father not in his life because the father chose not be involved, that can be debilitating,
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When you start to have success in athletics and get the adulation and praise that follows, that becomes quite an addiction. It gets you feeling better about yourself -- 'Maybe I am worthy.' That's why it may fuel that passion and drive to be great.
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What we would like to see is when a teammate walks into a locker room and wants to brag about his conquest the night before, that someone would have had their awareness raised around the issues of gender bounds to say, Hey, that's somebody's sister, that's somebody's daughter, that's somebody's friend that you might be talking about. That could easily be our loved one that we care about. And if we don't want our loved ones to be talked about in that way, let's not engage in that kind of conversation about somebody else's loved one.
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There are plenty of well-dressed people now going to prison for defrauding their shareholders, ... We have to be careful about making assumptions about folks simply on the way they look. That's a dangerous thing to do because it's how we start to create stereotypes.