Sporting Activities at School — Cambridge IELTS 17 Academic 2022 TEST 4 — IELTS Test

Cambridge IELTS 17 Academic 2022 TEST 4

Sporting Activities at School

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(0:00) Part 3. You will hear two students called Jean and Thomas discussing their sports science course. (0:09) First you have some time to look at questions 21 to 24. (0:33) Now listen carefully and answer questions 21 to 24.
(0:42) Hi Thomas, how are you enjoying the course so far? (0:46) Yeah, I think it's good. (0:47) Remind me, why did you decide to study sports science? (0:51) Didn't you want to be a professional athlete when you were at school? (0:55) Yeah, that was my goal and all my classmates assumed I would achieve it. (0:59) They thought I was brilliant.
(1:00) That must have been a nice feeling. (1:02) I thought I could win anything. (1:05) There was no one who could run faster than me.
(1:08) Exactly. So what happened? (1:11) Did your mum and dad want you to be more academic? (1:14) Not at all. Perhaps they should have pushed me harder though.
(1:18) What do you mean? (1:20) I think I should have practised more. (1:22) What makes you say that? (1:23) Well, I went out to Kenya for a couple of weeks to train. (1:27) Really? I didn't know that.
(1:30) I was chosen to go there out of loads of kids and run with some of the top teenage athletes in the world. (1:37) And I was so calm about it. (1:40) I just kept thinking how fortunate I was, what a great chance this was.
(1:45) Everyone back home was so proud of me. (1:48) But once we started competing, I very quickly realised I wasn't good enough. (1:53) That must have been a huge shock.
(1:56) I thought, this can't be happening. I was used to winning. (2:00) I'm sorry to hear that.
(2:01) It's OK. I'm over it now and I think it's much better to do a university course. (2:07) And this one has such a variety of sports-related areas.
It's going to be good.
(2:12) Well, I agree. I chose it because of that.
(2:19) Before you hear the rest of the discussion, you have some time to look at questions 25 to 30. (2:56) Now listen and answer questions 25 to 30. (3:03) So, Jianne, have you thought of any ideas for the discussion session next week on technology and sport? (3:09) We have to cover more than one sport, don't we? (3:13) Yeah.
(3:14) You know, we always think technology is about the future, (3:18) but we could gather some ideas about past developments in sport. (3:22) Look at early types of equipment, perhaps. (3:25) I remember reading something about table tennis bats once, (3:30) how they ended up being covered with pimpled rubber.
(3:33) Because they were just wooden at first, I'd imagine. (3:36) Yeah. In about the 1920s, a factory was making rolls of the rubber in bulk for something like horse harnesses.
(3:44) Really? (3:45) Yeah. And someone realised that it would make a perfect covering for the wooden bats. (3:50) So what about cricket? That's had a few innovative changes.
(3:56) Maybe the pads they wear on their legs? (3:59) I don't think they've changed much, but I'm just looking on the internet (4:02) and it says that when the first cricket helmet came in, in 1978, (4:09) the Australian batsman who first wore it was booed and jeered by people watching because it was so ugly. (4:15) Wow! Players have to protect themselves from getting hurt. (4:20) I mean, everyone wears one now.
(4:22) Hmm. Unlike the cycle helmet. (4:25) Well, unless you're a professional.
(4:27) But you're right, many ordinary bikers don't wear a helmet. (4:33) Hey, look at these pictures of original helmet designs. (4:37) This one looks like an upside-down bowl.
(4:39) Yet the woman's laughing. She's so proud to be wearing it. (4:45) It says serious cyclists ended up with wet hair from all the hard exercise.
(4:50) I guess that's why they have large air vents in them now, so that the skin can breathe more easily. (4:56) OK, so we've done helmets. (4:59) What about golf balls? Or better still, golf clubs? They've changed a lot.
(5:06) Yeah. I remember my great-grandfather telling me that because a club was made entirely of wood, (5:13) it would easily break and players had to get another. (5:16) There's no wood at all in them now, is there? (5:18) No, they're much more powerful.
(5:21) The same must be true of hockey sticks. (5:23) I don't think so, because players still use wooden sticks today. (5:29) What it does say here, though, is that when the game started, you had to produce a stick yourself.
(5:37) I guess they just weren't being manufactured. (5:40) So, one more perhaps? What about football? (5:44) Well, I know the first balls were made of animal skin. (5:48) Yeah, they covered them with pieces of leather that were stitched together, (5:53) but the balls let in water when it rained.
(5:57) Oh, that would have made them much heavier. (5:59) That's right. You can imagine the damage to players' necks when the ball was headed.
(6:04) Oh, how painful that must have been! (6:07) Yeah. Well, I think we can put together some useful ideas and… (6:14) That is the end of part three. (6:17) You now have half a minute to check your answers to part three.

Part 3 of 4

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