Thursday, June 14, 2007

The discovery of a Roman training manual, found in Turkey, inscribed in marble, and dating back some 2000 years, provides an insight into incentives offered for Roman athletes to behave themselves. The Romans clearly didn't believe in the soft and fluffy approach to personnel management:


The manual recommends a flogging to get them to perform better. And the same went if they drank too much mead or behaved disgracefully with the local maidens.

The marble tablet was found in 2003 in the town of Alexandria Troas in Turkey, and deciphered only recently by academics at the University of Muenster in Germany. Applied to professional football players today, the whip would undoubtedly replace the half-time talk as the favoured discipline of choice.

The 1.8-metre-high, 90-centimetre-wide tablet was inscribed with the name of Hadrian, the emperor who built a wall in northern England. He sought to get the best out of his athletes.

The tablet, according to research leader Professor Elmar Schwertheim, also listed entry fees to games such as discus and javelin throwing.

Hmmmmm - modern sports professionals beware, lest your bosses are tempted to follow the Roman example.