not nessecarily. all they have done is play sports and stuff but they might be heroes to little kids that might want to grow up like them and they also may act quite heroic if they achieve something great by trying as much as they can, e.g. when an athelete runs so hard that she/he beats her/his opponents in a 100 metres race even though they give her/him low chance of being first or something like that
They should, but be carefull who you idolize because alot of the athletes today are either on drugs or a really bad person. Now some ahletes are heroes, but this is an opiniotive question.
unless they save lifes and help the community, well anyone can be a hero if they try, so why not.
not really. all they do is act out stuff and/or play sports. although some little kids who want to grow up like them might want to treat them like heroes.
Ken Lane has written: 'Champions all; 12 stories of famous sports heroes' -- subject(s): Athletes, Biography, Juvenile literature, Sports
88 Countries are competing in the Sochi 2014 Winter Olympics Albania - 2 athletes Andorra - 6 athletes Argentina - 7 athletes Armenia - 4 athletes Australia - 61 athletes Austria - 130 athletes Azerbaijan - 4 athletes Belarus - 24 athletes Belgium - 7 athletes Bermuda - 1 athlete Bosnia and Herzegovina - 5 athletes Brazil - 13 athletes British Virgin Islands - 1 athlete Bulgaria - 18 athletes Canada - 221 athletes Cayman Islands - 1 athlete Chile - 6 athletes China - 66 athletes Croatia - 11 athletes Cyprus - 2 athletes Czech Republic - 85 athletes Denmark - 12 athletes Dominica - 2 athletes Estonia - 24 athletes Finland - 103 athletes France - 105 athletes Georgia - 4 athletes Germany - 153 athletes Great Britain - 56 athletes Greece - 7 athletes Hong Kong - 1 athlete Hungary - 16 athletes Iceland - 5 athletes India - 3 athletes Iran - 5 athletes Ireland - 5 athletes Israel - 5 athletes Italy - 113 athletes Jamaica - 2 athletes Japan - 113 athletes Kazakhstan - 52 athletes South Korea - 71 athletes Kyrgyzstan - 1 athlete Latvia - 58 athletes Lebanon - 2 athletes Liechtenstein - 4 athletes Lithuania - 9 athletes Luxembourg - 1 athlete Macedonia - 3 athletes Malta - 1 athlete Mexico - 1 athlete Moldova - 4 athletes Monaco - 5 athletes Mongolia - 2 athletes Montenegro - 2 athletes Morocco - 2 athletes Nepal - 1 athlete Netherlands - 41 athletes New Zealand - 15 athletes Norway - 134 athletes Pakistan - 1 athlete Paraguay - 1 athlete Peru - 3 athletes Philippines - 1 athlete Poland - 59 athletes Portugal - 2 athletes Romania - 24 athletes Russia - 226 athletes San Marino - 2 athletes Serbia - 8 athletes Slovakia - 62 athletes Slovenia - 66 athletes Spain - 20 athletes Sweden - 106 athletes Switzerland - 168 athletes Chinese Taipei - 3 athletes Tajikistan - 1 athlete Thailand - 2 athletes Timor-Leste - 1 athlete Togo - 2 athletes Tonga - 1 athlete Turkey - 6 athletes Ukraine - 43 athletes United States - 230 athletes Uzbekistan - 3 athletes Venezuela - 1 athlete Virgin Islands - 1 athletes Zimbabwe - 1 athlete
The 12 largest countries at the Beijing 2008 Olympic Games: # China - 639 athletes # The United States - 596 athletes # Russia - 467 athletes # Germany - 463 athletes # Australia - 433 athletes # Japan - 351 athletes # Italy - 344 athletes # Canada - 332 athletes # France - 323 athletes # Great Britain - 312 athletes # Spain - 286 athletes # Brazil - 277 athletes
Chris Rhys has written: 'BBC brain of sport 2' -- subject(s): Miscellanea, Sports 'Our greatest sporting heroes 1884-1984' -- subject(s): Biography, Athletes, Games
Heroes Among Heroes was created on 1993-11-11.
Athletes produce less lactic acid than non-athletes.
USA has 647 athletes. USA has 647 athletes.
There are 114 Jamaican athletes
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