<p>Are their any colleges in the United States that offer this? If not, would a mechanical engineering degree be the best for a job in sports engineering?</p>
<p>What is sports engineering?</p>
<p>[Sports</a> engineering - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia](<a href=“http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sports_engineering]Sports”>Sports engineering - Wikipedia)</p>
<p>For Pete’s sake don’t get a degree that’s so niche-y. Get a real engineering degree and then try to go into “sports engineering” if that’s what you want. If you want to work on equipment, MechE sounds appropriate, if you want to work on facilities, CivE sounds appropriate.</p>
<p>Settle down buddy it was just a question. I was just curious because I found it online and wondered what type of field it was. I plan on going undecided within engineering until I find what’s right for me.</p>
<p>Should i major in fart engineering or chemical engineering?</p>
<p>^ Fart engineering, I heard the job outlook is great and the salary is the highest out of all the engineering fields.</p>
<p>I think a better comparison to fart engineering would be petroleum engineering…I’d hate to see you make a mistake by choosing chemE over petroleumE when your ultimate goal is fartE.</p>
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<p>Definitely. Get an ME degree and design and manufacture a helmet that minimizes concussions and/or provides wireless impact information that allows medical professionals to assess the severity of on field contacts. File for a patent. Find some investors and create your own job.</p>
<p>SPORTS engineering.
HAHAHAHAHA
I’ve seen it all now.</p>
<p>You will design the next flavor of gatorade!</p>
<p>I think you can get a sports engineering job with a regular Engineering degree.</p>
<p>Urinal Engineering Technology sounds like a better major as opposed to Civil Engineering (not).</p>
<p>Or Food Engineering specializing in pretzles and tacos.</p>
<p>To FCS 325 - get a degree in mechanical engineering along with some (or a minor) in bio-med type courses that teach you about anatomy and mechanics of the human body. You can design knee braces, helmets, etc… Sports is big business, why not. And there is a lot of room for improvement. When I was young I had an interview with Nautilus for the design of fitness equipment. Never took the job, but looking back would have been more fun than defense industry work I did. I have an ME degree. </p>
<p>Check out Univ Wisc Madison - they have a great engineering department along with a top sports medicine program. Take an extra year or so and get a double major. Good luck.</p>