Lanefan
Victoria Rules
Though I'd appear to be in the minority here, I'll back this one.D&D is a sport! I submit the following evidence:
D&D is competitive
Indeed, but this one's a double-edged sword.D&D requires skill
If the point of D&D is to win then skill is a virtue. If the point of D&D is to entertain and-or amuse then skill can often be a liability.
For this to become an official sport there wold need to be a universal set of rules upheld by some overarching body (a la M:tG Tournament Rules) and this is I think where you'd run hard aground: D&D's long traditions of kitbashing, homebrewing, and good ol' rule 0 (or page 42 for the 4e types) would fight back and win handily. Never mind there's half a dozen or more different editions/versions of the damn game.D&D has rules and etiquette
As for etiquette - well, good luck with that....
If one counts using one's brain as physical exertion (and I believe there's a valid argument to be made there, though I've not the expertise to make it) then yes, you're onto something here.D&D requires physical exertion
That said, using a bigger beer mug would certainly add to the muscular exercise...

That team might win the gold, but the platinum would go to the team that found the most creative, unexpected, and-or unusual ways for their PCs to die.I therefore submit that based on the above considerations, D&D is a sport! And we are all athletes!
So it is high time that WotC gets the ball rolling, and apply to the International Olympic Committee to have D&D recognized as a sport!
(I'm assuming the players of the team that completes the IOC approved version of the Tomb of Horrors first would win the gold, but to each his own.)
