Luck in sports
#1
Posted 2012-July-08, 07:48
What about some actual sports? I used to think that in football (either kind) it is not luck that you kick/throw the ball with a particular amazing accuracy, it is just skill+clutch effect. But of course even the most skilled players will have a certain statistical spread - maybe you need to kick the ball with a certain strength in a certain direction between 44 and 46 degrees to score* - the best player would maybe have 45+/-5 degrees (don't worry about this data please) if he hits it as accurately as he can: of course maybe I could only hit it at 40+/-20 degrees and only half the speed, so of course he deserves it when he scores but what if he doesn't score? Maybe the kick was good but he just was unlucky. I'm watching tennis now, of course the room for error in tennis is even smaller. One thing that I haven't really understood: if players apologise when they hit the top of the net and the ball passes, shouldn't the other guy apologise when the ball hits the top of the net and the ball comes back? Of course it's not their fault but still. What if one trained to hit the top of the net very frequently and thereby won a lot of points?
*part of the spread is related to a margin of error related to where the defenders/goalie is and part of the spread is related to lack of 100% accurate knowledge on air currents and so on.
George Carlin
#2
Posted 2012-July-08, 10:15
Similarly in bridge, if I intentionally take a good line of play to make a contract that's skill. If a card drops out of my hand and the director requires me to play it, and it happens to be a brilliant play, that is luck. If I take a bad line of play that makes, the argument is that I failed in what I was trying to do (to select the best way of making the contract) but somehow received a good outcome (lucky) in any case.
a.k.a. Appeal Without Merit
#3
Posted 2012-July-08, 13:11
#4
Posted 2012-July-08, 13:16
a.k.a. Appeal Without Merit
#5
Posted 2012-July-08, 13:39
And my response wasn't addressing the apology point at all, just the main question of luck vs. skill.
#6
Posted 2012-July-08, 13:58
#7
Posted 2012-July-08, 22:42
We tend to focus on the spectacular finishes of an event instead of what happened up to that point. In a tennis tie breaker where a ball that misses a line by 1" either way can determine a winner and that seems kind of random.
Winner - BBO Challenge bracket #6 - February, 2017.
#8
Posted 2012-July-09, 02:45
barmar, on 2012-July-08, 13:39, said:
And my response wasn't addressing the apology point at all, just the main question of luck vs. skill.
I have apologised to opps in a couple of circumstances at the bridge table.
1. In a slam where the only point of the hand was Jx opposite Kxxx for 1 loser, the guy sitting over had the AQ but unfortunately discarded one a round before he should have done on the trump suit and had to play a low one when I led towards the K.
2. Where we had a completely messed up auction but ended up in a slam that required a long series of unlikely breaks and finesses and got them.
As to luck, think golf. Holing a chip where you played the shot perfectly and it was going to finish 6 inches away if it missed is fractionally lucky, but basically skill. Holing the same chip where you thinned it and the ball was going across the green and into the water if it hadn't hit the flag stick full on is luck.
The apology in tennis is because nobody tries to hit the top of the net, it just happens. You will also find they sometimes apologise when they play a perfect lob by accident when the ball hits the frame of the racquet and drops in when they were trying to drive the ball.
#9
Posted 2012-July-09, 06:53
wyman, on 2012-May-04, 09:48, said:
rbforster, on 2012-May-20, 21:04, said:
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#10
Posted 2012-July-09, 07:31
Hanoi5, on 2012-July-09, 06:53, said:
Of course it is. Who would disagree? Of course good physical condition would reduce the probability of this scenario, but not to zero. So if it happens, your team is unlucky. Also if the referee makes a mistake, or if the weather changes... There are a lot of uncontrollable circumstances in most sports.
George Carlin
#11
Posted 2012-July-09, 08:58
There's also the butterfly effect -- a spectator can cough at an inopportune moment, or shift in their seat so that the sun reflects into a player's eyes, a ball can have a little extra wear, etc.
#12
Posted 2012-July-09, 11:43
There is the normal variation, the +/- 10% type stuff; whether you are firing on the +10% or -10% on any given day is a matter of luck.
Then there is the unplanned result, the net ball that trickles over, the grounder that takes a bad hop or hits a bag, the opponent that slips, the equipment malfunction, the gust of wind.
I think people are prone to apologize for the latter because they reduce the connection between skill and outcome.
#14
Posted 2012-July-12, 04:53
Hanoi5, on 2012-July-09, 06:53, said:
If you were behind 0:2, and then subbed in a defensive midfielder for an offensive midfielder, and the new defensive midfielder got injured 5 minutes later, would you say that was bad luck or would you say it was a stupid idea in the first place?
-- Bertrand Russell