Proof of Evolution by Natural Selection in Sports
There
was a time that the governing body of tennis was forced to limit the size of
the racket. Players were playing with rackets with ever larger hitting surface
and were ostensibly compensating for the speed of the passing shots –
increasing their reach at the net. By using a racket of a larger hitting
surface they were unintentionally advertising their weakness and broadcasting
their inability to play the net game, this cynic says.
The
ruling body of tennis was in a hurry not to let players of slightly older era
to evolve and develop slowly the defence against the bigger rackets; the
passing shot arrow in their quiver was being rendered ineffective. The
regulators of tennis could have increased the size of the court, breadth-wise.
No, that would eat into the revenue of the clubs that host the two-week long
tournaments, the so-called majors, as they had to cram more and more courts
over the years in the limited area made available by a Royal Charter or by
municipal authorities.
From
a perspective I employ, mostly unthinking, I will try to justify my judgement–evolutionary
time passes at its own rate, unlike clock time.
Take
volleyball. The height of the net has not increased ever since I started
playing, in the 1960s. I was so tall that I could go across the net below it
without crouching! The height of the top of the net has remained the same,
depending only on the sex of the players and their age group. In the mean time,
the height of the players has gone up–now, I am only knee-high for them!
Therefore, I should expect more irretrievable smashes across the net.
This
does not happen. The smash is blocked at the net or people have become adept at
retrieving the same, I have seen the obverse of the palm slid under the ball in
retrieving. The court size has remained the same. Rules of scoring have
changed, but these affects both sides sans any bias.
What
gives? Evolution, by natural selection.
Basketball
has retained the basket at the height Dr. James Naismith nailed it, nearly a
century ago. In the meantime, players have become ever taller, and none shorter
than seven feet is almost unacceptable for the post players. The guards are no
shorter than six feet six inches. I recall a player who was five feet eleven
inches who could dunk the ball. That spectacle is off-limits to today’s
audience. And, the scoring has not gone through the roof. Again, what gives?
Evolution,
by natural selection.
Similar
situation in competitive Table Tennis, the playing surface has not become
larger and athletes are taller and can reach the net side almost casually, and
smash a back-spinning return (as long as the ball has not crossed back).
It
is one sport that seems to have accommodated some changes in the dimensions,
not of the table (the area in which the ball is in play), but of the ball. Yet,
this change was not in response to height and reach of the players but for the
ball to be more visible to the spectators. How would this play out under the
rubric, “Evolution by Natural Selection”? It would if you recognized that
spectators are part of the competitive Table Tennis “ecosphere” (Oh, how I hate
that word!).
Not
to stretch this write-up unnecessarily, soccer, hockey and in some other sports
(ice hockey, water polo), the target area (width x height) does not seem to
have increased.
In
swimming and track and field events, the World Records are inching up, surely,
but by a few hundredths of a second until an Australian swimmer or a Jamaican
runner does a smash-up job, but by merely two tenths of a second or so. These
swimmers have a sculpted physique, yet ...
Here,
evolution by natural selection is not between competitors, at least in the first
order, but between the winner and time; not Father Time, but record time. TV
broadcasts take any race in which any Record Time (Meet, Olympic or World) is
not bested is taken with a blasé “So what?” Almost the same with gymnastics.
Now,
I come to a home–grown sport, IPL. Note that I did not say T20, the
nomenclature indicating 20 overs per team. What is IPL noted for? The bowling
side shall be (a business imperative) burdened with negative handicap! There is
another write−up that is in the works that deals exclusively with IPL.
Here
it is bringing up the rear, as an exception that proves my thesis. We have
boundary lines that range between 59 m and 75 m. You heave the ball just about
two thirds of the maximum distance allowed from the center of the pitch to the
boundary marker, you are credited with six runs. Tut, tut ... Almost no effort
and the biggest reward?
More to the point, it needs no big effort on the part of the batsmen as they are weight trained and have arms like the traditional stone grinder. The stouter side (at the bottom) is where the elbow is and the narrow end is the wrist side, if you didn’t catch the comparison!
This
is what I mean when I said that bowlers are loaded with negatives, even before
they start to bowl.
This
has nothing to do with evolution by natural selection. It is, precisely the
opposite, sudden and drastic change through artificial selection.
With
that I have proved the hypothesis that is evident in the heading, with positive
correlations with it, and the required negative correlation also, which proves
the positive.
I
am off to playing tennis with my single broom-stick thick arms. Bye!
Raghuram Ekambaram
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