tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5794535954827182754.post2331141504903825004..comments2024-02-17T04:06:00.805-05:00Comments on Just Not Said: Interest vs. aptitudeJohn Craighttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08729625146043379286noreply@blogger.comBlogger8125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5794535954827182754.post-83103628787843489242010-01-05T21:57:17.251-05:002010-01-05T21:57:17.251-05:00Interesting. I've read in the past that the co...Interesting. I've read in the past that the correlation between the height of fathers and sons is .15, which means it's not that great (0.0 would be totally random, and 1.0 is a perfect correlation.) <br /><br />As to your last statement, Johnny has always claimed that his real father is Sean Connery, that there's no way he could have a father as ugly as me. He refers to my )somewhat) weak chin as a "little bitch chin" and tells me I look like a gay version of Wes Studi (the evil Indian in "Last of the Mohicans").John Craighttps://www.blogger.com/profile/08729625146043379286noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5794535954827182754.post-65719462743294261932010-01-05T21:43:17.321-05:002010-01-05T21:43:17.321-05:00Going back to the first response on kids starting ...Going back to the first response on kids starting sport at an early age.... A Russian coach I know said that they would look at the children's parents to get some insight into their genetic potential. He would add with a wink that they would also check the fathers of neighboring households. <br /><br />- EdAnonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5794535954827182754.post-60762369862586705912010-01-05T20:48:04.827-05:002010-01-05T20:48:04.827-05:00Guy --
I didn't interpret your philosophical m...Guy --<br />I didn't interpret your philosophical musing as anything but that, and never took any offence, so there's no need for a retraction. I just saw the opportunity for a dumb pun, and thought I'd tweak you in turn. <br /><br />Trust me, it's very hard to offend me (though I seem to find it very easy to offend others). <br /><br />In a more serious vein, I'd say that sport of football itself is not a metaphor for the USA's narcissism/lack of diplomacy (every country has its own quaint customs and sports). But I would say that both the seriousness with which big time football coaches tend to take themselves and the end zone celebrations of scoring players are pretty good metaphors for our uniquely American-style brashness.John Craighttps://www.blogger.com/profile/08729625146043379286noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5794535954827182754.post-22413384612808015372010-01-05T20:34:14.652-05:002010-01-05T20:34:14.652-05:00Cricket's popularity in the Indian sub-contine...Cricket's popularity in the Indian sub-continent puts me solidly on the better side of that argument. Or do Americans have a greater weight than other nationalities? ;)<br /><br />(PS there are still some lingering benefits of once great and extensive empire! :) )<br /><br />But I will retract my ungracious tweak, which in fairness was intended to be philosophical musing rather than offence to the home team, which as you know I support with gusto.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5794535954827182754.post-12514605489870697422010-01-05T20:08:23.211-05:002010-01-05T20:08:23.211-05:00Guy -- Thank you for that long and thoughtful comm...Guy -- Thank you for that long and thoughtful comment. The British are doing the right thing. I've heard of a lot of gymnasts who have been recycled into diving, and who do very well. In this country there are a fair number of sprinters who have gone into pro football, with varying degrees of success as running backs and occasionally, receivers. <br /><br />I've also heard of or known a fair number of swimmers who have branched out into rowing, and have done fairly well as rowers, though in every single case I've known of, the athlete has stopped improving as a swimmer at that point. But those kinds of transitions make a lot of sense. <br /><br />Personally, I think parents should try to encourage their kids to do what they're good at, if they can do so subtly. When I saw that my daughter wasn't going to be that tall, and when I saw that she had some talent at running, I encouraged her to switch, she did, and we're both glad she did. With my son, I was most definitely not subtle, but with him the choice was swimming or video games. <br /><br />Is American football a metaphor for our international cluelessness? Hmm. That comment is not really cricket. Oh, speaking of which, how widely played is that game?John Craighttps://www.blogger.com/profile/08729625146043379286noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5794535954827182754.post-8023619439984358792010-01-05T19:52:45.467-05:002010-01-05T19:52:45.467-05:00The well funded modern sports regime in the UK is ...The well funded modern sports regime in the UK is now getting fairly good at talent ID. They are particularly good at transferring talented athletes from sports which have a long skill acquisition trajectory and where the UK is not a world leader (like swimming) into sports in which skills can be acquired rapidly and in which UK is very strong (cycling, rowing), and one might cynically add that are not too competitive internationally - not many cycling Ethiopians but they'll kick your butt on the distance track. They have also done well recycling rowers into cyclists! This is done with relatively mature athletes and obviously reflects body type. My daughter's high school swim team has a number of athletes who are also national champions in rowing. They benefit from the aerobic base developed in swimming and have the size and strength to quickly excel in rowing. You might be interested in this:<br />http://www.uksport.gov.uk/pages/uk_talent_team/<br /><br />On a separate note, it is interesting to speculate how the Olympics might look if the US did not syphon so many of its athletes into professional sports that are played so little internationally (basketball slightly excepted). <br /><br />Is America's passion for Football, which the rest of the world doesn't understand, and it's lack of interest in many other sports that are big internationally a metaphor for the US's sometimes troubled relationship with the rest of the world? Sorry, I'm drifting....<br /><br />Interesting post John. Particularly the question it raises on how much parents should try to guide their kids in their life choices.<br />GAnonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5794535954827182754.post-15102524067924881532010-01-05T14:23:41.707-05:002010-01-05T14:23:41.707-05:00Anonymous -- Good point. What the East Germans wou...Anonymous -- Good point. What the East Germans would do was measure the height at age ten and also check the thickness of the wrist or something like that which would give them a sense of how big a child would turn out to be. But there's certainly no way of predicting for sure.John Craighttps://www.blogger.com/profile/08729625146043379286noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5794535954827182754.post-59316003905134912852010-01-05T13:51:16.402-05:002010-01-05T13:51:16.402-05:00Kids these days get into sports at such an early a...Kids these days get into sports at such an early age that it's not easy to predict what body type they will develop as adults. By the time they go through the growth spurt, it's almost to late to seriously get started at a new sport and to catch up with others in it who have done it for a while. Or, at least, in most sports good teams are so compatitive to get into that for an inexperienced teenager it's nearly impossible.<br />I think this is partly why we have so many "mismatched" athletes.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.com