Resistance to Change in Sports

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Every now and then you have to forget serious thought and have fun. This is a story for American football season.

Resistance to change is everywhere—even in sports. Think of the slow embrace of using stats (analytics) or changing the rules in professional sports. Giving up and out in baseball by bunting a runner to second base was once the orthodox move in professional baseball. Or consider another example from professional football. I grew up in St. Louis and our NFL team (1960-1987) then was the St. Louis (now Arizona) Cardinals. From 1963 to 1978 our placekicker was Jim Bakken.

[image error]Bakken was a 4-time pro-bowler and 2-time first-team all-pro, one of the best kickers of his era. ( You can see all his stats here.) Note that Bakken made only 63% of his field goals for his career from all distances; about 43% from 40-49 yards; and was 1 for 21 from 50 yards or more. Bakken also missed 19 extra points in his career in 553 attempts. (This is when an extra point was from about 19 yards.) Compare this to stats for kickers in the NFL last year. Today NFL kickers rarely miss field goals and even make the vast majority of their kicks from over 50 yards.

Kickers today are better for many reasons, but mostly because they kick the ball with their instep (soccer style.) Bakken, like most kickers of his era, kicked with his toe! When the first soccer-style kickers came along, they were viewed with suspicion. Who would kick a ball with their instep instead of their toe? Wow, that’s radical! That’s what I mean, resistance to change. Humans prefer stasis to dynamism; they are always stuck in the past.

Now to finish my story. In 1974 the St. Louis (football) Cardinals gave a tryout to a star soccer player from St. Louis University named Pat Leahy. Naturally, the Cardinals kept Bakken and cut Leahy—heck Leahy didn’t kick with his toe! Leahy went on to become the kicker for the Jets from 1974 to 1991.

Leahy finished his career 3rd on the all-time scoring list in the NFL with 1470 points. (He has since been passed by multiple players.) Leahy would be a terrible kicker by today’s standards—probably couldn’t even be a major college kicker—but he was a LOT better than Bakken. So why did the Cardinals chose a toe over a whole foot?

Well kicking a football with your instep was just thought to be weird, too non-traditional, whereas kicking inaccurately with your toe was then thought normal. That’s just what we do, we use a little pointed toe, especially the one adjacent to your big toe, the one that sticks out the farthest on some people. Why would you use your much-wider whole foot? That just wasn’t traditional.

That’s what I mean, resistance to change. It’s everywhere.

And, on a serious note, live on earth will only survive if we adapt and change.

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Published on December 22, 2024 10:31
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