Talent and Table Tennis
There's a lot of online debate and many books (from The Sports Gene to Bounce) and articles out about talent versus environment. How much are top athletes born and how much is made? There's no question that most of it is made, but is there such a thing as talent? Well, yeah. And remember that this is a blog, not a scientific study, so much of what I'm writing is based mostly on my experiences as a table tennis coach. I've also discussed the topic several times with my uncle, who chaired the neurology department at Johns Hopkins for many years.
Some say there is no such thing as talent, and that's nonsense. No two brains are identical, even at birth. There are many studies that show, for example, that IQ is mostly genetic, and yes, intelligence helps in table tennis. (It's a bit more complicated than that - there are different types of intelligence - but I'm not going to get into that here.) The brain is a complex organ that's evolved many built-in areas of specialization (verbal areas, spatial skills, facial recognition areas, etc.), but just as there are variations in the rest of the body, there are variations in these areas of the brain because of the variations in the DNA. Some of these areas help in sports such as table tennis, meaning some players start out with at least an initial advantage.
The real question is how much difference does it make? I'm pretty sure anyone who starts out very young, with top coaches and lots playing time, will become a top player, even a great player - but can they become the very best? I'm not sure. I've seen many players train and train as single-mindedly as anyone, and not get anywhere, while others do far less work and pull ahead. Perhaps an "untalented" kid who starts at age 5 can seem to be a "talented" kid by age 7. But what about the "talented" kid who also starts at age 5? However, the law of diminishing returns is how the "untalented" one can catch up. As the years go by, the amount and quality of the training becomes more and more important and where the player started in terms of "talent" becomes less important. So the question is how much, in the end, that initial "talent" mattered? Hard to say.
Oh, but what is talent you ask? It is a natural aptitude or skill for a particular activity. Since table tennis involves a number of diverse activities, the talent that makes up a top table tennis player is a combination of many of these. There is also a difference in mental versus body talent. If someone is born with more fast-twitch muscles - which you can't really increase afterwards - that's body talent. If someone is born with more hand-eye coordination than others, that's brain talent. (Don't believe that a brain can be born with natural hand-eye coordination? Then how is a chameleon born with the ability to snatch flies out of the air with its tongue? Okay, that's tongue-eye coordination, but same idea. There are many other examples, such as monkeys and squirrels that can almost flawlessly jump from tree branch to tree branch.) Here are just a few of the skills needed for table tennis:
The chances that a player hits the jackpot with all of the above, and just happens to not only be a player but have the right circumstances to become a top player, is minute. However, of the pool of players who do have these circumstances, some will start out ahead in most of these attributes.
Some elite players refuse to accept the idea that talent does count (at least at the highest levels), for several reasons. First, they became highly successful because they often believe they will be the best if they outwork the others. So there's an inherent bias toward believing that, even if it's not necessarily true. No coach wants to tell a player that he's not as talented as this other guy, but if you work hard, you can be second best!!! So they don't, but often it is true. (On the other hand, the less-talented one will usually come out on top in the long run if he works hard simply because the more talented one doesn't work as hard.) Second, those who are successful would rather attribute it to how hard they worked than on being lucky to be talented. Third, elite players train with other elite players, and rarely work on a regular basis for years with a non-talented player. Those who have quickly see the different in inherent talent among junior players, just as the juniors themselves do.
On the other hand, since the players that start out more talented are usually the ones that stick with it and work hard, since they have more noticeable improvement when they do, while the less talented ones get frustrated and tend to leave. This skews the stats, leaving us with fewer untalented ones who trained for years alongside the more talented ones. It can become self-perpetuating, as the more talented ones work harder and get ahead, thereby "proving" that the harder-working ones get ahead. Or the reverse, that the more talented ones get ahead, since the ones who started out better tend to end up better - but that's because they were both more talented and worked harder - but the hard work often comes about because of their initial talent.
The kids in our camps this summer are good examples of differences in "talent." Here's a listing of some younger beginning players I worked with who said they had never played before, though of course we don't really know their backgrounds. (These are the more interesting cases that stood out in my mind; there were many more.)
It sure would be interesting to get all these players, and many others, together to train regularly for the next ten years and see where they end up.
Olympic Eligible Rankings
There's an online discussion about the USATT ranking lists and why they don't have a listing for both top players and top USA players, so I did some quick research. And here it is, the minutes from the May 2003 USATT Board Meeting! Here's Motion #1:
MOTION I: Moved that the Board implement a Standing Rule to highlight, in a separate list in the Ranking section of the USATT magazine, the Olympic Eligible players.
Proposed by Barney Reed; seconded by Robert Mayer.
Passed: 11-0.
USATT has little organizational memory, and so what is passed at one meeting is often quickly forgotten, as was this motion. I was USATT editor at the time and maintained that list for many years. At some point after I left they stopped doing so.
Around the Net Shots
Here's a video (1:08, with replays) of a rally ends with what looks like three consecutive around the net shots!
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Coaching Updates
I had some interesting coaching sessions yesterday. Here's a rundown on three of them, with their permission - plus a fourth who just won three titles!
Orioles at MDTTC
I blogged about this on Tuesday. It's featured now on the USATT home page - that's me in the middle with Orioles star shortstop J.J. Hardy on left, former star center fielder and current VP Brady Anderson on the right. Here's the best photo! And here I'm instructing them on the intricacies of table tennis.
2013 World Championships
They are in Paris, May 13-20. Here's the ITTF World Championships page, where you can follow all the action - results, live scoring, articles, video, pictures, etc.
Team USA at 2013 Worlds
Here's the USA Team at the Worlds Page, which shows up-to-date results and video. Alas, all USA players are now out.
Table Tennista
Lots of great coverage of the Worlds here.
Day Four Photos from the Worlds
Two Around the Net Shots in One Match at the Worlds
Here's the video (54 sec).
Adham Sharara Re-elected ITTF President
He defeats Stefano Bosi, the one who had accused him of corruption, but was silenced by ITTF at the Annual Meeting.
ITTF Museum to Move from Switzerland to China
Here's the article. Here's the museum.
Patent 8105183 B2 - Celluloid-free Table Tennis Ball
Here's the patent! We might be using these next year.
Pepsi Chasing and Chewing Ping-Pong Balls
Here's the video (1:18) of Jay Turberville's dog Pepsi chasing and chewing on ping-pong balls. You can see close-ups of the bite marks one minute in.
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