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Game theory

Sports

  • The unthinkable

    What happens if the players on a major sports team die?

    by R.J.E.

    CHAPECOENSE have lost everything. The plane crash in Colombia on November 29th that killed, among others, 19 players from the Brazilian football team now overshadows everything that came before it (see blog). The side’s spectacular ascent from the fourth division to the first is forgotten; so too its unlikely run to the final of this season’s Copa Sudamericana, a continental club tournament. The tragedy that struck this modest club has touched players and fans far beyond Brazil. The minutes of silence solemnly observed in stadiums around the world would add up to days.

  • Doping in sport

    A second investigation finds “immutable and conclusive” evidence of systematic Russian doping

    by A.C.

    “THE story of how all the pieces fit together seems like fiction,” admitted Richard McLaren, a Canadian lawyer, on December 9th as he unveiled the findings of a second investigation commissioned by the World Anti-Doping Agency into state-sponsored doping in Russia. But he found the evidence of an “institutionalised and disciplined medal-winning strategy and conspiracy” to be ultimately “immutable and conclusive.

  • First rank

    Magnus Carlsen remains world chess champion

    by BY I.K.

    BY THE time the end came, the two duelling grandmasters had been dancing in New York for nearly three weeks. But Magnus Carlsen, the 26-year-old Norwegian prodigy, kept his crown as chess’s world champion, emerging victorious in rapid tiebreakers after a dogged challenge from Sergey Karjakin, a Russian prodigy of the same age. In doing so Mr Carlsen, who won the title from Viswanathan Anand, an Indian grandmaster, in 2013, solidified his claim as the strongest chess player in history. He has already broken Garry Kasparov’s record for highest chess rating ever.

  • Free the Trout

    Why baseball’s best player should be sent packing

    by D.R.

    MIKE TROUT has been the world’s best baseball player ever since his first day as a major-league regular, as a 20-year-old in April 2012. The announcement last month that he had won his second annual Most Valuable Player award in the American League was a fait accompli; the real question is what the voters were thinking in the three seasons that he finished second, given that he should have been number one in every single year of his career.

  • Brief but boring

    Changing tennis’s scoring system will make for less exciting matches

    by J.S.

    Tennis’s scoring system has long been known for its quirkiness. Your first two points are each worth 15, but not your third. You need to win two sets to triumph in most matches—except in the men's singles at the four “grand slams”, which are best-of-five. These sets are typically decided by complex tiebreaks—but not in the deciding sets at Wimbledon, the Australian Open and the French Open. And every unit of a match is completed only when one player builds a two-point advantage.

    The “win-by-two” nature of tennis is a big part of what makes it exciting, since it prolongs the climax of each contest.

  • Get up, stand up

    The enduring appeal of standing sections at football matches

    by J.M.

    ON THE afternoon of April 15th 1989, 96 fans of Liverpool football club were killed in a human crush at the Hillsborough Stadium in Sheffield. Their deaths were the result of a series of mistakes made in the run-up to a game by police, who directed too many supporters into the Leppings Lane end, one of the ground’s heavily-packed standing areas. This vast loss of life, the worst such incident in British sporting history, proved to be a tipping point as concerns about spectator safety escalated during the 1980s.

  • Daily fantasy sports

    A merger borne of weakness

    by W.Z.

    FANTASY sports have become so pervasive in America that it is often increasingly unclear whether fans care which real-life team wins. The games, in which players speculate on athletics by building teams of virtual players whose performances track those of their real-world counterparts, have blossomed from the informal “rotisserie” leagues of the early 1980s into a massive entertainment industry, with 57m participants and some $1.5bn in revenues per year.

  • The football pyramid in America

    Why is there no promotion and relegation in the United States?

    by J.S. | SAN FRANCISCO

    ON NOVEMBER 13th the New York Cosmos won the North American Soccer League (NASL) title, beating the Indy Eleven on penalty kicks in the final. In every other football-playing country in the world, their triumph would have been cause for outright jubilation: the champions of the second division invariably rise up to the top tier the following season, where they benefit both from the challenge of facing the toughest competition and from the windfall profits associated with higher gate, broadcast and merchandise income.

  • The Kiwi kings

    The current All Blacks are the most dominant rugby side ever. Why?

    by J.T.

    THE IRISH were elated, and they had every right to be. Their victory on November 5th against New Zealand, rugby’s perennial overlords, was their first ever, after a winless run of 28 matches lasting 111 years. Aptly, they beat the mighty All Blacks at Chicago’s Soldier Field—where the game was being played in the hope of expanding the sport’s appeal in America—just five days after the Chicago Cubs had ended a 108-year wait of their own by prevailing in baseball’s World Series. But the significance of the result was not simply that the men in green had finally claimed rugby’s most-prized scalp. It was also that they had vanquished the most dominant All Blacks side of all time.

  • Ultimate Fighting Championship’s big night

    Madison Square Garden takes mixed martial arts mainstream

    by G.E. and R.W. | NEW YORK

    “IT’S my life. I love MMA. MMA is what the world should be,” said Alex Santana, a huge fan of mixed martial arts (MMA)—a fast-growing combat sport that uses techniques from boxing, wrestling, judo, kickboxing and Brazilian jiu-jitsu. He admires its honour code. He coaches it to children and goes to as many bouts run by Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC), the world’s largest MMA promotion company, as possible. On November 12th he had flown to New York from Los Angeles, without buying a ticket, in the hopes of witnessing UFC 205—the first MMA event ever held in New York state, which legalised the sport earlier this year.

  • Tennis’s table-toppers

    Why Novak Djokovic would still be favoured to beat Andy Murray

    by J.S.

    IT HAS been a year to remember for Andy Murray. In July the Scot won Wimbledon for the second time, marking his third major championship in total. The next month, he became the first tennis player in history to win two Olympic gold medals in the singles tournament, after defending his title from the London games of 2012 in Rio de Janeiro. And on November 7th he claimed the top spot in the official men’s rankings as measured by the Association of Tennis Professionals (ATP)—the first time that he has done so, some seven years after he first clawed his way into second place. Mr Murray’s rise followed his victory at last week’s Paris Masters event.

  • Zwanzig20?

    Afghan refugees are energising cricket in Germany

    by T.A.W.

    SAMAR KHAN grew up playing cricket in Afghanistan with his brother. When his family fled from Kabul to Germany four years ago, after his father was targeted by the Taliban, one of his priorities was to carry on playing. He found a club in Cologne and in early July made his debut for the Germany under-19 team against Denmark in Copenhagen. “Cricket gives me a feeling of home,” he says, “and is the reason I am integrated into life in Germany.”

    Of the 1m immigrants who registered in Germany last year, 154,000 were from Afghanistan. As a result, the number of cricket teams and players in Germany has trebled.

  • Cubs win! Cubs win!

    America’s longest sporting curse is laid to rest

    by D.R.

    THERE’S a reason movies about sports are such a Hollywood staple: they offer guaranteed suspense, climax and denouement. In real life, by contrast, such taut athletic narratives are hard to come by. The best team usually wins, and most games aren’t close. It’s a remarkable testament to fans’ capacity for self-delusion that they are routinely willing to pay hundreds or thousands of dollars for entertainment whose outcome is frequently determined within 15 minutes.

  • Forget cricket

    A home-grown Indian sport is winning fans far beyond the subcontinent

    by A.A.K. | AHMEDABAD

    AT 6PM on a sweltering weekday evening, a street junction in Ahmedabad in western India is abuzz. On a footpath outside a big stadium, a hawker peddles colourful jerseys and wrist bands as young men line up to have the country’s flag painted on their faces. Selfies abound. A long queue snakes around the stadium’s corner, waiting for its gates to be opened. Tilak Patel, an engineering student, has driven six hours with his friends to reach the venue. “It’s worth it,” he says on a day when India is set to take on England—not in a game of cricket, but in the 12-nation World Cup tournament of Kabaddi, an ancient Indian contact sport that has gripped the country.

  • Strategy in baseball

    Progressive managers are finding sweet relief by unshackling their closers

    by D.R.

    “MY SHIT doesn’t work in the playoffs”, Billy Beane, the general manager of the Oakland Athletics, famously said in “Moneyball”, the Michael Lewis book and subsequent Brad Pitt film about how he succeeded in Major League Baseball (MLB) on a shoestring budget by playing the percentages. Mr Beane’s teams consistently won enough during the six-month, 162-game slog of the regular season—sufficiently long for random fluctuations to cancel each other out and the best clubs to rise to the top—to make the sport’s post-season tournament year after year.

About Game theory

Reporting and analysis on the politics, economics, science and statistics of the games we play and watch

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