McNabb's Ignorance
McNabb showed some extreme ignorance. It has been a while and this one hit a nerve so I wrote a book…forgive me. (blame Roketman for starting this thread) :lol
There are a ridiculous number of attributes that encompass criteria of athletes with many sub categories/details. Some sports exhibit the need to excel at a very wide range of those attributes (I would argue hockey, as one example). Some sports are biased to a much narrower range (I won’t start this argument!).
As a driver and more so as an engineer for some of the top drivers in the world I can quickly come up with the following criteria - some of which are noted by you guys prior. Racing requires many athletic attributes in common with many sports. And there are likely some I am forgetting, but these are the big hitters:
Courage – putting yourself in harm’s way - physically. Many sports require courage at varying levels, but few require it at the level of motorsports (Hemmingway's quote on the only true sports comes to mind). Great physical harm and death due to component failures, mistakes of your own or mistakes by others is real and constant.
Visual Acuity – Target acquisition – as noted by many here. Testing of many athletes, including race car drivers, showed drivers to be the very best at a test where they were asked to read the label on a spinning record as fast as possible. The race drivers dusted the rest of the athletes by a long margin.
Predicitive Ability – in my opinion, all great athletes are as much or more predictive than they are reactive. They predict two, three or more plays, moves or sequences ahead. They know where their teammates will be, where the competitors will be, etc. The best race car drivers have to do the same with track conditions, competitors and ultimately their own car’s behavior. They are rarely reacting and more often predicting its behavior.
Reactive Ability– their ability to read and react - their reflexes are in the top ranks of athletes.
Decision Making – like in football, hockey and many sports their predictive ability helps their split second decision making significantly. But they do have to make split second decisions they didn’t predict. For example, when to try to stuff it in the corner on a driver when they “slipped” a little and when to wait for another corner.
Multi-tasking and overall cognitive ability – like a great quarterback, but different - here is one that few people think about with racing, but it is one of the main elements that separates a good driver from a world class racer. The best of the best can drive at 100% (predicting, reacting, driving) while processing exactly what their car is doing and then give feedback on what they need it to differently to go faster. A good, even great driver can just handle the driving part, but not have capacity left to process the car’s behavior and give good feedback. They will never win a championship in any of the top series, yet alone win many races. The best have plenty of mental ability left over for very accurate feedback.
Endurance – mental and physical. They have to be fit.
Mental Endurance- There are few other sports, if any, that require such sustained focus and cognitive ability while “saving your life” and trying to beat the other 20 to 43 jokers around you. There are many guys who drive the car on the edge for a few laps, but very few who can do it lap after lap. It heavily has to do with the mental endurance required…along with the physical stress.
Physical Endurance – depending on the series the G loading is significant, as Tomcat noted. IndyCars run up to 5G braking, 4G cornering and up to 2 G vertical (on ovals) for a high percentage of two hours along with very high effort steering. Most people have no idea what 4 to 5 times their body weight feels like corner after corner compounded by vertical loading on the ovals. All while turning extremely high effort manual steering in a case like IndyCar. And constantly braking as hard as they can push the pedal at the end of every long straight.
While max heart rate alone is not a good indicator of fitness and athleticism, sustained heart rate can show the level of fitness including one’s anaerobic threshold. A race car driver’s sustained heart rate is high due to their physical workload in which they can maintain it due to their fitness level. And then deal with very high peak rates for short periods due to even higher stress events.
Strength – Cars like IndyCar, with very high downforce, allow the driver to push as hard as they can on the brake pedal at the end of a long straight. It is impossible to lock up the tires. So the stronger they are, the better their initial stopping power. Zanardi passed an awful lot of guys back in the day like they were chained to a post in the braking zone. I would argue the high G loading noted below takes pure strength as well. The average person couldn’t handle a single lap at full speed without passing out.
I am sure there are more, but this hits the highlights...any response McNabbit?:facepalm:
Scott