Finding the similarities between volleyball and snooker may seem quite
tricky. However, a group of physicists have found that the spread of
scores, otherwise known as distribution, across their ranking systems
are almost identical.
They've also shown that this is the same for almost all sports,
whether their ranking systems are based on points or the earnings of
each individual or team.
Publishing their study September 21 in the Institute of Physics and German Physical Society's New Journal of Physics,
the researchers came to this conclusion by statistically analysing the
ranking systems across 12 different sports: tennis, golf, table tennis,
volleyball, football, snooker, badminton, basketball, baseball, hockey,
handball and fencing.
Rankings are a direct measure of a player or a team's performance and
come in different forms. Some sports are ranked using a points system,
while others are ranked using earnings. By statistically analysing the
rankings and plotting them onto graphs, the researchers found that the
distributions for each sport were almost identical.
The reason why the ranking systems have a common distribution is
unknown and is the latest example of a phenomenon that abides by the
mysterious 'power laws' -- a term used to describe phenomena where large
events are rare and small events are common.
In the past, research has shown that the frequency of words in
different texts, the size of cities and people's income all abide by the
same power law.
Co-author of the study, Dr Wei Li, said: "Let's take human wealth.
The chance of being a billionaire is small, but not zero as we see
thousands of them in the world. At the same time, the chance of being
poor is very high. We call this distribution a power law and, for some
unknown reason, witness exactly the same distribution in other everyday
phenomena.
"The sports ranking systems we analysed all follow similar power-laws."
The researchers, from Hua-Zhong Normal University, ISMANS (LUNAM
Université), Université de Maine and Max-Planck Institute for
Mathematics in the Sciences, also found that the sport rankings agree
with a maxim known as the Pareto principle.
Also known as the 80-20 rule, this states that, for many events,
roughly 80 per cent of the effects come from 20 per cent of the causes.
Vilfredo Pareto noticed this in 1906 when he found that 80 per cent of
Italy's land was owned by 20 per cent of the population. The rule also
applied to a variety of other countries he analysed.
In all of the sports analysed, 20 per cent of the players possessed 80 per cent of the total scores of the whole system.
"We all want to be the best or at least one of the best in some
aspects. A businessman wants to be Bill Gates; a model wants to be Cindy
Crawford; a tennis player wants to be Roger Federer. The idea of
ranking is ubiquitous throughout our human society and we have found
that for a number of sports, there is a similar law which dictates how
these rankings pan out," continued Dr Li.
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