Freakonomics Radio - 363. Think Like a Winner
Episode Date: January 17, 2019Great athletes aren’t just great at the physical stuff. They’ve also learned how to handle pressure, overcome fear, and stay focused. Here’s the good news: you don’t have to be an athlete to u...se what they know. (Ep. 4 of “The Hidden Side of Sports” series.)
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You cannot be afraid to fail.
I have an eight-year-old son. There's no way I'd let him play tackle football.
I had never been in an environment that was so emotionally charged.
The fight started and I hit her as hard as I could.
I would say that sports was my way of becoming American.
I want to leave this sport being known as a bad motherf***er.
I would say most things that we think are true do turn out to be true, not always for the reasons we think.
Toby Moskowitz is an economist who teaches at the Yale School of Management.
That's right.
Yes, so you have won a really prestigious academic award as one of the top finance scholars in the world.
Why do you mess around with sports?
It's called tenure.
They can't fire me.
No, it's one of the things I tell my students all the time
is don't go into this business
unless you really love what you research.
So sports has always intrigued me.
And to be a little bit more serious,
a lot of what I study is behavioral economics
and how people make decisions when faced with a lot of uncertainty.
Sports is just a really rich field to look at those kinds of things.
This is a true fact.
It's why you see a lot of economists messing around in sports.
It's why you see a lot of sports-themed academic journals and conferences.
Sports may not be nearly as important as education or health care or politics,
but when you do research in those areas, it can be really hard to establish cause and effect.
There are so many inputs of so many different types and such hard-to-measure outputs. Furthermore, the incentives in education and healthcare and politics
are often opaque or, worse, twisted.
In sports, the incentives are usually transparent, the results are clean,
and if you like data, as economists do, well, sports provides boatloads of data,
most of which happens to be neatly categorized and
extend back for decades. Toby Moskowitz, along with John Wertheim, wrote a book taking advantage
of these data. It's called Scorecasting. In it, they challenge some of the most fundamental
beliefs in sports. For instance, does defense really win championships, as NFL pundits like to say, especially around this
time of year? Short answer, no. What's the biggest reason for home field advantage? Short answer,
involuntary referee bias. And what's the real story behind one of the most compelling elements
of sports, the hot streak? There's a huge academic literature on this. So as an example, a player in the NBA who's hit a couple of shots in a row,
his teammates will start feeding him the ball more,
his coach will give him the ball more,
and he'll start taking worse shots as a result.
There's this belief that they're hot.
Is this belief supported by the data?
Is the player actually hot?
If you look at the actual evidence, you find
either zero or something very close to zero in terms of predictability. It's just a bad strategy.
Other scholars, we should note, challenge this conclusion. They argue that there is some evidence
for the hot hand theory. Where does Moskowitz land? I'll sum it up in the following way, which is
our beliefs in streaks are much stronger than
the data actually supports. But don't we know that confidence is a big contributor to, you know,
good performance in any realm? And wouldn't past success in sport contribute to greater confidence,
which would then contribute to greater future success?
That's the theory. But the evidence is that it just doesn't show up. And you could say,
well, it's hard to measure, right? Because take my example of the NBA shooter. If they're taking worse shots or the defense tightens on them, it's not the same experiment. I agree. However,
there have been experiments run where it's a perfectly controlled experiment. And what was really interesting is, you were right, Stephen, that players who hit a couple shots in a row did indeed remark that they felt more confident, that their mechanics felt good that day, they felt good, but the predictive value was absolutely zero. I am familiar with that study.
I also did a version of sort of this hot hand study on my own.
That is not another economist.
That's the Philadelphia 76ers' J.J. Redick, who's played in the NBA since 2006.
Redick ranks number six among active players in career three-point shooting percentage.
The study he did was for a statistics class at Duke,
where he played his college ball,
and where Redick is still their all-time leading scorer.
I went in the gym and I did like four or five workouts
where I would shoot like a hundred,
it was either 200 shots or 100 shots.
And, you know, I would sort of get to the point
where I was in a rhythm, where I felt like
a rhythm, and I would sort of note like, okay, you know, I have a hot hand. And I would record
after each time I felt like I had a hot hand, like the result of the next shot,
and came to the exact same conclusion that it is a fallacy.
Of course, measuring the hot hand idea in practice or even an experiment
is different from what happens during a game with people watching,
millions of people, if you're an NBA player.
My mindset, and I think most players' mindsets,
if you make two in a row, three in a row,
your natural sort of inclination is to get what we call a heat
check in. And a heat check is, it's not necessarily a wild shot, but it's a shot that has a low
probability of going in. So you've made two threes in a row, know now the crowd's on their feet the ball comes to you
it's a fast break you dribble up two guys are guarding you sometimes i shoot one on four and
you know and you shoot like an off balance three and it's like one of those things that in in
basketball culture it's understood like well no he just he's he he's hot. He's made two or three in a row.
He's allowed to sort of take a heat check.
It's on!
He's as hot as a blowtorch.
It's a heat check.
You knew that was coming.
It's heat check time.
There's got to be an element of, like,
true belief in yourself that every shot you take is going to go in, whether that's rational or irrational.
You just have to believe that.
You cannot play a professional sport and be hesitant.
You cannot play a professional sport and be hesitant.
You just have to believe, whether it's rational or not.
Today on Freakonomics Radio, the latest installment in a series
that we're calling The Hidden Side of Sports.
In the first episode, we looked at how sports have throughout history mirrored society,
which may explain why we care so much about an industry that dollar-wise is actually quite small.
Spectator sports in the United States is roughly the same size as the cardboard box industry.
In episode two, we looked at the economics of a single NFL franchise,
the San Francisco 49ers,
who've been trying to recover from a debilitating losing streak.
When you lose a game, a lot of noise happens.
When you lose two, a ton happens.
Usually three is like Armageddon.
Try nine.
The third episode was called,
Here's Why You Are Not an Elite Athlete.
We looked at all the things that have to go right for an aspiring athlete, from talent to coaching to luck.
I mean, you can't get hurt. You have to be healthy. You can't have the flu on the wrong day.
You have to find the right coach in the right city.
In today's episode, the mental side of sports.
How do athletes prepare for high stakes situations? How do they recover when things go wrong? How do they develop a
winning strategy when they know their opponent is thinking the same thing? Everybody in the NFL
is in a really tight range physically. And what separates great players from average players
is all in the mental piece. We'll hear from a mental skills coach.
There's a lot of pitchers who pitch no hitters in the bullpen and can't take it with them across the lines.
We'll hear from athletes.
I was a poop show in my head. I was so afraid.
And, of course, we'll hear from some of our favorite economists.
So it looks like roughly about a $5 million a year mistake.
From Stitcher and Dubner Productions, this is Freakonomics Radio,
the podcast that explores the hidden side of everything.
Here's your host, Stephen Dubner.
It's natural enough to see elite athletes as finely tuned machines, like a BMW or a fighter jet.
For starters, they're usually bigger, faster, and stronger than the rest of us.
Some of them, like Olympic gymnasts,
are competing on a global stage at an age when most people are still struggling with acne.
Also, even in sports that require over-the-top physical power,
think of a clean and jerk in weightlifting or a brutal scrum in rugby.
There's a graceful element that to the casual observer can look nearly effortless.
All these factors conspire to persuade us that an athletic endeavor is an almost purely
physical endeavor. It's easy to neglect what may be happening in the athlete's mind. But if you talk to enough athletes and coaches and others,
you discover that's where a massive share of their energy is going.
Yeah, well, I think developing a mental game plan is important for consistent success or consistent performance.
That's Bob Tewksbury.
I am the mental skills coach for the San Francisco Giants.
And just give me in a nutshell your major league career as a pitcher yourself.
I pitched in the major leagues from 1986 to 1998 with six different teams,
won 110 major league games, lost 102, had two arm surgeries, seven demotions, made an all-star team,
and kind of experienced just about everything. Tewksbury recently wrote a book called 90% Mental.
He did not have such a long major league career because he threw the ball so hard.
His success was rooted in control and accuracy. Tewksbury had one of the lowest ratios
of walks per nine innings in baseball history. Correct. Yeah, correct. People know the strikeout
people, but they don't know the guys that don't walk people. When he retired, Tewksbury got a
master's degree from Boston University in sports psychology and counseling. He got his first
coaching job with the Boston Red Sox.
That year, they won the World Series
for the first time since 1918.
The Boston Red Sox are world champions!
During Tewksbury's playing career,
there was no such thing as a mental skills coach.
Today, the vast majority of baseball teams have them.
Here is one of Tewksbury's
foundational beliefs, which he tries to teach to every player. Confidence is a choice. I think a
lot of people think it's a feeling, but if you wait for that feeling, it may never come. Confidence
is a choice. That seems intuitive enough, maybe even obvious, but it's remarkable how easily even an elite athlete can get derailed.
I remember a day in San Francisco where I was pitching for the Cardinals and the hecklers were, you know, I didn't know my mother had army boots under my bed.
You know, they would say all these things and it really distracted me.
And my first thought was, well, I could always go back to school and become a physical education coach. There's also the voice inside your head. Yes. Shawn Johnson is a four-time
Olympic medalist in gymnastics. Gymnastics is terrifying. Johnson's 26 now. She's been retired
for years. I am terrified of gymnastics. Like, I would never get up on a balance beam right now
and try to flip. I would hurt myself. I feel like anybody in the world can be trained physically for an Olympic
event. You can train your body to do it. Now training your mind is the hardest part because
learning to overcome fear, learning to push aside thoughts that are negative and still take that
risk of injury or a failure or of falling on your face in front of the
entire world is really difficult to do. I was so afraid of losing. That's Kerry Walsh Jennings,
one of the best beach volleyball players in history. She has three Olympic gold medals,
but it's a bronze medal, a third place finish that haunts her from the 2016 Olympics in Rio.
You know, I'm really working on letting go of it.
To be very honest with you, getting bronze in Rio threw me for a loop.
And it's not necessarily losing.
Well, I've lost plenty in my life and I've had bad matches plenty.
But I just, I believe in the fairy tale.
Even when I'm having the worst game, I know there's going to be a point where things are going to shift because I'm never going to give up.
And I have that mindset.
It's coming.
It's coming.
I got it.
And I had a terrible match in the semifinals.
And I just kept talking to myself.
It's coming.
It's coming.
And it never came.
Because it never came.
And because Walsh Jennings went home with bronze instead of gold. She's preparing for another Olympics.
I'm going for my sixth Olympics, and I'm turning 40.
And I'm, you know, playing against these young kids,
and it's so nutty, but I'm still going through the same process
of leveling up, aspiring to go higher,
looking in the mirror, do you got it, do you want it?
Yes, carry on.
But since Rio, the insecurities are still there.
Oh, it's exhausting.
It's really exhausting.
And ever since then, like I'm just letting go of living in fear of that happening again.
It's been messy and sad and like nonsensical because one match should not define anyone.
One bad performance in the life of your doctor, you know, a wife, whatever, an athlete, it should not define you.
And I allowed it to define me.
And I'm still working my way through it, you know, and I'm almost there.
That feeling, Walsh Jennings' experience in Rio of desperately waiting for the real you to show up,
the you who's practiced for thousands of hours and
excelled at every level. That feeling is not rare. Consider the recently retired baseball
player Mark Teixeira. Were you ever totally lost at the plate? Absolutely. I mean, I had stretches,
whether it was a week or even a month, where I said, this might be my last week in baseball. I am so bad right now.
There is no way I'm getting another hit in Major League Baseball. I look awful. I feel awful. I
can't get a hit. It's worth mentioning that Teixeira was not a borderline Major League player.
He won all sorts of offensive and defensive awards. He won a World Series with the Yankees, and he hit 409 career home runs,
number 54 on the all-time list. But the line between success and failure was always right
in front of him. Hitting a baseball is still the hardest thing to do in sports. And you have guys
on the mound that are trying to get you out. And if you're off a little bit, mechanically,
mentally, confidence-wise, and he's on, you can have some bad nights.
We were surprised at how often the word fear came up
in our interviews with athletes.
It's another dimension on which we think
athletes are so different from us,
but they're somehow fearless.
Plainly, they're not, but they do try to fake it.
Having a fearless mentality.
You know, I coach that way.
I tried to play that way, obviously.
You can't live with fear.
Doug Peterson is head coach of the Philadelphia Eagles.
It just can paralyze you, and you're not going to have success in life.
Peterson spends a lot of time helping players mute that fear.
Or better, crush it.
The Eagles last year made the Super Bowl and faced the New England Patriots. The Patriots, led by coach Bill Belichick
and quarterback Tom Brady, had made it to eight Super Bowls since 2001, and they'd won five.
So, a fairly intimidating team. But in the days leading up to the game, Peterson made sure his team did not think about
that. We didn't focus ourselves on the Patriots and worry about all the mystique because, again,
it's like fear. It's going to paralyze you. If that's what you're worried about,
you're not going to be able to play. The Eagles, who had won zero Super Bowls,
were underdogs. Just before kickoff, Peterson had a quick greeting with the opposing coach.
You know, I had just briefly met Coach Bilicek in the past, and, you know, this was really our
first time to spend, you know, a minute together and basically just congratulated each other on
our seasons and, you know, wishing each other the best for this game.
Coach, congratulations. You too. Thank you so much.
Tell them to be here.
Yeah, thank you very much Coach, congratulations. You too. Thank you so much. Tell them to be here. Thank you very much. You too. You too.
At the same time, internally, I was just thinking,
no idea what's coming. Not saying they overlooked us, but
I think that feeling can creep in. I was so confident in
our guys and our coaches that I just felt like
that he had no idea.
All right, everybody's up. Everybody up. Everybody up. Everybody up.
One, seven. Let's go, baby. Let's go. Let's go. Let's go.
Peterson's fearlessness was made manifest toward the end of the first half.
The Eagles had a small lead and a fourth and goal from about one and a half yards out.
The safe play, probably the smart play,
was to kick a field goal.
Peterson decided to go for the touchdown.
This is an unbelievable call.
This could decide the game.
People say you've got to be daring to beat the Patriots on this stage,
and Doug Peterson certainly
showed a lot of confidence in his offense.
On the sideline, quarterback Nick Foles
approaches Peterson to suggest a play.
You want Philly Philly?
You can hear Peterson think about it for a second and then approve.
Yeah, let's do it. Let's do it.
Philly Philly, or what would come to be known as Philly Special,
was a trick play, the kind of thing you draw up in your backyard on Thanksgiving.
But it turned out all right.
Foles! Bulls!
Touchdown!
How do you figure?
Breathtaking.
In a Super Bowl,
that's a breathtaking call.
If you don't make that,
that was second guess forever.
Doug Peterson today.
You know, it's definitely going to go down,
I think, as one of the greatest Super Bowl memories.
But now it was only halftime.
Peterson had another chance to be fearless in the fourth quarter.
Now the Eagles were trailing.
33-32.
They had the ball near midfield facing another fourth down.
For the moment, they're going to leave the offense on the field. Do you dare?
I think there was just six minutes or so left in the game. And
you know, if you remember, the Patriots didn't punt a single time in the football game and we
were struggling to stop them. And I just knew there's no way I'm going to punt this football
and give Tom Brady the ball back where he could either run the clock out and win the game or,
or go down and score again. So I wanted our team to control our destiny.
And I just, in my gut, said this is the right time to do it.
I didn't flinch.
Called the next play on fourth down.
And falls and the pressure throws.
Caught.
And we got it by a yard.
Just enough for the first down.
And we ultimately went down and scored the game-winning touchdown.
The Philadelphia Eagles are Super Bowl champions!
Peterson, of course, was just the coach.
He didn't actually have to run the plays.
For the people that do, who have to perform difficult physical feats
under massive mental pressure,
how do you shed your fear, gather your confidence, and focus on the task at hand?
As Bob Tewksbury told us, it generally starts here.
Yeah, well, I think developing a mental game plan is important for consistent success.
Okay, so the mental game plan starts when?
It starts with the preparation.
So, you know, what time do you get up?
What time do you eat lunch?
What time do you go to the ballpark?
What do you do when you're at the ballpark?
And more specifically, as you get closer to game time,
what do you do from a mental perspective?
You know, John Lester uses a concentration grid.
John Lester, whom Tewksbury coached with the Red Sox,
has been one of the better pitchers in baseball for many years.
He's channeling his mind to get ready to perform, you know, to transition away from my day
to getting ready to pitch. I need to make my world a little bit smaller. And that leads into using the
imagery program of seeing himself perform or doing pregame rehearsal of the lineup that he's going to
face. Imagery happens better when we're relaxed. So getting there is through the breathing exercises, and then the imagery starts. And so when he goes out to warm up,
he can recall those images of what he wants to do with the baseball.
Now it's time for what Tewksbury says is one of the most important components of the mental game,
self-talk.
So I like to have affirmations or mantras essentially that players can use so that in performance,
when things start to go awry, they can help them. I call them anchor statements, and those anchors
would be see it, feel it, trust it, smooth and easy. I get all it takes to beat the competition
one pitch at a time. What you say to yourself, how that little man affects performance,
how to understand it, change it, correct it, minimize it, move forward. Without them,
your performance could get swept away like a boat in the ocean.
I do think there is something to that.
That's Brandon McCarthy, who just retired after pitching in the major leagues for 13 years.
Once the ball's coming back from the catcher, you're still kind of doing a quick breakdown of what just happened. And then it's slowing
down my breathing, getting myself back to just simply focusing on the execution. And
at times that's been based on having a little mantra of good direction, good angle, quality
pitch. And you just say that a few times and it's something that calms the mind and it enhances some
of the delivery things that I'm working on. The mind has incredible power. JJ Redick again. I think the mind is as big of a
separator for professional athletes as any physical tools or physical liabilities that a player may
have. He's been doing some form of self-talk for many, many years. So this is sort of like
ages 8 to 12. It was a lot of imagination. It was a lot of playing imaginary games.
And then years later, playing for Duke in the conference championship.
We were down, I think, 15 points with like 10 minutes to go. I had, I just went,
I actually blacked out and just went crazy in the last ten minutes and had like 23 points.
Fires a three-meter! Holy cow, he made it!
Are you ready to change your MVP vote?
JJ Reddick putting his show on!
And we won the ACC championship, and in the post-game press conference, I said,
you know, I played that game in my backyard a hundred times.
Mental preparation and visualization are particularly important for those pressurized moments when the ball is not yet in play, and it's your job to put it in play. Picture a tennis
or volleyball player about to launch a key serve,
a golfer standing over a drive on the 72nd hole of a tournament,
or an NFL place kicker preparing for a game-winning kick.
When you're young, you want to kick a bunch of footballs to figure it out.
That's Robbie Gold of the San Francisco 49ers.
He's one of the best kickers in NFL history.
Last year, you missed like one field goal?
I missed two.
So 30 for 32 or something?
39 for 41.
Oh, sorry. 39 for 41. Who's counting, though?
Yeah.
Gold says NFL kickers spend most of their time not kicking footballs.
You can take mental reps, so that way you're not using your leg
because every kick that you take is a kick off your career. So the more that
you visualize, the more that you mentally go through situations and you talk through situations,
it makes those situations easier that you're not wasting reps.
This preparation doesn't just happen during the workday, but also at home.
I'll get home about 5.30. I'll have dinner with my family. I'll play with my kids, do bath time, read them a book,
and then put them down.
Once they go to sleep, then I'll pull out my iPad, start watching film, going over game
playing, going over what we might have to do that week that may come up, whether it's
weather, whether it's playing in a certain place with crowd noise, whether it's something
that happened in practice.
You're just always thinking of ways to make yourself better.
On some dimensions, making yourself better as an athlete has never been easier.
Like the rest of the modern world, sports are undergoing a revolution in data analytics.
Aren't they?
Look, to say that data analytics is revolutionary is a bit strong.
I view it more as evolutionary.
The Yale economist Toby Moskowitz again.
What you're trying to do is make a judgment.
That judgment's based on intuition.
It's based on theory as well as it's got to be based on data.
That's what science is.
Every good science is a combination of both.
So how much do the athletes partake in this data evolution?
We have heat maps,
you know, there's two applications that break down where every serve is coming from, how a hitter does when she gets served in the middle or short or wide, and we watch a ton of video. So all of
that is happening. Carrie Walsh Jennings again. I do not do well with all of that sensory input.
I want to feel it and certainly know their tendencies, but that's kind of where I want to finish it. I don't need to know the rest. So I've got to like, I ration data to myself.
I don't let myself read all of it. The 76ers, JJ Redick again.
You're obsessing about these numbers on a daily basis in the middle of the season.
I'm just gonna be honest, like I'm a little bit of a head case. I don't want to be in the middle of a game going to my left and saying,
wow, this shot's 15 percentage points worse than if I was on the other side.
You just can't do that.
Maybe it's just too much to process when you've got the ball.
On defense, meanwhile.
I'll look at all of that data for the people that I guard.
Redick recalls a defensive assignment he had a few years ago
in a playoff game. The data revealed
that the player he'd be guarding was a great
three-point shooter, but
if you run him off the line
and he has to take a pull-up
two or a runner
or a floater, you know, five to seven feet
from the basket, I think this guy was shooting like
low 30s. Low 30s
meaning his make percentage, which is pretty low for a two-point shot in the NBA.
So whenever this guy got the ball in three-point range, Redick stayed in his face.
For the whole series, I didn't care if he beat me off the dribble at all.
I think he shot like 27% from two for the series.
So I like did my job.
So that's an example where you use the data available
and it works.
The sport that's seen the most use of data
for the longest time is baseball.
That's partly because some of the early data nerds
happen to be baseball fans,
but also the sport lends itself to analysis.
Every pitch, every at-bat, every ball put in play is an independent action that can be
independently measured. Even though there are nine players on a team, they don't interact with
anything like the complexity of players in football or soccer or basketball or hockey.
One obvious change in baseball facilitated by data is how a manager will shift his defense
in response to the opposing batter's tendencies.
Toward the end of his career,
Mark Teixeira suffered from this change.
Once teams knew exactly where he was most likely to hit the ball,
they would shift their defenses.
What used to be a ground ball single up the middle
was now an easy out.
I'm curious the degree to which you think that rise in analytics and the use of the shift was a contributing factor to your decline and how much of it was
just the natural cycle of an aging baseball player? Yeah, I think it's probably, you know,
70, 30, just the natural age. Without analytics, I still would be retired. Yeah, I still, my body, you know,
analytics doesn't, you know, make your wrist blow out. Analytics doesn't make you tear up your knee.
But I would say that analytics, you know, took numbers that should have been better
and decreased them. Right. What are some ways that you benefited from analytics? Did you,
I don't know if you were a tape rat, if you watched a lot of tape, and I'm curious whether
you studied pitchers and so on for their tendencies. I didn't benefit, I don't think, at all.
I wasn't the guy that went up there and said, okay, it's two to one. This guy has a 73% chance
to throw a backdoor slider here. I'm going to look. I never did that. And there's a whole bunch
of players that still don't look at tape. Coming up after the break, from the athletes who have mixed feelings about data
to an economist who can't get enough of it. The executives looked at the data and said,
this is incredibly convincing. And I think you're absolutely right. And then the general manager
said, but I mean, what am I supposed to do about it?
And how do athletes get their body to do its job when their mind is absolutely melting down?
You're trying to run a race, except you've lost one of your feet.
Also, do you have a burning question about sports?
If so, send it along to radio at Freakonomics.com. In a couple months, we will
be participating in the famous MIT Sloan Sports Analytics Conference, which means we will be
asking questions of some of the best and most innovative minds in sports. So if you send us
a question, there's a chance it'll end up in a future podcast. Again, write to us at radio
at Freakonomics.com. We will be right back.
We've been talking about the mental side of sports.
So far, mostly from an internal perspective,
using your mind to drive your body's performance.
But there's a whole other external perspective to consider,
outthinking your opponent.
And this gets us into what economists call game theory.
So game theory is a part of economics, which is actually quite different than most of the rest of economics,
because most of economics focuses on either cases where there are many, many, many people interacting,
and that's what we call perfect competition,
or where there's exactly one person, like a monopolist, interacting with many people.
That's my Freakonomics friend and co-author Steve Levitt.
He teaches economics at the University of Chicago.
But game theory is economics applied to the interactions
of two or three or four or five individuals or firms or actors.
And so game theory, it turns out,
has very different predictions and kinds of predictions
than the rest of economics.
Levitt, would you consider yourself a sports economist?
Absolutely not.
I've written papers about sports,
but I've only written
about sports as a vehicle to understand
bigger economic concepts,
and sports happen to be a place
where there's often really good
data and really well-defined
and simple incentives
in play so that you can match
data to incentives to try to that you can match data to incentives
to try to answer questions that economists want to answer more generally.
Questions about cheating, for instance.
In one paper, Levitt analyzed sumo wrestling data
and found what he believed was widespread match-fixing.
So it really looks like a quid pro quo,
like there's a deal worked out where
if you let me win when I really need it, the next time we meet, I'm going to throw the match and let you win.
In another paper, Levitt found evidence of racial bias in the TV game show The Weakest Link.
Not quite a sport, I know, but other economists later did similar research and found racial bias among NBA referees and major league umpires.
Levitt has also studied the details of in-game decision-making in professional sports.
In a paper he co-wrote with Ken Kovash, a one-time University of Chicago research assistant,
now a Cleveland Browns executive, Levitt looked at how good NFL offenses are at confusing or deceiving the defense.
We looked at whether teams are making the right choices between running plays and passing plays. And our conclusion is that we see that on average, teams seem to make a mistake.
The mistake is essentially being too predictable.
They seem to not throw enough passes relative to running plays.
And NFL teams in particular have lots of serial correlation.
Serial correlation meaning the previous play is too predictive of the next play.
Ideally, you want the play calling to appear nearly random
to maximize the element of surprise.
It turns out the play that you just ran
seems to have a very large influence on the next choice.
And interestingly, and almost embarrassingly funny to an economist,
is that it's exactly when that play did badly.
So if you do a running play and it didn't do well,
you are much less likely to call a running play the next time
because of, you know, some belief that,
well, if it didn't work last time, it's not going to work this time.
There are, of course, other factors to consider.
If a run play fails, you've got more yardage to make up,
which might argue in favor of a pass play.
But in the final analysis,
Leavitt and Kovach found that teams were leaving points on the table.
We think the stakes are really high.
The magnitude
of the mistakes that they made were associated with scoring like an extra point a game, which
doesn't sound like much, but an extra point a game would turn into about half of a win per season.
It's worth about $5 million a year. So it looks like roughly to us about a $5 million a year
mistake. And by our estimates,
we kind of think currently in the National Football League, the number of pass plays is about
58%, 57% when we wrote this paper. And our belief is the optimal looks like it's much more like 70%.
There really should be dramatically more passes in the NFL.
Leavitt and Kovach also looked at a game theory question in baseball.
How well do pitchers randomize their pitches?
The best way to fool a hitter is to throw a fastball when they're expecting a curveball
or a slider, or a curveball or slider when they're expecting a fastball.
Game theory in action.
So how well do major league pitchers do at defying expectations? It turns out
across all major league pitchers, on average, there's an enormous overabundance of fastballs
being thrown. And by that I mean, when pitchers throw fastballs, controlling for the situation
and controlling for everything imaginable, it turns out that on average, pitchers are doing
worse when they throw fastballs than
when they throw curveballs or sliders. And that suggests that pitchers are not doing what game
theory says, which is balancing off the three different kinds of pitches. I agree 100%.
That, again, is former baseball star Mark Teixeira. We'd asked him about Levitt's research
showing that pitchers are too reliant on fastballs. But it's not so simple as
merely randomizing, he said. Imagine you're the pitcher, you've got two strikes on the batter,
and maybe also a runner on third. The issue is, is you have to take the pitcher's skill
and ability to perform that skill with two strikes. So the pitchers that can throw curveballs and change-ups
and sliders with two strikes do it. The guys that maybe bounce that pitch or hang that pitch
are going to throw fastballs, and so they're going to get hit. So the best pitchers in baseball,
they throw more sliders and curveballs and change-ups with two strikes because they can control it better.
In their study, Levitt and Kovacs actually did factor in pitcher quality,
but even when controlling for pitcher quality,
they found too many fastballs.
That was good news for a hitter like Teixeira.
I feasted my entire career was based on not getting me to chase the curveballs and the
sliders and the dirt and having to come with a fastball over the middle of the plate. That was
the style of hitter that I was. Knowing about this fastball surplus would be especially useful
if you are, say, the general manager of a baseball team. Steve Levitt again.
No, it's funny. So we did get some time with a general manager of a major league club
that I will not name to protect the identity of the innocent.
The executives looked at the data and said,
this is incredibly convincing, and I think you're absolutely right.
And then the general manager said,
but, I mean, what am I supposed to do about it?
And I said, throw fewer fastballs. And the guy said, how in the world am I supposed to get my team to throw fewer fastballs?
And I said, well, you're the general manager. Why don't you tell them throw fewer fastballs?
He said, I can't do that. I said, okay. I had kind of anticipated that. And so I said, you know, here's my other suggestion.
There are eight catchers available on the free agent market.
And I've calculated over the last three seasons
what share of fastballs have been thrown
when each of these eight catchers have been behind the plate.
And there's a big difference.
And these two catchers have been behind the plate. And there's a big difference. And these two catchers have actually called games with something like four or 5% fewer fastballs per game. And my suggestion is
you go pick up those catchers on the free agent market. Well, they didn't do that either. And
instead they stuck with their current catcher who called the highest share of fastballs of any
catcher in the league.
This disconnect between the data and behavior suggests a few things.
The first is that decision-making in sports,
while trending toward the scientific-ish,
is often still not that scientific.
It also suggests just how strong habit can be and our belief in intuition.
Maybe more than anything, it suggests that in the heat of competition,
the mental state of a given athlete can be fragile.
Brandon McCarthy told us there were times when a particular pitch in his arsenal
just became unavailable.
Mentally, you just couldn't imagine throwing that pitch where you want it.
In McCarthy's case, it was his fastball.
The problem started when he was pitching for the Los Angeles Dodgers
and followed him off and on to the Atlanta Braves.
I mean, your brain just, I couldn't, I would lay down,
you'd close your eyes and try and picture throwing that,
and it was, it truly felt like your brain went in a tilt-a-wheel,
and you just couldn't picture it.
I couldn't, no matter how hard I tried, I couldn't imagine doing it.
It just went haywire, so when it would happen in a game,
you would try and throw everything else to make something work
and keep going as long as you can,
but you're very aware that you're now trying to run a race,
except you've lost one of your feet.
I was convinced early on it was a mechanical thing.
It feels like it's something physical that eventually becomes mental
and then you just can't see otherwise.
So I really, I don't know.
I just know I'm fortunate that it happened late enough in my career
that I could get past it or at least work around it.
It's the thing that I find most of the best athletes in the world
are the ones who
can control something in their mind just a little bit better than everybody else can. They can be
physically gifted, able to do certain things that others can't. And I think that last bit is just
how much better they are mentally in some capacity that we haven't figured out.
I asked McCarthy how much of that mental advantage lies in the ability to self-diagnose in the moment.
It's a tremendously large component.
Not just the ability to diagnose, but the ability to fix instantly.
Not just, I'm not doing this well today, this is what I have to work on before my next start.
It's, how do I fix this for the next pitch?
And watching Clayton Kershaw in L.A. for the last three years.
Clayton Kershaw, McCarthy's teammate during that time,
is one of the most dominant pitchers in baseball.
One thing that McCarthy particularly admired about Kershaw is how quickly he fixes something
where most everybody else kind of spirals
and it turns into an okay outing or a poor outing.
His turns into just a less great outing
because he fixes the little thing that's going wrong.
And then even if it's still not great,
it's much better. And then by the next start, he fixes it again. And that's the diagnosing and the
ability to fix immediately that the brain and physical ability to do that is very rare.
Did you pick his brain when he was a teammate of yours?
As much as you can. But one thing I've noticed when you talk to players who are really, really great
and they're historically great is a lot of them can't explain the things that they do.
That's why a lot of them make for bad coaches.
I've had Greg Maddox in different camps with me before,
and how do you throw your change up?
And it's, you know, I grip it like this and I throw it.
Well, thank you.
That's not, it wasn't of any help to me.
But in his mind, it makes complete sense. Bob Tewksbury, the former pitcher and now mental skills coach, argues that the ability to
self-diagnose and self-correct in the moment is among an athlete's most important tools.
I think that's the ability to have consistent performance. And what I mean by that is,
you know, you're not always going to go out and perform well every game.
And that's what happens to athletes is they get to that situation
and they don't know how to manage themselves out of it.
You know, there's a lot of great 5 o'clock hitters,
guys that hit the ball very far during batting practice but can't hit in a game.
And there's a lot of pitchers who pitch no hitters in the bullpen and can't take it with them across the lines.
I asked Tewksbury to explain how a pitcher like him, in the heat of competition,
could get himself back in sync if his mechanics started to go haywire.
So my mechanics, you step back with your left foot, you rotate
your right foot adjacent to the pitching rubber, your hips turn clockwise toward third base,
you lift up your left leg. As you do that, simultaneously your hands are together at about
the waist, waist to the shoulder height. Then your hands, as your body starts to go forward
toward the mound, your hands separate with the ball coming out of your glove. Your body continues to glide toward home plate.
Your left shoulder should be in line with your target as your arm takes its arc and path and
gets into a position to throw. Now your body is square to home plate. Your left leg has hit the
ground. Your left knee is bent and the arm continues its arc,
and you throw the pitch to your intended target. So there's a feeling that happens with that.
When that is all in sync, you know that the ball can be located at your intended spot.
And what if the ball doesn't hit your intended spot?
So say I throw that pitch and I bounce it in front of home plate.
That tells me that I got out and my body was too far in front of my release point
so that the only place the ball would go would be down.
Conversely, if my body was lagging or if my arm was lagging, the ball would be high.
And so once you know how your body responds, you're able to make that correction.
Simple, right?
And remember, you're not just throwing the ball into space.
You're throwing to a supremely tuned and muscled opponent
gripping a long piece of hardwood,
preparing to hit the ball as hard as he can,
right back in your direction,
from just 60 feet, six inches away. So what do you do in that moment if your mechanics are off,
if your confidence abandons you, if the only thought in your mind is that your next pitch
is about to be crushed? What you do is you delete the thought, I'm going to just change the channel.
You know, it's like I'm watching this bad channel. I'm going to change it to ESPN. Delete the thought, take a breath,
and then reframe that thought or use an anchor statement.
Some of Tewksbury's anchor statements, as you'll recall.
See it, feel it, trust it. Smooth and easy. One pitch at a time.
And if that doesn't work, here's what Tewksbury suggests. Taking a
tongue depressor timeout. I tell pitchers to tape two tongue depressors together, put it in your
back pocket. And when things get tough on the mound, call a timeout, go back behind the mound,
clean your spikes, or make pretend you clean your spikes. That allows you more time to take your breath, to refocus.
That's a lot better than going around the mound,
walking around the mound, rubbing up the baseball,
because your behavior is really adding to your frustration.
You're not doing anything to slow down.
And slowing down your mind is almost always a good thing.
When he coaches athletes,
Tewksbury uses a simple four-step mantra to get their mind right. Step one, slow down.
Step two, breathe seriously.
Under pressure, it's easy to forget to breathe.
Breathing is important, and it helps you slow down.
Step three, engage in some positive self-talk.
I got this.
Step four, focus on the task at hand.
There, now you've got it.
Bob Tewksbury's recipe for success in athletic competition under pressure.
It's just one problem.
For every athlete trying to harness their own mental fortitude,
there's an opponent trying to mess with them,
trying to invade their mental space,
trying to plant a seed of doubt or confusion or fear.
That is the premise behind one of the most entertaining mental battles in sport,
a practice in American
football known as icing the kicker. There's just a few seconds left on the clock. One team trails
by a single point and they are lining up for a game-winning field goal. The kicker goes through
his mental preparation. He breathes. Maybe he invokes a mantra. He focuses on the task at hand.
And then, just as the ball is snapped,
the other team is called a timeout.
This is how you ice the kicker.
The opposing coach wants to freeze the kicker out of his routine.
He wants to make him think a bit more about the enormity of the circumstance.
Icing the kicker has become a standard move in these situations, and occasionally it yields
results. In the Eagles-Bears playoff game a couple weeks ago, the Bears kicker was iced
and he missed the kick. But overall, statistically, is icing the kicker effective?
It's certainly the conventional wisdom.
That, again, is the sports-loving Yale economist Toby Moskowitz,
who covered this phenomenon in his book, Scorecasting.
It's something every fan believes.
And in fact, every fan expects a coach to do.
But it turns out there is no effect from this.
And if you think about it logically, it makes sense.
These are kickers, if you make it to this level in the professional football league,
they've kicked the ball thousands upon thousands of times in many pressure situations.
They're selected on that dimension.
As one professional kicker said to us when we were writing the book,
you know, if something like that bothers you, you probably shouldn't be kicking in this league.
That professional kicker, it turns out, was none other than Robbie Gold, whom we heard from earlier.
You're just always thinking of ways to make yourself better.
Gold prides himself on mental toughness and mental preparation. This includes practicing
alone and with his team for any game time possibility, including being the kicker
who's getting iced. We'll actually line up the field goal,
snap, hold, but won't kick it.
So you go through your entire routine,
whether it's head coach calling a timeout to ice you,
whether it's, you know, there is a bad snap.
These are all situations that come up that you have to be aware of.
Part of that awareness is the particularly intense pressure
of the position Gold plays.
Let's say you kick the game-winning field goal.
You're the hero.
And if you miss it...
I don't get another chance to get that play back, right?
I have to wait for the next week to get it.
Some players, like wide receivers, DBs,
they have 70 plays a game.
So if they screw up, they can go right back to it.
Well, as a kicker, you have to make them count
because the point totals
in the National Football League are staggering to the point of how many close games there are.
Gold just finished his 14th NFL season and is second with the 49ers.
Yeah, I played 11 with the Chicago Bears. I played one with the Giants.
The Bears, remember, were eliminated from the playoffs this year when their kicker was iced
and missed the game-winning field goal.
Gold, meanwhile, had another excellent season this year for the 49ers.
He made 33 field goals and missed just one,
though he did miss two extra point attempts.
His team, meanwhile, was a mostly dreadful season
marked by injuries and losses.
So, what happens to gold next year?
You never know. You know, I mean, you can be here one day and gone the next. I mean,
I got cut in Chicago on Labor Day weekend after, you know, making the team. And then
the next day, it's just how it is.
Had you missed a couple in the game?
I missed a couple in preseason, but I mean, it was just a lot of different things. Salary cap
issues. You know, I had a big in preseason, but, I mean, it was just a lot of different things. Salary cap issues.
You know, I had a big cap number that year.
What's the most you've ever earned in a year?
Probably $4 million.
Well, I mean, this is a business.
This is not a college football scholarship.
It just isn't.
It doesn't matter what round you're picked in.
It doesn't matter how much you're making, how old you are in the league, how experienced you are. You know, I think every day you have to earn
your keep. Of all the mind games a professional athlete must master, this is perhaps the most
difficult. How to sustain your career once you've reached the elite level. Once you've realized
that as good as you may be,
there are 100 people nearly as good, maybe even better,
who can't wait to take your place.
The life of a professional athlete is relatively short.
If you're lucky enough to be paid well,
you have a relatively small window of time to take advantage.
And the people who pay your salary,
well, they'd be very happy to pay someone else
less. So coming up next time on Freakonomics Radio, we get into perhaps the toughest competition
in all of sports. The reality is they are management and we are labor. We'll start with
the management side. We'll hear from team owners and league officials from the big team sports like Major League Baseball.
Right now, one of the commissioner's main objectives is to spread the game globally.
As well as newcomers like the UFC.
$300 million per year over five years, $1.5 billion total.
We'll hear their dreams of expansion.
When you're talking about 130 million households in this country,
you know, there's billions
of households not in this country.
Their excitement over legalized
gambling. Yeah, I think it'll lead to our franchise
valuations doubling. We'll hear what they
hate about their own sports.
The ends of NBA games is one of my
bugaboos. I just can't stand the fouls
and timeouts. What they
think is the sport of the future.
I take esports.
And we'll hear where the money goes.
They're making a lot of revenues,
but not much of that is going into the athletes.
That's next time on Freakonomics Radio.
We will also periodically release
some of the full interviews from the series,
including soon Mark Teixeira
and Dallas Mavericks owner Mark Cuban. So keep your
ear out for those. Freakonomics Radio is produced by Stitcher and Dubner Productions. This episode
was produced by Alvin Melleth, Anders Kelto, and Derek John, with help from Matt Straup and Harry
Huggins. Our staff also includes Allison Craiglow, Greg Rippin, and Zach Lipinski. Our theme song is
Mr. Fortune by the Hitchhikers. All the other music
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