StarTalk Radio - The Joy of Techno Science, with Rayvon Fouché

Episode Date: February 26, 2021

How is technology changing sports? Neil deGrasse Tyson and co-hosts Gary O’Reilly and Chuck Nice talk with author Rayvon Fouché to explore game-changing technology in the final episode of our Game ...Changers mini-series. NOTE: StarTalk+ Patrons can watch or listen to this entire episode commercial-free here: https://www.startalkradio.net/show/the-joy-of-techno-science-with-rayvon-fouche/ Thanks to our Patrons Ceasar Perez, dniel, Coleman, Raphael Zadey, Jordan Schoepke, Munnie, NAOS NARUTO, Nika Chkhartishvili, Alea Montgomery, and Gregory for supporting us this week. Photo Credit: All-Pro Reels, CC BY-SA 2.0, via Wikimedia Commons Subscribe to SiriusXM Podcasts+ on Apple Podcasts to listen to new episodes ad-free and a whole week early.

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 Welcome to StarTalk, your place in the universe where science and pop culture collide. StarTalk begins right now. This is StarTalk Sports Edition. And today's episode is all about tech in sports. In fact, title it Tech Rules. And who do I have with me? Today's episode is all about tech in sports. Let's, in fact, title it Tech Rules. Who do I have with me? My co-host, Gary O'Reilly.
Starting point is 00:00:31 Gary. Hey, Neil. I love having you, Gary. We love your accent straight from the UK. That's not why we have you. It's because you're an ex-pro footballer, soccer player, I think we call it over here. So great to have you, your perspective. And you spent time as an announcer.
Starting point is 00:00:49 Yes. That was also good. Very cool. I assume you were announcing soccer. Yes. Not something else. They wouldn't let me loose on the royal family, so I just had to stick with soccer. Royal family need full-time announcers for what they're up to. And Chuck,
Starting point is 00:01:05 always good to have you, man. Always good to be here. And your body of knowledge of sports always impresses me. I don't want to say surprises, because that meant I had low expectations. You meant surprise. You have a fluency that I don't find with many comedians. I just want to thank you for lending that to this show.
Starting point is 00:01:23 Yeah, sure. Very excellent. So we could opine on this subject, but really what we really need is an expert. That's what StarTalk is all about. Subject expert. Subject expert. And we've got Professor Ravon Fouché.
Starting point is 00:01:40 Ravon, welcome to StarTalk. Thanks so much for having me. Excellent. You are a professor in the School of Interdisciplinary Studies in Purdue University. That's the Boilermakers, right? It is. And you guys in Indiana, if I remember correctly, you don't have daylight savings time there. Is that still the case?
Starting point is 00:01:57 I think some parts have daylight savings times, but I believe other parts don't. So we're splitting the difference. Okay. Wow. I don't think it we're splitting the difference. Okay. Wow. I don't think it's supposed to work that way. We're embracing the interpretive flexibility of time here. So you're author of the perfectly titled book for this episode, The Game Changer.
Starting point is 00:02:20 Yes. The Technoscientific Revolution in Sports. All right. Okay. And also, Black Inventors in the age of segregation. Whoa. Whoa, we got to bring you back for that. So you mean up until last year.
Starting point is 00:02:35 This happened. So, oh, okay. That's good, Chuck. You're a bit ahead of me. I'm not sure it's ended yet. You're not even sure that's happened yet. Yeah. So you have a PhD in science and technology from Cornell.
Starting point is 00:02:49 It's great to have you on here. So thanks for participating in our Game Changer series, which is sort of a sub-series within our sports edition. So interdisciplinary studies, that feels kind of sort of wishy-washy. So where does the science fit into that? Wow, man, why you got to do that to my man's consciousness? Just ask him. Interdisciplinary. How you going to
Starting point is 00:03:12 do that to his concentration? You know, inter-prodictionary study. I mean, I'm just going to say that's very, very weak and wimpy. That is not what I said. I said I'm trying to understand it. Asking questions. All right. So take me there. What happens in inter-disciplinary and wimpy. That is not what I said. I said I'm trying to understand it. Oh, okay. Asking questions. All right. All right.
Starting point is 00:03:28 So take me there. What happens in interdisciplinary studies? I'm impressed. You should be the biggest champion of interdisciplinary studies. It's just bringing together multiple different disciplinary perspectives and asking questions that are bigger and larger than one disciplinary space. Oh, snap. So it's like the cosmic perspective for
Starting point is 00:03:43 science itself. No, it's... Oh, snap. So it's like the cosmic perspective for science itself. No, it's... Oh, shoot. Thanks, Chuck. Okay, that was good, but I wouldn't give it an oh, snap. I would save the oh, snap for, you know, and there's the Z snap, you know. Guys, just wait there. I'm going to get the snapometer. It's just behind me.
Starting point is 00:04:07 I'll bring it in and we can, where it seems, it registers on the sky. All right. So how far back would you say technology has impacted sports? I can tell you I used to row and I was only told about this. I never read it because I didn't want to believe it. But that there was a day when rowers, before they had the seat that rolled, okay, the sliding seat,
Starting point is 00:04:33 they would grease your butt and you would slide back and forth on a polished surface when you rowed. And I'm thinking, damn, but at that time, would that have been considered high tech? You know, friction, low friction, grease, butt sliding, increasing power to the stroke. At what point do we say sports has been touched by technology? My perspective is technology influences sport from the beginning. influences sport from the beginning. So roughly 3000 BC, they have instances of wrestling,
Starting point is 00:05:13 Greco-Roman wrestling, bodies and arms. And the moment, I would say, you potentially move past that moment of people using their bodies and arms, you have a ball, a piece of equipment of any kind, it becomes technological. And all of a sudden, that changes the nature of sport. All of a sudden, you go from using your own body to playing with something else that can be manipulated by an athlete, a competitor. Technology enters the game. So it's a tool. It could be material science or anything else. Yes. Okay. or anything else?
Starting point is 00:05:42 Yes. Okay. So when they started oiling themselves with olive oil, that was a technological advancement for Greco-Roman wrestling. Exactly. Because, you know, olive oil comes in many different forms. It can be Spanish, Italian, and it depends on what part of the world you're from.
Starting point is 00:06:02 You know, maybe Italian oil is better than Spanish oil. I don't know. But, all right, but when we move forward in time, there are certain sports that feel distinctly backwards. I think of baseball. You're still using leather. You have to kill an animal for your leather glove. The ball is leather.
Starting point is 00:06:19 It's got rubber bands on the inside. They spit. They use pine tar resin. And I'm thinking, was any of that ever considered modern? Because right now that stuff looks old. I think it's tremendously modern, right? The baseball bat has gone through multiple evolutions in time. From very simple wood sticks. Two by four.
Starting point is 00:06:41 Just get your two by four out. So now you go to a place like Louisville and Louisville Slugger. The engineering of the bats is very, very serious and thoughtful about the woods that are being chosen and where the wood is being cultivated. It is deeply technoscientific, as well as the ball. The ball has gone through multiple iterations, even down to the more recent instances of people talking about the baseball being juiced. And a lot of some more recent research has been studying the seams of the ball.
Starting point is 00:07:12 And the question is, you know, how the ball has changed and evolved over time as part of this continual technoscientific evolution. You can't get the same leather that the ball was made out of 100 years ago because we've killed all those cows. And eventually... But cows today are fatter, so maybe their skin is thinner. I don't know. True.
Starting point is 00:07:32 But tanning is a kind of old-school technology, right? Late 19th, early 20th century. And a lot of the materials are still being tanned by the same few factories in the United States. Horween is one factory that tans for the NBA balls and also NFL footballs. So they're trying to maintain the continuity, but I would say very deeply technological and scientific. It's weird.
Starting point is 00:07:58 I know Chuck and Gary have questions, but it's weird to think that they want to be consistent with the past, but for example, they've changed the athlete's diet. They've changed their exercise regimen. They've changed the medicine surrounding it. Oh, but the ball has to be exactly the same, and this has to be exactly the same. So it's weird that the body is allowed to change, but the other stuff related to the sport isn't. To me, that looks very inconsistent. I agree with you completely. It's totally inconsistent. The ball is not the same as it was 100 years ago.
Starting point is 00:08:31 The bat is not the same. Right. In fact, the mound in a baseball field is six inches lower than it used to be, right? I mean, they're changing stuff, so don't pretend like it's all pure, right? So, Chuck, what do you got? Gary.
Starting point is 00:08:43 I want to know if if you speaking of things changing is there a technological advancement that can be too much too soon too fast so that you have altered the game in such a way where the spirit of the competition is compromised oh that sounds like it like like you rehearsed that question. No, I just thought- That sounded like, show all work. Yes, compare and contrast. No, that popped into my head based on that- He's going to use that question on the next exam he administers. You know it. But no, because you guys were just talking about everything has changed, but those changes are kind of gradual.
Starting point is 00:09:25 So could it happen in such a way that you look at it and you say, nope, that's too advanced. That's too much changed. And you're changing the spirit of the competition itself. Yes, absolutely. I mean, there have been multiple instances where the technology has changed the understanding of the sport. the understanding of the sport. One of the biggest examples in recent past is the Speedo Laser Racer swimsuit, which changed the nature of the competition
Starting point is 00:09:52 from individual bodies to the question about who is using which existing suit, who is using which new technology. So you have world championships in, say, 2009, where 40-plus world records were broken in one world championship. Oh. And it all has to do with the suit and the technology. Well, so it's no longer about the athlete.
Starting point is 00:10:16 No, it's about the suit. So the narrative of the sport is like traditionally part of what makes baseball so unique is they're saying, well, it's such a simple sport. It's just the ball and the bat. And it's about individual athletic brilliance. And historically, the same thing was going would go for swimming. It's just athletic talent. However, all of a sudden it transitioned from which athlete, how much time they spent in the pool, how much training they had done to who was wearing the fastest suit.
Starting point is 00:10:44 spent in the pool, how much training they had done to who was wearing the fastest suit. And right, sport governing bodies who are selling athletic performance and not swimsuits had to change that. So by 2010, they banned all of these polyurethane, super high-performance suits. You know, that's, you know, I feel like old school, like I'm the grandpa on the porch in the rocking chair when I say, back in my day, you know, Mark Spitz had a hairy chest, had a mustache, and my boy still won all those gold medals in 1976. He actually swam in a sweater.
Starting point is 00:11:16 A sweater? He was wearing a cardigan while he was swimming and still broke world records. In the snow. Yeah, in fact, it was ice. world records. In the snow. Yeah, in fact, it was ice. He swam in the ice. But there are also some very interesting instances where the athletes actually revolted. So most recently, NBA, a handful of years ago, introduced synthetic basketball to the NBA. And a handful of players, primarily led by Steve Nash and others,
Starting point is 00:11:44 said that they had no part in changing the ball. It was different. It bounced different. It felt different. And eventually the NBA Players Association was able to force the NBA to go back to its traditional leather ball. And the idea is that Spalding and the NBA was trying to produce a modern technoscientific ball, one that was grippier when it was wet, one that performed better. It was more consistent, right, because if you're thinking about leather on balls, they come from different animals, different cows. The consistency is suspect. So you could create this new technology that allowed you to have really similar balls from game to game to arena to arena to state to state. But the players said this
Starting point is 00:12:31 ball was different than they were used to playing with. It changed the game in a substantive way and they wanted the old leather ball back. So they should use free range cows for their leather balls. They're happy cows. they should use free range cows for their leather balls. They're happy cows. All right. Okay. Professor,
Starting point is 00:12:48 if I look back and I'm using the word intentionally, I find one thing that seems to have changed sport, no matter which event it is more than anything else. And it's cameras. I mean, am I the only person who thinks cameras? Or has it had such a profound effect on the way we are engaged in sport now? We the viewer?
Starting point is 00:13:13 We the viewer, the athlete, the coaches, everything. Of course the viewer, but how is the athlete touched by a camera? Okay. Something had to be using it because we have footage of games from way back before there was television. Somebody was filming that for some reason. For some reason. I mean, Lombardi was using game footage to analyze opponents in the mid-60s. And he would roll his defensive unit in or offensive unit in, sit them down.
Starting point is 00:13:42 Now, watch this. Now, this is how this happens. Now without sort of slow motion, without instant replay, without all of those clever things that came through, for me, this sport isn't as big. Football does not take off without massive TV audience and without upgrading cameras. For me, it doesn't happen. So you're saying Lombardi was just an ordinary coach, but he had really good technology. That's you putting words in my mouth that I never said. I like it. No, he had an asymmetric advantage if he's using video or film
Starting point is 00:14:15 and other people aren't. So what do you say here, Professor? Well, definitely. I mean, two most recent examples. I don't know if we're getting onto the world of cheating, but we think about the Houston Astros, or a little further back, 2007, with the New England Patriots and Spygate.
Starting point is 00:14:33 Yep, that's right. So there have been cameras used to observe the opponent for multiple different times and for different agendas. And Lombardi is just one of many who have used cameras to observe the ways that people uh perform right it's it's an old technique uh it's espionage you think about it's espionage that's what it is yeah my god s71 blackbirds uh it's it's an old war technique and sport is driven by these metaphors of of competition and warfare it's about gathering data using a camera which will give people a very strong visual representation of what's happening
Starting point is 00:15:13 so yeah it's totally powerful i once visited the the seattle uh seahawks training camp and when they were in there they have a training dome basically, like one of those inflatable things. And he wouldn't let me take pictures in there. They wouldn't want to. Oh, no, not a chance. He likes you. He doesn't love you. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:15:35 Yeah, no, that was, I had not thought about that until that moment where he says, no, not in here. We're working on plays and you get to see what the athletes are doing.
Starting point is 00:15:43 So that's his polite way to, that's his strategic defense initiative, preventing me from possibly exploiting his secrets. So you're going with that war metaphor. That's
Starting point is 00:16:00 good. Well, I mean, a lot of coaches see it quite literally as a war for x amount of minutes or hours and this you know hopefully there's no deaths or casualties but to them it is mano a mano it is a war i just look now professor if i take my 200 inch tv screen in the in the ginormous man cave and i want to watch pictures that aren't very good quality, I need myself a 5K picture. Therefore, I've got to have 5K cameras.
Starting point is 00:16:32 And all of a sudden, I have such a sharp image. Am I opening up, then, the route for artificial intelligence? Because back in a blurry day, artificial intelligence couldn't analyze as accurately. Or have I just made... It didn't have the data, you mean. It couldn't get the data artificial intelligence couldn't analyze as accurately. Or if I just made... It didn't have the data, you mean. It couldn't get the data. It couldn't get the data,
Starting point is 00:16:49 couldn't get the sharp enough image. I mean, I think for golf, for tennis, for baseball, with spin rates, all those sort of different sports. With camera technology comes an advance in other ways technology is enabled. Wait, wait, wait. It's not only the 5K. It would be, because you said spin rate, it's 5K plus a frame rate.
Starting point is 00:17:09 Yes. So that things aren't a blur, and then you can actually track this. So, Ravon, where does that fit in, just high-res data? Yeah, I think it's… Time and spatial data. It is totally where much I think there's a lot of potential within the context of sport. Because now, instead of having using, say, Lombardi taking photographs, you can have that data coming into your home. And Gary can now be the next Sabermetrics data analyst.
Starting point is 00:17:42 And he's just sitting on his couch, slowing down the frame rate, doing his analysis on his own. So it opens up in many ways, it potentially democratizes the use of data in certain ways that was not necessarily available. Because like Neil, you said you couldn't take photographs in the arena, but in many ways you might not need to be in the arena anymore. You can just sit at home and download the data and use it how you see fit.
Starting point is 00:18:09 All right, well, we got to take a quick break. We're going to shift from cameras and the data it provides us so that we can gain an asymmetric advantage. I've got to use these war terms. Let's keep doing that if that's what this is. I'm going to see what more of high tech has influenced the sport
Starting point is 00:18:27 when StarTalk continues. We're back. StarTalk Sports Edition. We're talking about game changers. And in this case, what role tech has played in this? And, of course, we've got Professor Rayvon Fouché. That's an E with an accent, in case you didn't know how to pronounce the trailing E. He's at Purdue University,
Starting point is 00:19:11 who basically, literally, figuratively and literally, wrote the book on this. And that book was titled The Game Changer, The Technoscientific Revolution in Sports. When was that published, Ravon? 2017. 2017, so it should still be out there. Excellent. was that published, Ravon? 2017. 2017. So it should still be out there.
Starting point is 00:19:26 Excellent. And who published it? Johns Hopkins University Press. Good. So we'll give them a shout out there. Thanks for mentioning that. So with cameras giving us sort of some people who use it cleverly and asymmetric advantage, if you connected the information the cameras obtain to computers
Starting point is 00:19:44 and using that to analyze, so it's not just a human looking at it, we now feed it to computers. At what point did computers start mattering in sports, would you say? I would say really when the computational power started to push forward in a big way. Late 90s, early 2000s, and in many ways, I think a big marker of the combination of all these pieces is 2006 when we get the MIT Sloan Conference on Sports Analytics. It's the one point where I think that's the culmination of the moment of everyone seeing the power the computation could have.
Starting point is 00:20:25 But I think, really, it's early, late 90s, early 2000s when, instead of having large-scale computers, the personal computer could do a lot of the data crunching and data analytics. You didn't need to go to your local university and ask for supercomputer time to do some data analytics. And that's when it became a real powerful tool. You know, interesting, this is a little bit off the subject, but I'm going to slip it in there because we were thinking warfare. So to design a fuselage of an airplane to be stealth requires very significant calculations so that any surface that reflects a radio radar signal towards it will not reflect it back towards the detector at all
Starting point is 00:21:13 so that it doesn't show up. And in the 1970s and 80s, computing was so primitive that they could only solve the equations with straight lines. So the F-117 stealth fighter has these surfaces, flat surfaces on it, because that's the best they could do. They couldn't fit the spline, the continual spline solution to the shape of the fuselage.
Starting point is 00:21:38 Once the computing power boosted into the 80s and into the 90s, then they could design the B-2 stealth bomber. And all the surfaces are curved on that in all places. So this is computing power having it totally affecting, of course, not only sports, but everything in our lives. Yeah. I think that connection is deeply related because arguably I think some of the people
Starting point is 00:22:02 that are doing that high-level computing computing engineering are also interested in sports does computing count if you because i remember there was a big deal in the in the u.s open tennis open where ibm was brought in to detect to see if the ball hit the line or didn't and they re and it was like wow this is computing and it's like, wow, this is computing, and it's this. And I remember the enthusiasm behind that. Not everyone embraced it. But with computers as judges, is this a thing? As referees? Without a doubt. And we are here at this moment.
Starting point is 00:22:36 And this is a huge controversy because we're asking the big question of, do we want to eliminate humans and their, well, I'll just say idiosyncrasies. Right. Or their biases. You can't kick dirt on the shoes of a computer because you're angry with the call. No. So Major League Baseball has experimented already in some of their minor leagues. Strike zones.
Starting point is 00:23:06 With the strike zones. Really? Yeah. Yes. And where you have a home plate official who has microphones or headphones in his ears, and the ball comes by, and they call ball a strike. And so now do you want your officials to be bystanders or just reporting out the information that's perused by the sports system? I want a reporter. But I think the—
Starting point is 00:23:31 Wait, wait, why do you want a reporter? Because— What do you need them for? It either is a strike or it isn't. This is a part of the game. No, here's why you need them. You need them because there are things that happen at the plate that still require sportsmanship. There's certain conduct that needs to be monitored.
Starting point is 00:23:48 There's also factors of cheating that could happen. Program that into the AI and get rid of the empire. That's the whole point of AI. It'll do what the humans do, but better. And this is computing power at its next extreme here, correct? Yeah, but I think the limitations are that we, as the rules are written right now, they're not capable of enacting this clear specificity
Starting point is 00:24:14 that the AIs can. Right. Right? Because the strike zone, halfway between the shoulder and the waist, that's the Major League Baseball's understanding of it. But see, I don't want him there. I don't want the AI for that.
Starting point is 00:24:32 Even though the AI from a camera angle might be able to determine that, I only want it for inside, outside, over the plate. That's all I want the AI for. Because everything else is still subjective. There really isn't a... There's not an objective strike zone. There just isn't. You're in the wrong place here.
Starting point is 00:24:52 So just program into the AI a subjectivity. So it gets one in ten calls wrong. How about that? And you don't know which call that's going to be. No, no, no, no, no, no. In fact, you could have the record. No, no, no, no, no, no. In fact, you could have the record.
Starting point is 00:25:10 You could preload the ball strike record of any ump you want, and it'll be them. But here's the problem with that. What? Okay, what? I don't want a computer to be just as stupid as me. Okay, stop. I can't know.
Starting point is 00:25:21 No. Gary, you're going to ask him about Moneyball and stuff. What? Oh, no. Okay, Gary, you're going to ask him about Moneyball and stuff. What? Oh, no. Take me there. Okay. Moneyball was pre-computer power. That was all done with a sort of human brain, I think.
Starting point is 00:25:33 But it's still analytics. It's still analytics. I mean, it is the birth of analytics in sport to another level, but it's still pre-computers. Now, what we've just discussed here has got me jumping even further forward. we've just discussed here has got me jumping even further forward. Professor, am I wrong here? Where normally the rules of the game, the rules of the sport, the laws that are engaged to play or execute the performance are written by humans. With the technology that we've just discussed with Chuck and Neil and yourself, are we not at the point where the technology is in advance of the rules and the rules have now got to play catcher? Are we in that zone already?
Starting point is 00:26:08 Or is that something in the next few years? We're in that zone. And I think people are not very happy that we're in that zone. For instance, what is a catch in the NFL? Right. And it's possession. Right. Control. It's control. Well, it's possession and control and a's possession. Right. Control. It's control.
Starting point is 00:26:26 Well, it's possession and control and a football move. And so the question is, I'm on board with you, Neil. You can clearly program an AI to make that decision. But the problem is, we haven't made that decision outside of the AI to even have that discussion. So if we can't tell the AI what to do... If you can't, if you
Starting point is 00:26:53 don't even know what it is you're saying it's doing. Exactly. So I like the idea that technology is pushing us to have to make those decisions. Because now, you know, we live in a world where the AI can do it. And the only reason we don't have a clear understanding of what a catch is is because we're not willing to make that decision.
Starting point is 00:27:12 We're not willing to lay that terminology down in text and say, we're doing this because the technology exists at this moment to make clear, accurate, definitive decisions. Somebody's got to judge whether the person was in control of the ball to judge it to be a correct catch. And that's not written down anywhere. It's just somebody's looking at it. They know that they see it.
Starting point is 00:27:34 Yes, exactly. It's like that was control, that wasn't control. Or, you know, he was bobbling. Some will say that the ball moving at all is a lack of control, whereas others will say it was moving while he had it trapped to his body, therefore he still had control. Yeah, but did his knee hit the ground before that happened? Exactly.
Starting point is 00:27:56 Okay, I got another one for you. I think about this all the time. This is the first I've ever gone public on this. So what you can do is you have a pitcher, this. So what you can do is you have a pitcher and you can get the statistics of how, of the spread of where the ball is thrown to the catcher. Okay. And so you can look at the statistical likelihood that that pitcher is going to throw outside of that zone okay so if one of the pitches comes and floats up and damn near hits the batter in the head you eject the pitcher if that's a two or three sigma throw whereas if the pitcher is just wild today then a throw that kind of goes near the head
Starting point is 00:28:39 there's not no intent there because the pitcher's control has not demonstrated that that could be intentional. So you can statistically judge whether the throw was at the person's head or not. Yeah, but isn't Tim Music a part of the game? Tim? Okay. And then the fact is you just have to know whether the pitcher
Starting point is 00:29:00 and the hitter have got something going on historically, right? And he's likely to ding one off his helmet and it's all going to break loose and the benchter have got something going on historically, right? And he's likely to ding one off his helmet, and it's all going to break loose, and the bench is clear. All right, how about this? Let me move this forward. My father used to run track, and at the finish line, there would be people with stopwatches, and each person,
Starting point is 00:29:19 it was their job, you would time the second-place person, the third or the fourth, whichever, okay? And then they'd come and compare all the stopwatches. All right. This involves human reaction time, all of this. That's all went to cameras. It's now digital. And in swimming, they do it to a hundredth of a second. Is there going to be a day where we're not really improving all that much, so we got to go down to like 10,000th of a second or 100,000th of a second. You can set a world record by being 100,000th of a second faster than the previous record? Absolutely.
Starting point is 00:29:50 I mean, we're already here because we can time well below the chosen level. And, yes, hand timing has been problematic, and they've been slowly. This is in swimming, in swimming. Swimming, yeah. Yeah, across the sport, right? So, you know, in the 1950s, they're saying hand timing was off by a quarter second. By the 60s, they're saying roughly hand timing was off by about a tenth of a second. So people were getting better.
Starting point is 00:30:14 But now, timing is all fully automated. And, right, we're at the point right now where we can time even more detailed than not so for instance in the last handful of years there's been a couple ties and world cups skiing however they're timing down to i think the millionth of a second in world cups skiing so yeah but they're not i bet they're not tied to a millionth of a second so they could have easily picked the winner there exactly but but they don't want to because i think they're the arguments is that we can't we don't believe that that the infrastructure of sport is clear enough to tie them to that level um and you gave the instance of swimming it's
Starting point is 00:30:55 impossible to build a completely perfectly square swimming pool right it It's pouring a big, massive concrete block. I mean, my house isn't straight. How can you think about pouring this liquid substance and making it perfectly straight? So in theory, one lane is longer than another. And if we're starting to time down to the millionth, the 10 millionth of a second, it may be that the pool is not square
Starting point is 00:31:24 instead of someone's square or you didn't arrive at your destination with the correct phasing of your stroke and you had to like bring your helm another on another swing and then you just lost a quarter of a second right there okay so you can't it doesn't okay so this happens in science all the time where it's possible to have excess precision for the question that has been posed and using that precision becomes completely misleading and in fact false yes oh wow and we get so we need in the end that's a sad state that's a very sad state it's no no for i'll give you an example i'll give an example so in track and field I think they still do this. It's not when your head crosses the front line.
Starting point is 00:32:10 It's your chest. Okay, is that why everybody leans? That's why they lean, right? Okay, it's your chest. Well, if you can measure this to a millionth of a second, that's the time between your shirts crossing the line and your flesh. Okay? But only measuring your shirt.
Starting point is 00:32:28 So maybe people will wear, like, big bosoms or something. I should have never. If only I didn't have these blasted man boobs. No, no. I'm just agreeing with Rayvon here that you end up measuring things that are not even what you're trying to measure. Oh, man. And part of it is we don't have the rules
Starting point is 00:32:50 to deal with that kind of accuracy. Gotcha. So in the accuracy that we do have and that we're using right now, are there events, and I know if they are, they would be very infrequent, but in world-class events, do we ever have ties anymore?
Starting point is 00:33:06 Do we ever have somebody coming in on the clock at the same exact time? The answer is yes, but we can time it better and show that they're not at the same time, but then you're measuring other things at that point. This is the point I was trying to make. We have to have a winner. No, I'm saying, has there been
Starting point is 00:33:21 instances where we've had ties? Yes, in the 100-meter dash've had ties? I mean, listen. Yes, yes. In the 100-meter dash. Oh, okay. And when you have a tie, two people stand on the podium at the number one spot. They omit the second spot, and then a person comes in third. So there's no silver medal given when that happens.
Starting point is 00:33:38 Okay. That's how they do that. I was just unaware if that had ever happened. But that shouldn't happen any longer. It wouldn't have to happen. But let's take a quick break and we'll come back. We'll just digest all of this and shoot the shit with Rayvon, our professor at large,
Starting point is 00:33:52 helping us unpack technology and sports when we return. Hey, it's time to give a Patreon shout-out to the following Patreon patrons, Daniel Freeman, Coleman, OEI, and Cesar Perez. Hey guys, thank you so much for your support. Without you, we could not do this show. Or at least, we couldn't do it as well as we do it. And anyone listening who would like their very own Patreon shout-out, please go to patreon.com slash startalkradio and
Starting point is 00:34:31 support us. We're back. StarTalk Sports Edition. I've got Professor Fouchier from Purdue University, the Boilermakers. And that's a whole town full of engineers right there. So you've got just the expertise we need for this show. We're talking about game changers, athletes. But in this case, we're talking about technology.
Starting point is 00:35:01 majors or athletes. But in this case, we're talking about technology. So we've got, in recent past, some examples of damn near geriatric, highly performing athletes. Like... Name names. Name names. Name names. So what do we have?
Starting point is 00:35:19 We have, how old is LeBron? LeBron is like 36. Yeah. Okay, that's a foot in the grave right there. And Tom Brady was, it a foot in the grave right there. And Tom Brady was 43 in the Super Bowl. That means he died three years ago and didn't even know it.
Starting point is 00:35:32 But they're at their height. They're not just put out to pasture and we keep them just because they sell tickets. They're actually performing at the top of their game. Drew Brees is another one. Yeah, so tell me about technology and health and surgery and all the rest of that. There'd be medical technology, of course.
Starting point is 00:35:51 I think clearly we're at the front edge of what we can do physiologically with athletes. With the amount of, at least football players, right? And you mentioned two examples, LeBron. At least football players, right? And you mentioned two examples, LeBron. LeBron is on pace to have the most mileage on his legs of any NBA player in the history of the game. Similarly, Tom Brady playing at his level until 43. Just remind me, LeBron came right out of high school, right?
Starting point is 00:36:19 Yeah. Right, okay, okay. And so obviously there's a whole infrastructure that's allowing these athletes to perform longer and at the highest level. And it's not just a crisp bowl of Wheaties every morning that's allowing them to perform at that high level, right? There's a whole infrastructure of health professionals, bodily treatments, scientific and technological training methods
Starting point is 00:36:45 that allow these athletes to continue to play. Diet. Diet is in there too. Yes. All of this. And so, all right, so let's unpack the 900-pound elephant in the room. If technology helps you win, if you have the technology and other people don't,
Starting point is 00:37:04 what's the difference between that and cheating? It's all about perspective, right, of all kinds of things. So from my perspective, sport is not about equality. Sport is about maintaining a competitive advantage for as long as possible, legally or illegally. So I think there's a gray space when we have the conversation about cheating. And I would say it's only cheating until it's been officially banned
Starting point is 00:37:32 within a sporting governing body or sporting environment. So Fosbury didn't cheat when he jumped backwards over the bar with a Fosbury flop. He was not cheating. Which is smart, Anil. I mean, all right, I used my own body
Starting point is 00:37:48 because I had knee ligament reconstruction, right? Now, the whole idea of that is it is stronger after surgery than before I damaged it. Oh. Now, am I coming back... We can rebuild him. We can... But am I now doped?
Starting point is 00:38:06 Have I now body doped by having surgery that's actually made my knee ligaments stronger? I mean, this. This is like the Tommy John surgery in baseball. Correct. So this is the point the professor is making, I think. Until it's made illegal, it's okay. But is it in the spirit of things cheating? I would say it's completely within the spirit of sport.
Starting point is 00:38:29 Right. Because the spirit of sport is about winning. And I think that's what makes the technology and science so powerful and so awesome at the moment. No, in elementary school, it's about participating. Okay, just to make you... Okay, thank you. Let's get that straight.
Starting point is 00:38:43 I think we're all past elementary school. You get your participation trophy. Speak for yourself. Well, Chuck, I like that your participation trophy on your shelf there, Chuck. Exactly. No, so, I mean, technology is the place where you can gain and acquire the biggest competitive advantage. And so many of the technologies, computational processes, health mechanisms, the governing bodies of the sport
Starting point is 00:39:13 aren't looking at and aren't thinking about. So therefore, it's kind of an open world for people to experiment and see what the limits are and how they can improve their bodies. Wait, Gary, is that a real thing from my notes here? Like ghost pacers from an augmented reality glasses you wear? By the way, sir, yes. Damn. I know. So this thing is now otherworldly.
Starting point is 00:39:39 So imagine I gave you a pair of look like a normal pair of sunglasses. You put them on. You're going to go run around a track. Then all of a sudden, this augmented reality appears in front of you, and you can't catch it because it's been set at a certain pace. Imagine you're an elite athlete. We talked about it in a recent show, right, about the marathon breaking two hours, right? Kip Koji.
Starting point is 00:40:05 Imagine he was training with one of these that just made him run faster and faster and faster until he gets himself under two hours. This is the sort of technological advancement we're finding ourselves with outside of someone's got to run in front of you, burn themselves out, and then someone else has got to come in. So you go through half a dozen pacemakers during a marathon.
Starting point is 00:40:26 Nope, this thing's going to run, run, run, and run. But that really isn't very different from the way anyone trains now. I mean, that's the same as a sparring partner. The better your sparring partner, the better boxer you will be. If a sparring partner kicks your ass every day, then you should be the sparring partner. That's what I was going to say. Or you're just not going to be boxing.
Starting point is 00:40:48 You know? But you don't want to spar with somebody who can't box very well because that doesn't help you at all. So, you know, the pacing, I think pacing is different. Plus, I wouldn't want to not be able
Starting point is 00:41:03 to catch the augmented reality. You set it up so that I catch it right at the finish line, and then I have some sense of triumph. So, okay, I was about to say, there is, how about, what's the old experiment where they took mice or a rat, and they put it, and they let it swim halfway, and then they wouldn't allow it to ever reach the the edge and so it ended up giving up and drowning i mean can you break somebody's spirit by training them to a place where they
Starting point is 00:41:35 never receive a reward you probably can chuck but i think it's the whole now the technology has to be managed because otherwise, as you've just described, is a destructive use of technology. So, Rayvon, what my co-hosts are telling us here is that athletes, they need a little tasty tidbit every time they chew something. Like they feed the dolphin in the swimming pool. So, you can't keep the carrot out there forever. You've got to bite the carrot every now and then.
Starting point is 00:42:04 Toss them a fish when they get it right. But where is this headed? Where are we going 10 years from now? What's going on? I mean, I think this is getting back to what Chuck was saying about and just pushing the limits, right? So the outer edge is this whole world of neurostimulation, right? So the idea is that athletes,
Starting point is 00:42:27 the brain is the limiting factor within athletic ability and competition. So in a sense, your brain breaks down. I was going to tweet that about a week ago. I was saving for a good moment. It's that very thing, right. Elite athletes are limited not by their bodies, but by their brains, by their minds. And so some people have been saying, researchers saying that,
Starting point is 00:42:43 well, what's happening is you're getting central fatigue and that all of a sudden you're getting weaker signals from your body, from your brain to your muscles. So therefore you work on a series of newer stimulations, create more plasticity within the brain and allow and train yourself to push farther and deeper into the pain zone and allow your body to produce stronger signals to your muscles. So you'll be ignoring your evolutionary signs to stop.
Starting point is 00:43:20 Or even overriding them. Overriding, that's a better term. Wow. The idea is to... Okay, but we're all going to be like the dude who ran from Marathon to Athens to report on the battle and then just drop dead. That's what's going to happen. If you don't drop dead at the finish line,
Starting point is 00:43:37 then you didn't give all the energy you could have. Is that what you're telling us? That's where the goal is. No, you're not supposed to agree with that sentence. Do you know, this has been something. I'm going to be in with LeBron being dead and Brady. No, no, I didn't say that
Starting point is 00:43:53 for you to agree with the sentence, okay? No, I love it. It's the Kellen Winslow effect. Like, if they don't carry you off the field, then you didn't do your job. Don't leave anything on the field. I mean, we've had this thought
Starting point is 00:44:09 process in sport and in training for decades and decades. You train harder than you compete. So it's when you compete, you're not at the edge of your envelope. And Chuck and I had a discussion some years ago. Wait, wait, wait. I can tell you that makes sense to hear it, but it's not true.
Starting point is 00:44:27 Why? Because no one breaks world records while they're training. I know, but once you get into the element of competition, other stuff kicks in and you push, push, push. So you know what you need to do to win, and so you train beyond that. So if anything ever comes along, you're always working within comfort and without stress. So you've got that wriggle room to push further onwards
Starting point is 00:44:50 to get to be even better. But I'm not convinced people aren't breaking world records in training. They're just not organized and have the record keeping. I think people are going extremely fast and powerful in training. They're just not officially sanctioned, right? When we think about world records, they're official sanctioning events.
Starting point is 00:45:07 Absence of data on that, yes. Okay. Nothing would piss me off more than to break a world record while I was practicing. While nobody was looking. And nobody was there. Well, that won't happen
Starting point is 00:45:23 now, Chuck, because everything is filmed. Absolutely everything is filmed. And we go back to the cameras, where the super high speed cameras with tens of thousand frames a second, and there's nothing goes past anybody anymore. So it will be captured. I mean, look at our dear friend, Sasha Cohen.
Starting point is 00:45:40 She produced a, was it a quadruple salchow? In a a warm-up routine rather than in competition and she landed it it's on film so therefore she owns one so credit to her so let me ask you this then speaking of that because she never did it in competition not to not to disparage her in any way, but the fact is she didn't. Is there any technology that can monitor and help an athlete kind of stay in the zone so that when the time comes, they're just popping in the zone right when they need to be?
Starting point is 00:46:25 Yeah, so I think this is one of the leading edges of where we are as well. There are companies that are in the process of trying to track biometric data and figure out peak performance. So generally, a lot of these organizations and companies and research labs have gotten very, very good at checking a series of biometric data points and being able to determine if you'll be at your highest level of key performance. So that's the part they're really good at. However, the part where it breaks down is the less biometrically dated data-related events. So you could be ready to perform at your highest level, but you got in an argument with your mother, your girlfriend broke up with you,
Starting point is 00:47:13 you got in a car accident. All of these other social things that intervene in one's life may derail you. No, no, Rayvon, you just put in brain implants. That'll rub that out. I mean, let's go 10 years into brain implants. That'll rub that out. I mean, let's go ten years into the future. It's just your brain. Yeah, so then I'll just go robotic all the way.
Starting point is 00:47:31 Get rid of the bodies. Just ditch the bodies. You have your mats, and you go home, and you're like, who are you? Rayvon, I wish I had a rebuttal to that sentence, and I don't. You're right. Once you start tickling and twitching brain cells, interrupting or enhancing neurochemical synapses,
Starting point is 00:47:52 you're a machine at that point. All right. So now let me ask you this. Speaking of machines, is there or will there be an acceptable time for implantation to be a part of any sport? Implantation of what? Of anything, whether it's not just sensors, but augmentation. So the implantation actually heightens your performance.
Starting point is 00:48:17 So we're talking prosthetics then. Suppose I have a bad heart and I get a pacemaker. And now I'm a senior running and I get a pacemaker. Okay? And now I'm a senior running in a 65 and older race. Did the pacemaker prevent me from dying? Yes. Did it make me win the race? I don't know.
Starting point is 00:48:36 But there's a lot of stuff we can put in our bodies and already is put in our bodies. So, Ravon, where does that sit going forward? I think we're already at the point where generally I think people are going to get more comfortable with it. Because I think we're already at the point where generally I think people are going to get more comfortable with it. Because I think we're understanding as a society that the world in which we live is techno-scientifically driven and mediates all things that we live with. And we're getting to the point where we're going to have to give up on this illusion that sport is all about the human body and just generic performance. The technology is here. You know, if we can talk about the pacemaker, we can talk about all these kind of technological
Starting point is 00:49:14 innovations. And eventually, it's going to come to the point where we're going to be more interested in the great athletic performances and what the technology can bring than, I think, old school representations or ideas of what an athlete should be. Because, you know, athletes go through surgical procedures, right? You know, Kevin Durant, he's back playing. And that's pretty amazing. What happened with him? Remind me.
Starting point is 00:49:40 Kevin Durant, the basketball player. Yeah. Yeah. So multiple injuries. He's player. So, multiple injuries. He's gone through a series of injuries. Some gruesome ankle, feet, calf injuries.
Starting point is 00:49:54 And I don't even know the extent of the bodily injuries, but an injury enough that allowed him, he had to sit out a whole season. And so choose him or any other athletes who are sitting out long periods of time. And they're getting back because there's a massive
Starting point is 00:50:10 amount of techno-scientific research to allow themselves to retrain their bodies. That's not why they're getting back. They're getting back because it's money. That's why they're getting back. I'm not retiring your ass. You get back on that court.
Starting point is 00:50:25 I paid that for that contract. True, but, I mean, the only way they get back is there's a huge team of scientific and technological innovation going forward. And so I think we're getting to the point where if athletes are going to get injured, are we willing to say, well, maybe we should implant certain things, reconfigure their bodies, because we would like to see Tom Brady play another decade? Well, some of us would. Some of us. Well, no, the only way I'd like to see him play another day is if he were wearing
Starting point is 00:50:57 an Eagles uniform, other than that. So, I mean, Professor, are you actually saying that we're going to see some crusty old 40-somethings performing at the very top of Major League Baseball, NFL, NBA? Well, baseball maybe still. But are we going to see more dynamic sports populated by older athletes? I think so. Okay, I have to modify that. I think where pure skill matters, yes. But where physicality, no.
Starting point is 00:51:25 No. No. Yeah, so Brady is not the wide receiver at 43. No. Okay, so that's the difference here. And his offensive line becomes way more important than it ever has. Exactly, because
Starting point is 00:51:41 if anybody gets through, that's the end of Tom Brady. Right. You don't want to say that. So guys, we've got to than it ever has. Exactly. Because if anybody gets through, that's the end of Tom Brady. Right. Exactly. You don't want to say that. So guys, we've got to bring this to a close. Rayvon, it sounds like you're all in on this technology thing. I don't want to put words in your mouth, but it sounded like you're ready
Starting point is 00:51:56 to take this wherever it can go. I wouldn't say I'm ready to take it wherever it will go, but I think we as a society are getting to the point where we are interested in seeing what technology can bring to the human body and athletic performance. And I think the next steps are
Starting point is 00:52:13 really right around the corner. In our lifetimes, you're saying? Yes, definitely, in our lifetimes. Okay, alright, dude. Well, this has been fascinating, and I'm sure we only just began to plumb the depths of this topic. All right, guys, we got to call it there. So thank you, Professor, for joining us for this.
Starting point is 00:52:33 And Chuck, Gary, always good to have you. Thank you. This has been StarTalk Sports Edition Game Changers. I'm Neil deGrasse Tyson, your personal astrophysicist, occasionally posing as an ex-athlete for these shows. I hope to see you next time. As always, keep looking up.

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