StarTalk Radio - The Physics of Football
Episode Date: March 28, 2013How are the universal laws of matter, energy and motion expressed on the football field? Subscribe to SiriusXM Podcasts+ on Apple Podcasts to listen to new episodes ad-free and a whole week early....
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Welcome to StarTalk, your place in the universe where science and pop culture collide.
StarTalk begins right now.
Welcome back to StarTalk Radio.
I'm Neil deGrasse Tyson, your host, and I'm an astrophysicist with the American Museum of Natural History in New York City, where I also serve as director of the Hayden Planetarium.
Joining me is my special guest host, Chuck Nice.
Hey, man.
Nice Chuck Nice.
That's Nice Chuck Nice.
Thanks for having me back, Neil.
People might want to know why I said Nice Chuck Nice.
Oh, that's because you can follow me on Twitter at at Nice Chuck Nice.
Chuck Nice was already taken?
Was that?
You know what?
Oddly enough enough it was
so welcome back this is our special super bowl break edition of star talk radio yeah i know
you're a football fan from way back huge out of control football fan huge i love it i love it
it's like crack to me you get in a football football mood? Yes, I do. You just love?
I love everything about it.
I'm telling you right now. I got a little stiffy just talking about it right now.
TMI, TMI.
For today, I brought in one of my longtime friends and colleagues, Professor Charles
Liu.
He's a professor of astrophysics at the City University of New York.
Charles, welcome to StarTalk Radio. Thank you so much for having me. Hi, Chuck.
Let me say why I've got him on here. A couple of years back, he wrote an essay on the physics of
baseball, and he did all kinds of cool calculations about what baseball would be like on the moon.
And I figured, well, I need him for my football show, because then he'll do all these weird,
crazy, geeked out calculations for what goes on in football.
Cool.
And you get to comment on our interviews that we have for this segment.
Do you know who we – Chuck, do you know who I managed to get?
No.
Three football players from the New York Giants.
That's very cool.
It was very cool.
Except for the fact that they're from the New York Giants because I'm an Eagles fan.
You're an Eagles fan.
Well, get over it.
York Giants because I'm an Eagles fan.
You're an Eagles fan.
Well, get over it.
Three of them, tight end Travis Beckham and special teams captain and linebacker Chase Blackburn.
Okay.
And another linebacker, Jonathan Koff.
Good guys.
Yeah, good guys.
That's pretty cool.
And on the very first segment with them, we talked about what makes the best tackle and how you might
try to take someone down who's in motion. So let's see what they have to say. And Charles,
when we come back, I want your analysis of this conversation. I'll do my best. All right.
Let's check it out. Do you actually invoke laws of physics you learned in your engineering class
to become a better linebacker? I could say, yeah, but it's actually something that you learn as a young football player,
and that's the low man wins.
Low man wins.
I've heard that.
Leverage.
And so you want to come in at what point in the person's body?
You want your hat under their hat.
Oh, okay.
Oh, you call them hats?
Yes.
How polite.
Well, my cap, yes.
Okay, so you want your cap, your helmet under their helmet.
What does that then do for you?
It gives you better leverage and puts you in a better position.
So if you're a smaller guy, it puts you in a better position to control the blocker.
And so it helps if you can crouch a little lower than others can.
Yes.
So why aren't people just slithering along the ground to get to their people's ankles,
to get as low as humanly possible?
You get some power.
Oh, you start losing power when you get real low.
So it's whatever's the best combination of how low you get, you still get to use your leg strength.
Yeah, right.
With the speed coming down, you know, it's obviously meet force with force when you come out.
That's where it all comes from.
A lot of people think that it's your upper body, it's really your legs and what you have underneath them.
So, Jonathan, tell me about leg power.
If you're going to block someone, the most obvious thing you're using is your upper body.
So how do the legs play out?
Your legs and your hips, those are the most important things.
But that's where you generate all of your power, all of your momentum, that it gets started with your legs.
You don't need to have phenomenal bench press to be able to deliver those big hits
or to create separation between yourself and a blocker.
It all starts with your legs, and if you can get good acceleration with your legs going,
then everything else comes.
If you had the choice of tackling a tall person or a short person,
who would you be most effective at tackling?
Tall.
Tall, yeah, I mean.
Bigger target.
Get the legs and wrap them up.
They can't drive.
Same thing, if you're tackling and you hit a guy up high,
they can still move their legs and drive.
And there's still something going on in the play if the legs are still touching.
And if you can get a taller guy and you take him on thigh level or waist level,
the legs can't go anywhere.
He's out.
So why aren't there more little players, or are there, in football?
Running backs.
A lot of running backs are shorter.
We've got a Ma Bradshaw back there for us.
How tall is he?
He's got to be 5'9".
5'2".
He might be like 5'9".
So he's a little fire plug then.
Yeah.
And what does he weigh?
Much more than 200.
200, plus or minus.
There's a lot of guys
in the league
that are starting to come back.
Like Barry Sanders
is one of the greatest
running backs of all time.
He may have been 5'10".
And Darren Sproles?
Darren Sproles, yeah. My data says he's 5'6", maybe. Yeah, a lot of the greatest running backs of all time. He may have been 5'10". And Darren Sproles? Darren Sproles, yeah.
My data says he's 5'6", maybe.
Yeah, a lot of the running backs now are.
But they also have those thick legs that drive, too.
Just let me alert the listening audience
that Jonathan Koff, linebacker for the New York Giants,
majored in mechanical engineering in college.
And Chase Blackburn was a math major.
Charles, what does that do for you?
Well, that explains why it sounded a heck of a lot like a NASA engineer conversation just now
at Goddard Space Flight Center. Rather than the New York Giants locker room. Yeah, pretty much.
It's quite amazing. But actually, they're quite right. The center of mass makes all the difference
in terms of whether you're able to stop somebody. Now, what's interesting is, of course, the center
of mass for most men is just above the belly button, whereas for most women, it's just below. So,
what that means is these short guys you refer to, like Darren Sproles, Ahmad Bradshaw,
their centers of mass are more like women in the sense of further down in their legs,
which makes them more effective in driving. But I wonder if they'd rather tackle a short guy
10 times or a tall guy 10 times,
because you want to hit Brandon Jacobs, who's 6'4", 250, 10 times,
you can stop him the first time.
It'd be fun.
I don't want to hit him at all.
It's huge.
Yeah.
So I don't know.
It's interesting that a single tackle you want to tackle the big guy.
But by the fourth quarter,
I'll bet you you'd rather go for Darren Sproles any day of the the week because he's beating you down the big guy that's right the big guy yeah
so the little guy is much less mass coming at you and and and it works for you is what you're saying
i think so this thing about women with a lower center of mass is it just because they're shorter
or because their hips bring some weight below the belt that would otherwise be above the belt for
men it has to do with the anatomical structure.
Ah.
The anatomical structure.
So that explains why it's so damn hard for me to tackle women.
I'll leave that to you, Chuck.
You're listening to StarTalk Radio, and let's go back to my interview with my three New York Giants football players,
Travis Beckham, tight end, Chase Blackburn.
He's a special teams, what do we call him?
He's a captain linebacker and Jonathan Koff.
And this time we're going to talk about sort of what it might take to escape a tackle and what kind of force you'd feel if in fact you felt one.
if in fact you felt one.
An NFL lineman hitting with a full force carries about 2,500 pounds into his opponent.
And that's like a VW Beetle.
On that point of impact, does it feel like that in a tackle?
Or is the equipment just so well designed around your body
that that's just a walk in the park?
It's by no means a walk in the park but um it doesn't it doesn't feel like you're just standing in the middle of the road as
a vw beetle you know it comes that's what takes you you know so it's not quite like you're standing
in the middle of a road right okay or no because you're because you're going at them also i mean
because he's bigger i mean he has he's more mass and uh so he won't be able to move quite as quickly and so
that's where i need to use my athleticism to to generate more speed than he is and then to try to
overcome the force the force yeah you feel the force big running back up high flush like you
know squared up head to head it's going to feel a lot worse than you tackle a guy from the side
to the relative velocities are very different yeah it's going to feel a lot worse than you tackle a guy from the side.
So the relative velocities are very different.
Yeah, it's all about the angle of the tackle and everything else.
But if you're watching where you're going,
you're not really going to have the occasion to come straight head-on.
You're trying to avoid it.
Goal line happens. You almost never line up and just go.
It seems almost magic how a quarterback can avoid a tackle.
I don't know what's going on there.
They're there ready to try to pass.
Somebody's running after them, and they just sort of step to the side,
and the guy just falls on his face.
Or they spin a little bit with just a little bit on the shoulder.
What's going on with the quarterback?
Do they just have high experience away from heavy people?
Looking out of your peripherals, I think that Vic would probably be the best person.
Michael Vic?
Yes. And the way he just sees people, and he does Vic would probably be the best person to talk about.
The way he just sees people, and he does a spin move a lot. Plus, he's quick, so if you're going to tackle
where he is at this moment, in the next split
second, he's in another place, and your body
is out of position.
You never really got a handle on him.
I also think with all the rules in place for the quarterbacks
to protect him, a lot of the defensive players
are so nervous about, they have such a small
target on a quarterback you can hit without a personal foul
that it's kind of like when you're going at them rushing full speed as a defensive player
and you have to think for that split second.
That's it.
Once you think in the game of football, it's over.
You have to react.
So it has to be your life experience telling your body what to do
without even processing it to react.
So they're telling you not to think on a football field.
What does that mean, Chuck?
Well, look at that.
It means that I could play football.
Anything that requires no thinking at all.
I'm a Viking.
Wow, it's like a learned instinct.
A learned instinct, yeah.
I think Charles, is that what they mean there?
Yeah.
You see, the typical rushing lineman is moving about 20 miles an hour, which is about 30 feet per second.
Average human reaction time is about two-tenths of a second.
So if you have to react after you see something, you're already six feet past the quarterback.
So you really have to rely on that animal instinct, that learned instinct that has nothing to do with the thinking processes in your head in order to catch him.
Otherwise, he's long gone by the time you thought, oh, I got to go that way.
So this one is split-second timing of the action and the reaction of
the tackle. Yeah. And that's what the training is so important, the repetition so that your body is
used to moving without having to think about it first. Yeah. Plus, the guy ready to tackle the
quarterback is probably much more massive than the quarterback himself. So presumably,
the quarterback is more nimble. Right. Otherwise, they wouldn't be quarterback.
And a hell of a lot more scared scared which helps you not have to think well there there are big quarterbacks now actually
ben roethlisberger right as long as just as you're getting smaller running backs you're getting
bigger quarterbacks these guys not only are they tall enough to see over the linemen and see the
passing i always wondered how they see past that line yeah Yeah, they're 6'5". It's like the wall of China. How do you even know what's going on?
In fact, the front line has to make passing lanes. The way they block,
they make it so that the quarterback can actually see. They should have periscopes.
That's a new helmet equipment addition there. Let's go to my next clip real quick. And it
talks about spinning moves. Spinning moves and
whether anything you might learn in a ballet class would help your football. The easiest way to spin
out of someone is if they have all of their force on one shoulder. It's easy to spin the other way.
It's very hard to spin if someone's coming to top of you and their head up on you. And if they hit
you square in the middle, it's very hard to spin. Say for instance, I'm running at you and you're coming at my upfield shoulder, you're going
to hit my right shoulder, it's very easy to spin to my left because all of your force
is going that way.
So you don't know in advance, until contact is made, what's the best way to undo that?
Well, you can anticipate it, I guess, a little bit.
I like to shuffle my feet and see where they go, and whichever they go, it's easy.
So you do like a Muhammad Ali thing with your feet to try feet yeah to try to shake them and spin them like a bee although the reason the reason on defense that we
like it when offensive players spin with is because as an offensive man you're the only man with the
ball and a defense you have 11 guys out there going for that ball so when someone spins on the
first defensive player there's usually one or two guys coming to hit him so as soon as he spins
the ball the ball's out and that's the risk of spinning in the NFL.
Oh, because if you're spinning, the ball is away from the spin point, and now you're exposed.
Okay, my colleague posed this question.
Many defense pass rushers will spin their bodies when they rush the quarterback.
Dwight Freeney of the Indianapolis Colts may have the best such spin move in the NFL today.
They're basically doing a ballet spin in the air to avoid blockers,
and then they rush straight to the target.
Is that spin move generally better than a straight bull rush,
or is it just that Freeney does it so well that it's sort of uniquely effective for him?
It's the mix-up of it.
They complement each other.
Yeah, if you're bull rushed one time and the offensive tackle is deep-setting for you
and trying to come at you, trying to get his leverage, expecting you to just bull-rush him,
that's when you want to hit the spin move on him.
Keep him guessing.
Yeah, because if they get up, especially if they're deep-setting because of your speed,
they deep-set to your up-field shoulder.
So as soon as they do that, you kind of lean into them to get them to guess that way.
And then you take them out.
And you roll back underneath, spin move underneath. So it's this is a mind game at that point yeah it's like a chess
match chess match in the old days there were these videos of football coaches teaching their players
ballet are these sort of tiptoe moves still taught for your agility and i've heard some guys do ballet
yeah i mean if someone's going to do it they'll do that on their own. Not tell anybody about it.
Yeah, right?
You don't want to know about it.
And leave the tutu back at home.
A whole football field of tutus.
We're going to a commercial break, but when we return, a whole conversation about football injuries.
Stay tuned on StarTalk Radio. You're listening to a special edition of StarTalk Radio during this Super Bowl week.
I have the privilege of interviewing three NFL football players,
and it's Travis Beckham, Chase Blackburn, and Jonathan Koff.
Two of them were science and math majors in college, which is pretty cool.
You want to follow us, StarTalk Radio.
We're on the web, StarTalkRadio.net.
And find us on Facebook, StarTalk Radio.
And guess what our Twitter handle is?
StarTalkRadio.
And my special guest today is my colleague Charles Liu, astrophysicist and all-around calculator of geeky things.
So we're going to come back to you after this next clip where I talk to
these New York
Giants about what they
do when they strip the ball from anyone's possession
and the pile on that results.
Let's see what they tell us.
It didn't seem to me that
back in the 70s or 80s
that tackle people aimed for the ball.
It seems like it's happening all the time today.
It's something that's taught now.
Every coach teaches it.
It's taught.
Special teams, everything.
Offense, especially now, teaches it.
I mean, you sit in on those meetings,
and they talk about if the defense gets an interception or a fumble recovery,
that's what they're taught to do now is strip the ball
because defensive guys aren't used to running with the ball.
Say it like a loaf of bread.
That's how they carry it.
So it's there for the pickings.
Yes, exactly. And also if you look at the statistics for teams that win the turnover battle,
the teams that create the most turnovers, or that have the best ratio, those are the teams
that are going to win the most games. He's calling coaches, by the way. I was going to say, how do you not know the exact
percentage throughout the league? Let me go get my PowerPoints. I saved all the PowerPoints.
I think it's like 80 some percent.
I mean in old days they might have seen someone try to knock it out of your hands but if you hit
it with a helmet it's almost impossible to keep holding that. I think it was somebody running
full speed at you with a helmet right at that football. Aiming for the football. It's very hard
to hold that football that's why a lot of times you see guys holding the football with two hands
and there's times where I've been running with the ball and they try to put their hat on the ball
and they haven't and hit my forearm and that's
not a very good just think about that pressure on the football it's very hard
to right and the form is not protected no it's not at all I guess the draw
analogy it's it's a lot like in a nail with the hammer and your helmet
sometimes ends up being the head of the hammer right when the balls bouncing
around and it's live for you guys it seems to be quite dangerous because
that's when the piling on happens somebody goes in grabs the ball's bouncing around and it's live. For you guys, it seems to be quite dangerous because that's when the piling on happens.
Somebody goes in, grabs the ball, and who determines who has possession of the ball?
Whoever comes up with it.
No, no, no, no.
There are 14 guys in a pile, and they just peel them off one at a time.
Whoever comes up with the ball.
Whoever ends with it.
So if you and I have equal grip on the ball we're
gonna we're gonna one of us is gonna get it bad stuff in there yeah I mean
there's any biting or there's everything I mean you have you can't really people
getting punched in the down there and and people getting stepped on and people getting eyes poked.
Right.
Oh, yeah.
It gets dirty down there.
That's like throwing a fresh piece of meat in the lion's den.
So, Charles, it must be a lot of force if you're in the bottom of that pile.
Oh, yeah.
You're suffering.
Let's say, it's probably not 14 guys, but let's say eight guys are on top of you and they're 250 pounds each.
You're talking 2,000 pounds. That's a Volkswagen Beetle right on top of your chest. Right, just are on top of you, and they're 250 pounds each. You're talking 2,000 pounds.
That's a Volkswagen Beetle right on top of your chest.
Right, just driving on top of your chest.
That's right.
And the thing is, of course, the ball is a prolate spheroid, right?
All right, that's geek for football shape, okay?
Yes.
What that means is that-
It's a football.
Football, yes.
It bounces like crazy.
You don't know where it's going to go depending on whatever force.
So the next guy piles on, suddenly it squirts that way.
Next guy comes on, squirts the other way. But attacking a ball is also all about physics.
The reasons being coached now is because coaches figured out that it takes much less force to
actually knock a ball out of a kid's hands than it is to actually take the guy down.
It actually requires less force. Okay. So they're invoking the laws of physics to-
Improve their ability to win the game.
Okay. Gotcha.
So it's easier to strip a ball than
it is to tackle a guy. Absolutely, in all
cases. In retrospect, this sounds kind of obvious.
I don't know why they didn't figure that out 50 years
ago. Maybe they didn't have physics 101.
I think that might have something to do with it.
Well, you know, a big problem these days are helmet-to-helmet
hits, and I had to bring that up
and find out where that leads, where that was and where it's going to go.
Let's find out the latest on that.
Nowadays, you have these guys in the NFL that just lay people out.
They just knock people out.
And they do it with their helmet going into your helmet.
Yeah.
Head-to-head.
And that's the worst part.
I mean, if you want to strive yourself on being a hard hitter and knocking people out, hit someone in the chest.
Hit someone in the stomach.
Hit somebody in the shoulders.
When you hit somebody in their head where it messes up their cognitive skills and all that stuff, you shouldn't take pride in that.
That's like you're knocking someone out based on something that they have in control.
I take pride in taking a cheap shot at an opposing player, but it's football.
It's a physical sport.
It's by any means necessary to get your job done. But there's football. It's a physical sport. By any means necessary.
Get your job done.
But there's a law now against it.
What is the law?
You're not allowed to hit a helmet-to-helmet.
On a defenseless receiver is the key term.
There's no helmet-to-helmet contact on a defenseless receiver,
and there's no helmet-to-helmet period on quarterbacks.
So I'm a pass receiver.
I don't have the ball yet.
Now I have the ball. You i have the ball you can't hit
your helmet to my helmet have you had an opportunity to make a football move and it's how you tackle
like if you're lunging at someone like if you're attempting to go helmet to helmet then yes if the
receiver is running and he ducks and you're going for a tackle it's still it's kind of but it's kind
of judgment call different stuff where you can get fin, you can get penalized in the game and fined the week after,
but you can actually send it in for an argument,
and then they could actually take your fine away, and usually it's $7,500.
Some of the hits are arguable, but during the game, they call the flag, it's a flag.
But the hardest part is the fact that a lot of times these balls are thrown,
and the receiver may bobble it, or as they're catching it, they're ducking. They're not in control yet.
Yeah, but as a defensive player, you're aiming at their chest.
But as they bobble the ball, it's going to the ground.
They're going down to duck to get it.
Okay.
As they're doing that, your target area that you've already aimed for was their chest.
Now, in that same area is now their head because they just dropped.
Yeah, they're basically giving us a strike zone.
Yeah, at the heat of the moment, it's so hard to change your strike zone as another player is moving.
Yeah, I mean, this injury stuff is something else.
And I then spoke to them once we talked about helmet-to-helmet buttheading behavior.
You butthead.
I asked them about concussions because it's one thing to just say we hit heads, but now what happens to your brain?
Let's find out.
Have you guys all had concussions? Oh, yeah. I haven't. So why did you say, oh, yeah, and Travis says, I now what happens to your brain? Let's find out. Have you guys all had concussions?
Oh, yeah.
I haven't.
So why did you say, oh, yeah, and Travis says, I haven't.
I mean, I've blacked out.
Oh, so it's a matter of the definition.
It's a matter of what you say.
And that's the thing about it now is concussions have been graded so much differently now.
Every head injury is now looked at.
That's why there's so many more concussions.
Where in the past, the same head injury wasn't even looked at.
Yeah, they just slap you, you know, put you back in the next next line a lot of times people get concussions and don't remember what happened i remember in high
school i we were playing a green team i got knocked out and opened my eyes and all i could
see was green but that's not a concussion they only lasted a couple plays no but i but the thing
is i remembered everything nowadays you got guys that they can't even like open their eyes and look
at light or a week later can't even remember anything
Okay, so part of the problem is the helmets are rigid
If you made a soft helmet then the brain is not going to get the jolt because there'll be a cushion a pad
What the padding is underneath that hard shell
Well, this is already supposed to do that. Yeah
And they're working on that again this year. That's one of the things they're working on is compression of the helmets and everything like that
Okay, Travis, I read your bio you broke your leg in college And they're working on that again this year. That's one of the things they're working on is compression of the helmets and everything like that. Okay.
Travis, I read your bio.
You broke your leg in college.
Well, it was actually my senior year.
It was actually a very tough year for me because I started the season with a hamstring injury,
so I missed the first three games, came back, played four more games, and then I broke my leg.
I was actually blocking.
Our running back got tackled onto my leg, broke my fibula.
Fibula is in your shin. In your outs.
So it got broken with you getting tackled. No,, broke my fibula. Fibula is in your shin. So it got broken with you getting tackled?
No, no, I was blocking, and our running back got tackled and tackled on my leg.
Oh, gotcha.
So in a way, that was a secondary incident that broke the leg.
Yeah, injuries is a part of the game, and that's one thing you're going to have to face.
So in a way, a nice, clean bone break, that's the best kind of injury.
It's not your knee knee it's not your brain
exactly okay it's a hundred percent injury rate in this in this game in this league anything from a
broken finger to something that's gonna end your career like blowing out your knee what percentage
of players leave the game because of injuries i would say most do even if they're not career
ending per se but as you're speaking to me with your arm in a swing right now exactly i just had
surgery on friday so and what your surgery was on what? I had my labrum repaired
and my end up being my bicep tendon reattached. That just sounds painful. Reattach your bicep
tendon. Yeah it was week one I had this actually happen so I played the entire season with this.
If it's not necessarily messing you up while you play what is it five years later this really
catches up. Yeah and it cannot be a career-ending injury like hey this is it five years later this really catches up yeah and it cannot be a career any
injury like hey this is it that day but yeah my shoulders could catch up to me in a few years or
you know the knees may not be that instant when they happen but a few years later they're going
to eventually slow you down so it can become a career any injury what part of your body hurts
the most after a game shoulders and shoulders yeah your shoulder but that's where you got all
the plastic stuff that's why still that's why you got all the plastic stuff. That's why it's plastic.
That's why, even with all the plastic.
Because I see all the layers, and each layer kind of diffuses the force to spread it out as evenly as possible.
Still, it's your shoulders.
That's how much force there is in a game of football.
That's why football players have big shoulders and big necks.
Because if they didn't, they'd be dead.
There that is.
So, Charles, what's your reaction to all this injury talk?
Well, first of all, helmet to helmet has been going on for a long time.
You guys may remember a guy named Fred the Hammer Williamson,
Kansas City Chiefs.
That was all he did.
But beyond that, when you have hard helmets, I know—
He later had a big career in blaxploitation films in the 70s.
That's right.
Yeah.
The problem is that when you've got hard helmets hitting each other, the time for the impact
goes down, and therefore the impulse lasts up.
So it's an elastic collision.
Exactly.
So you're actually transferring much more force in a very short time, even though you
do have padding on the inside.
So they really should be the leather heads.
Yeah, soft helmets.
That's right.
Like in the old days.
Well, keep the whatever's inside, but they should soften it, and that way the head butt takes longer for it to execute the contact.
Right.
It's like whether you have a bumper that crushes with your car or whether a really hard piece, it transfers a lot more energy.
What they should do is just grow giant afros.
When we come back, more of our special Super Bowl break StarTalk program.
Welcome back to StarTalk Radio, our special Super Bowl break edition.
We've had the pleasure and the privilege of having three New York Giants football players on StarTalk. They visited me in my office at the Hayden Planetarium.
Two of them have backgrounds in science.
Chase Blackburn was a math major at the University of Akron in Ohio,
and Jonathan Goff majored in mechanical engineering. And where did he go to school?
He was at Vanderbilt. That's right. And we have Travis Beckham, a tight end. He was the youngest
of the three of them, even a little spunkier than the rest. And it was funny hearing him talk about
the fact that he runs faster than the other two. He made them sound like old timers. It was funny hearing him talk about the fact that he runs faster than the other two. He made them sound like old-timers. It was funny.
They're all born in like the mid-'80s.
This is what was crazy about it.
And so, Charles, you do weird calculations about things.
That's why I brought you on the show.
What can you tell me about the football enterprise and what the uninitiated listener might want to know?
Well, I've got to tell you, football is the perfect example of how physics is
actually fun everything we love about football is applied physics everything from blocking and
tackling to the hail mary right when you have a football that's flying out 50 yards toward the
end zone with three seconds left that ball is actually traveling almost exactly the same way
in artillery shell fires because when you shoot the artillery shell out,
it has rifling in the barrel that makes the shell spin.
So they spin. That's because of stability.
Exactly. It increases the ability for it to hit its target in a nice trajectory.
And that's part of the reason why quarterbacks will spin the ball when they throw it.
So they can legitimately call it the bomb.
There is no question about it.
Wow. throw it so it's so they so they can legitimately call it the bomb there is no question about it yeah you know that's just one tiny example of how the physics just translates and translates out
and you can figure everything we were talking earlier about how the reason people go for the
ball these days instead of just trying to tackle the runner is because it takes less force to
remove a ball from a runner than it is actually to stop the runner from running and less energy
on top of that so if you analyze it, you can just become a better team.
Absolutely.
So you can have a whole team, 11 guys who are skinny,
who just know how to strip the ball.
And they're the best defense in football.
Well, you know, football is an incredibly cerebral game.
You look in a playbook, and there are 200 plays in there
that these guys have to learn.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
So basically, it would actually benefit you to have a bunch of smart dudes on your team.
Absolutely.
Well, smart dudes who can run fast away from those who can try to get them.
Or like you said, Neal, smart guys with calculators just like,
okay, Ignatius, I'm going to need you down at the 20-yard line. Just waiting.
As long as they're really, really strong.
So on my next clip, I had to ask these guys, because these are big guys.
They're 6'4", 240 pounds or whatever, and they look like football players.
I had to ask them, what goes on in the locker room?
Are you guys like, is there a pissing contest there or what?
Let's see what they say.
What is the measure these days of who's the strongest
in the locker room? Is it the bench press?
Yeah. Okay.
Which makes no sense.
I know, I know. It's
old school. I understand. It's old school.
But something's got to happen in the old
school way. So what can you bench?
Travis? Now, I mean,
my shoulder's so messed up. My bench was
460. That's where they messed up shoulder. No, no, no. That's when my shoulder was good. Okay, I mean, my shoulder's so messed up. Most of that bench was 460.
That's where they messed up shoulder.
No, no, no. Well, that's when my shoulder was good.
Okay, Jonathan?
Same as Travis.
Well, 465.
Tommy Topper.
470.
I mean, you know.
470?
No, no, no.
Honestly, you know, obviously, I can't bench at all right now with my shoulder on a sling.
But I think 440 is about as much as I went up to.
So does that still have bragging rights in the locker room?
Oh, definitely.
Yeah.
Yeah.
There's guys, what are these, 600?
Oh, yeah.
I know.
Chris Knees.
Single bench, 600.
Chris Knees.
One of our rookies, actually.
I didn't know you could fit that much mass on the bar.
That's when the bar starts bending.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Pretty much does.
Okay, now how about in the thigh lift?
Squat?
Leg press.
Squat, yeah.
It all depends because a lot of guys, if you have injuries, you have to do, you can do
a front squat on a slide machine or you can do leg press.
Oh yeah, so leg press is the...
Yeah, it all depends and it's all relative to what exercise you're doing.
I mean, a lot of guys can leg press a thousand pounds or so, you know?
I mean, that's not on leg press, but if you're squatting a thousand pounds, it's something
to be said.
Yeah, because leg press, your whole body is supported.
You're just pushing weight off of you.
If you look at people in the Olympics with very strong legs,
they're not necessarily huge, they're just very well defined.
And so where's the tradeoff between getting super mondo thighs
and having thighs that can actually serve your needs on the field?
I think that it's the way you use them.
I think if that's the case, you would think that ice skaters would have huge legs.
You mean speed skaters?
Yeah, figure skaters or whatever.
I think that to base off of any sport,
I would say football players probably have the most defined bodies.
And it's just the way we use them.
I think football is a sport where you need to use every single muscle in your body.
Every muscle in the body. Wow. Chuck, how to use every single muscle in your body. Every muscle in the body.
Wow.
Chuck, how many muscles do you have in your body?
I think I have four.
I'm pretty sure I have about four, maybe six tops.
On a good day.
On a good day, that four becomes six.
But there's a whole other philosophy here, obviously.
In the old days, you flex your bicep, and if you had the biggest bicep, you'd say, oh, that's cool.
But what good is that other than flexing when you need all your muscles to take somebody down who's running with the ball?
A punter is not going to need biceps.
Right.
A punter is going to use them.
By the way, there are about 650 muscles in the human body, just so you know.
But anyway.
Maybe your body.
For my body
They're really small
But you've got a situation
Where a punter
Is going to kick a ball
50 yards or something
In the air
He's not going to need biceps
He's going to need
Massive quadriceps
Oh by the way
Depending on which direction
The field is facing
Yeah
The spin of the earth
Will actually cause
A punted football
To slide to the left
Or the right
You're not talking
About the Coriolis force Are you I am indeed talking about the Coriolis force, are you?
I am indeed talking about the Coriolis force.
You're totally geeking me out now.
Hey, hey, it's awesome.
This is the force that generates hurricanes on Earth.
If any air mass moves north or south, it's coming from a different part of the Earth
that has a different sideways rotational speed,
and it either overshoots the center or pulls behind it.
And when that happens, you can spin a storm in the northern hemisphere.
They all spin counterclockwise.
That's right.
Okay.
And so you kick a ball.
About 50 yards, the ball will move one quarter inch either to the left or the right, depending
on whether you're kicking north, south or east, west.
But that's because-
Or if you're in the north or southern hemisphere.
And you're kicking during a hurricane.
This is the problem.
No, the Quarrel's Force doesn't need a hurricane to operate oh okay so i bet there are a couple of
kicks that that hit missed by a quarter of an inch it happens yeah it's a game of inches or in this
case the earth hates me that's why i missed that field goal. The earth hates me. Well, in Cowboy Stadium, which just opened a few years ago,
you actually had a punter which hit the big screen above,
and that completely changed the path of the ball too.
Yeah, if you hit a blunt object.
Yeah, thank you.
That or the Coriolis Force, one or the other.
I also had to ask these guys about their diet
because where do you get your energy from?
You get it from your food,
from something you have slaughtered for the benefit of your own caloric intake.
And so get over it.
Even vegetarians have to kill something to eat it, even if it's just a carrot.
So let's find out what my guys were telling me about diet and calories.
Do you guys count calories?
What do you eat in a day?
I mean, I just try to eat balanced meals for the most part, especially in season.
Reese's cups?
Reese's cups followed by ice cream.
That would balance that out.
All the sugar food groups.
So what you're saying is you just eat to stay healthy, but not in any...
You know your body.
Everybody's body's different.
I mean, you got to know yourself.
Some guys are different.
For instance, Kevin Boss, our tight end, is very strict in what he eats and he gets mad
at me when I sit down and eat because I got
the cakes and all the sweet
stuff and he's just like, oh, I want some of that but
I can't because a lot of guys have to deal with
the being overweight and
you get fined for overweight. What do you mean you get fined?
Exactly, see?
You get a window. You got to be a certain window.
$500 a pound. No.
$450, my bad. Something like that. So there's some weight that the coach has decided you should be or some weight interval.
And you come in after a cheeseburger weekend, five pounds overweight.
Oh, yeah.
You're paying.
That's an expensive cheeseburger.
That is a very expensive cheeseburger.
Oh, my gosh.
Per pound per day.
So what is your percent body fat?
Although it does depend on now.
See, if you are overweight, they check your body fat.
If your body fat is still below a certain point, then you're good.
That you're out.
Okay.
That you're out.
All right, so you could have built some muscle over the weekend.
So what's your body fat?
I'm 11%.
Is that your ideal?
Yeah, 11%, and then I have to be between 240, 244.
Okay, Jonathan?
So, I mean, it depends on the time of year.
So when I start training.
I mean, you sound like a woodland creature.
In the spring when I'm a hibernate.
What do you mean?
Okay, full-on schedule. mean? I'll be around.
Full-on schedule.
I'll be around 13 in the spring.
13%.
And I'll get down to about 10 or 11 come August.
Okay, and your weight?
About 240 to 250.
And above that, you start paying out?
Yeah.
Oh, yeah.
Okay.
I'm about the same as John.
Get up to about a 13 and 13 and a half and get down to about a 12 or just under maybe an 11.
That's not an NFL rule.
That's just the New York Giants.
Oh, no.
It depends on the club.
Okay.
But everybody's got an incentive clause for this.
So, Chuck, they charge you if you come in fat.
Look at that.
And I thought models had it bad.
That's right.
These guys are just like, oh, dear, I could never.
Oh, I must be bulimic.
I'm going to have a salad.
I'm just going to have a salad.
I'm playing this weekend.
Yeah, I can't.
I don't know.
I don't even want to have that image, Chuck.
But it's true.
You need calorie equals energy.
Right.
Charles, I once, again, my colleague, Charles Liu, thanks for being on the show.
Sure.
I once saw, it was an ad for Snickers that said, high in energy, low in calories.
I don't think so.
That's right.
A calorie is a measure of energy.
Is a measure of energy.
That was an ad slogan guy who never had physics 101.
Yeah.
And so when we come back, we will talk more about what the total weight of all their equipment is.
You ever think it's like, you know, it weighs like 50 pounds or something?
Right, yeah.
It does not.
And I ask them about it, they'll tell me about it.
Oh, and amongst that equipment are girdles.
Oh, come on.
You were talking tutus earlier.
We're talking girdles.
Charles, I don't even want to know why you know that.
We've got to take a quick break, but more StarTalk when we return. you are listening to a special edition of star talk radio what in this foot in this super bowl
break yeah for a special episode of star talk what what are the calculations have you done for us
well i figured i would figure out what would happen if we played football on the moon.
They did golf on the moon, so you might as well have football.
They did golf on the moon, might as well have football.
Turns out that your typical NFL quarterback will throw a ball 350 yards in the air before it comes down.
That would have to be a really big stadium.
That's cool.
So that would be a Hail Mary squared play.
350 yards. Amazing. So you would literally have to get in a car Mary squared. 350 yards.
Amazing.
So you would literally have to get in a car to go catch the ball.
Yes, I'm afraid so.
But there is another way you can do it.
If the quarterback happens to throw it really high upward in the air using a trajectory,
then you can actually have the astronaut quarterback kind of amles slowly across that 350 yards,
and you can actually catch it.
Wait, all thrown footballs have trajectories.
Yeah.
So what are you telling me here?
Take the angle and aim it really high.
Very high trajectory.
As opposed to a low one.
A high parabola.
Right.
The ideal trajectory to get maximum distance is always 45-degree angle.
But if you take it 60 or 70 degrees,
you actually can give the runner enough time to make those 350 yards before
you actually get it.
Okay.
Yeah.
So that would be a fun thing.
So when we have moon colonies, you'll be on the sideline recalculating all plays for moon
gravity.
It would be my pleasure.
It would be a one-sixth gravity situation.
And what would be great in one-sixth gravity is the goal line stands where you have the
running back where they want to jump over the line.
Oh, yeah.
Oh, that's it.
That's pretty cool. Yeah. You launch you get that that ballet music 15 foot
vertical trying to play football in space in fact it can only jump over the line you could jump over
the the the goal post exactly right you wouldn't have to kick a field goal you could just jump the
field you score a touchdown and the extra point all in the same play, which is pretty awesome.
Well, I got another clip here of my three New York Giants football players who came to my office at the Hayden Planetarium.
Let's find out what they saw.
I was curious about just what equipment everybody's wearing these days.
And it looks like it's heavy and that they would impede their ability to move, but apparently not.
So let's find out.
Jonathan, you majored in mechanical engineering.
As an engineer, is there any change in the football gear that you could suggest that would make the game better or faster or safer?
I haven't had an opportunity to do enough research to give you a good answer.
I've not done my research.
It's better than just making stuff up. right how much does all of our stuff weigh yeah what is the
weight of all that gear oh it depends if you wear thigh pads knee pads and all that you're counting
your cleats it's about eight to ten pounds only yeah it's like yeah helmets have gotten so much
lighter because i remember even really yeah when you're in high even in high school i mean that's
only 10 years ago now and the helmets then were even I mean so much heavier you got to look at it and say yeah
it's 10 pounds but you have guys that when they run at the combine run a 4-3 flat with nothing on
and get down to this football field and can't run a 4-6 yeah football speed that's the difference
in football speed how much it does yeah it's still in the way yeah that and. From a mental standpoint, the game will slow you down a little bit.
It will slow some people down.
When I look at a helmet, it doesn't look like you have full peripheral vision,
but somehow quarterbacks always know when someone's coming up behind them.
What kind of view do you have out the side of your helmet?
A decent view.
You have to do a lot of head turning just to see.
As a quarterback, when a defense lines up also,
you kind of have an idea of which side they're going to blitz from. When they're making out calls, they're setting
their protection to block a certain way. So they're expecting someone to come free. Like if
we bring a blitz on the defense that has too many defenders for them to pick up, we bring one more
than they have to block, they know where that free defender's coming from. So they kind of have an
idea of where already to be peeking at. The gloves that I see you guys sometimes wear, is it to keep your hand warm?
Is it to give better friction with the ball?
What's the point of the gloves?
It's to give you better grip of the ball.
So is the glove made of a special material that basically glues itself to the ball, like
Velcro or not?
Yeah, not so much glue, but um...
I don't mean literally, but...
Yeah, your gloves will adhere to the ball a little more.
Is this why pass receivers, I can see, put up their hand, and the ball just sticks to their hand.
And the size of their hand also has something to play in that, too.
Yeah, and the big mitts they got.
That'll definitely help.
I just think it makes my fingers feel stronger.
And maybe a lot of stuff plays a mental toll.
Yeah.
But if it's doing that, I'm going to keep going for it.
But my fingers just feel much more weak.
It's a placebo, though.
I mean, a lot of things in the NFL, there's a saying that look good, feel good, play good.
Yeah, exactly.
This is the equipment.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So, Charles, you were telling me during the break that there were some changes in the
equipment over the years?
Yeah.
Yeah.
In the, oh, a few decades ago, the guys would just wear a simple athletic supporter.
You mean jockstrap, you mean?
Oh, sure.
Okay.
Okay.
But now, they wear full-fledged girdles.
Girdles?
Yeah, this is...
Wait, wait, Charles, how do you know this?
That's another show.
Fine, fine, okay.
The basic point is...
It's a full-form fit girdle.
That's right, and it protects...
Were they worried about panty lines or something
with their jockstrap?
Well, I don't know,
but they have the entire groin area protected.
They've got pockets where you can take pads.
That's why you don't see lines of undergarments
within their uniform.
So they're basically wearing Spanx.
Yes, actually they are.
There was actually at least one or two running backs
in the 70s and 80s who wore women's girdles for a period of time until this actually evolved into modern regular equipment.
So the helmets have also changed.
You were mentioning peripheral vision in that segment.
Yeah, it's true that humans usually can see about 200 degrees.
Right, so 180 is complete exactly left to right.
Exactly left to right.
And a little bit extra on each side.
Yeah.
That's right.
complete exactly left to right and a little bit of extra on each side.
Yeah.
Yeah.
That's right.
So the helmets have been made so that there are more gaps along the side so people can actually take advantage of all those distances.
And then I guess you mentioned the gloves at the very end, right?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Before the gloves, there was something called stick-em.
Stick-em.
Stick-em.
Yes.
And what was that?
Well, just a spray-on adhesive.
It's actually legal in certain sports like pole vault, okay, because you don't want to
let go of the pole vault, vault while you're halfing.
But you do, at some point, need to let go of the pole.
So it sticks, but not too much.
Not too much, exactly.
So Lester Hayes was an Oakland Raiders player who used a lot of stickum in his day.
He would take a brush and paint it on his arms.
Okay, so that's why-
So that anything that came in contact with him would be stuck to him like flypaper.
Okay. Yeah, so it's illegal now. It's illegal now. But the
materials that the gloves are made of have a perfect
combination of what they call squeeze,
which is the ability to catch the ball,
and tack, which is the ability for it
to rub. And people can still
find a way to get it sticky
by covering it with water or sugar
water and then washing it off just before the game.
So you get a residue of the sugar left on it.
That's right.
You're listening to StarTalk Radio.
I'm Neil deGrasse Tyson, your host.
We'll see you again next week.
And as always, I bid you to keep looking up.