Phelps

The thrill I get from watching Michael Phelps swim is the same thrill I get from watching Tiger Woods put for birdie on the 18th hole or from reading 1930's Auden: the impossible isn't just made possible: these guys make the impossible look easy. So I was struck by this paragraph in an old profile of Phelps:

In testing conducted by physiologists from USA Swimming, Phelps scored as one of the weakest elite swimmers they had ever measured, but that was on such traditional tests as the bench press and how much weight he can lift with his legs. ''He's fine on land,'' Heinlein says. ''He can walk. He can do all the things you want him to do. But he's not extraordinary in any way. What Michael excels at takes place in water, so what does it tell you to test him on land?''

That reminds of the study of spatial memory and chess grandmasters and how they only have better-than-average memory within the narrow domain of chess. Although these chess experts can memorize a chess board in a glance, and play an entire game in their head, they still get lost in cities and forget where they put their keys. Talent, in other words, is excruciatingly specific, which is why Michael Jordan was a mediocre baseball player and why I've never really enjoyed Auden's prose.

More like this

In response to my last post on Musical Geniuses, I was accused of being a simple minded nurturist, a proponent of environmental determinism. So I thought I would take a moment and elaborate on why people with extraordinary talent - like Mozart, or Michael Jordan, or this Jay Greenberg kid - aren't…
Time Magazine has an interesting profile of Magnus Carlsen, the youngest chess player to achieve a number one world ranking: Genius can appear anywhere, but the origins of Carlsen's talent are particularly mysterious. He hails from Norway -- a "small, poxy chess nation with almost no history of…
This kid is a poster child for deliberate practice: Marc Yu, a 9-year-old piano prodigy from Pasadena, Calif., recently played at a benefit for victims of the earthquake in Sichuan, China. And he didn't play "Row, Row, Row Your Boat." He played a piece that Chopin wrote for victims of the Polish-…
When Michael Jordan made his second comeback from retirement to play for the Wizards, a young player for the Pistons was asked in a press conference if he looked forward to playing against Jordan and seeing what he still had left at his age. The player responded by saying that Jordan isn't the…

Good afternoon

We can post your ad to forums and Blogs related to your website. We can bring hundreds of new visitors to your

site as well as see your site jump in pagerank.

Your website will be in the top of the search engine result pages.

It is a proven service that works

We will post your ad as per your specifications and send you a log file with all the URL links to your ads we

posted so that you can click on any of them and make sure that we did our work

Try our service FREE at http://www.GooWall.com

Have a nice day

http://www.GooWall.com

The best way to promoter our lonly webiste on the Internet

Another story like that is from Ken Dryden's autobiography. The famous hockey goalkeeper took part in a basic reflex test (pinch a ruler that is dropped between your fingers. The faster you pinch, the shorter the distance the ruler falls). He came off as "average" in the reflex department, even though he was widely considered the best goalie in the game.

Jordan was a mediocre professional baseball player