085 – Marc West – The Science and Psychology of Cricket – Part 2
In this episode, I continue my discussion with science journalist Marc West. We talk about the psychology and science of sport – and the case study we use is cricket. The topics we talk about can apply to practically any team sport, but being the cricket fans we are, we relate it to the gentleman’s game. Topics we cover in this second part of our discussion include:
– Psychology and batsmen
– The psychology of Shane Warne
– The difference between on field and off field psychology
– Body language
– The usage of sports psychologists and counselling for the English team
– Life after a sporting career
– The similarities between professional sportsmen and retired soldiers
– Research into injuries and sports medicine
– Kinematic studies of the doosra and off-break deliveries
– Tracking the workload of cricketers using GPS
– A mathematical surprise about the statistics of the best batsmen in the game – Sachin Tendulkar, Don Bradman, and even Ricky Ponting! (in fact, the top 34 test run scoring batsmen) What is this revelation, and how could this revelation be true? Mathematics will show you the way…
– Is it harder to get Ricky Ponting out at 49 compared to 51?
– The longer a batsman stays at the crease, the harder it is to get him out, right? Wrong! Listen in and find out why…
– How does this relate to the exponential distribution and coin tosses?
Also featured in this episode is Listener of the episode, and listener feedback.
This is part 2 of a 2 part interview. Please listen in to episode 84 for the first part of the interview.
You can read Marc’s articles at the following sites:
The Curse of the Duck
Psychology & Cricket
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February 12th, 2009 at 12:50
I wrote up the Psychology article in more detail here: http://www.mrscienceshow.com/2009/01/science-psychology-and-cricket.html
The Canberra Times unfortunately can’t pay all that much for their cricket/science articles! So it was a cut-down version. On the blog you’ll also find interviews with the experts consulted.
July 1st, 2010 at 18:24
[…] sport, but being the cricket fans we are, we relate it to the gentleman’s game. Topics we cover in this second part of our discussion […]