kaitainen wrote:
Flagpole Willy wrote:Also, let's be more clear. It wasn't just that I won races on 15-20 miles a week. I set records that still stand today, and with a 15:48 as a high school senior, I was one of the best high school cross country runners in the state of Ohio in 1984.
when you reread this, don't you think it sounds a bit arrogant?
as to whether i can or have run sub-5 for a mile, again, i don't feel like my running accomplishments alter the value of my comments, it will suffice to say that i have indeed broken 5:00 (you should know this though as we covered the topic on a similar thread a couple months ago) and (i can't resist the following) trust me, i have loads more running talent than you. check out statman's PR thread if you want more detail.
I'm fairly new to the board. I don't want to take sides in the sense of forming de facto alliances, but I must note that after reading several of his posts I have the utmost respect for Kaitainen. I really liked his earlier distinction between talent and skill in this context, for example. That was profound.
I happen to disagree with him on this issue but reserve the right to change my mind based on new evidence. (re: percentage of 5 min milers -- my guesstimate is 5-14%. If you are interested, see earlier posts in this thread because this post is too verbose as it is.)
I keep coming back to the value of personal experience in relation to evidence. "Been there, done that" is important. There is great value in knowing from the inside how something feels, what it takes to succeed, etc. I don't think that the attitude of "If I can do it, everybody can" is arrogant. That's the way I used to feel; I did it, and I'm nothing special. However with the passing of time I tend to agree with Flagpole Willy's point about talent simply being the luck of the draw (but don't care for the way he derived the conclusion). The psychology of attribution is fascinating. But that's not the point. How can you settle anything with appeals to personal authority and/or accusations of motive on a board filled with pseudonymous posters (and poseurs)? It's entertaining but not really productive. (Of course, if I were so concerned about productivity I wouldn't spend as much time on this board.)
It's funny. The guys who could pull rank based solely on personal experience don't. For example, Malmo and jtupper are great because there's gold in them thar hills -- facts, world class experiences, anecdotes, and solid reasoning. Plus the caustic comment or two from Malmo. Thank-you-sir-may-I-have-another.
Back to my point. Since this is a question of numbers, let's look at the numbers. Personal appeals are subjective, unverifiable, and unavoidably skewed.
Here is a bit of analysis on the skewed perception of talent from Bill James, the baseball scholar who has helped revolutionize the modern game (despite never rising above little league, I might add -- no 5 minute miler he):
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"Talent in Baseball Is Not Normally Distributed"
Talent in baseball is not normally distributed. It is a pyramid. For every player who is 10 percent above the average player, there are probably twenty players who are 10 percent below average.
Talent in the general population, when plotted on a graph, looks like a bell-shaped curve, with the largest number of people in the center and the extremes of high and low at opposing ends.
In major league baseball, all talent is drawn from the high-talent end of the general population -- the right side of the bell. Thus withing the pool of pro players, the most common level of talent is the bottom, not the average.
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What does this have to do with our topic? The ability to run a mile is almost certainly normally distributed among the general population, like height. What we are arguing about is the value of the mean, or average time, in this case 5:00. The shape of the bell curve for the general population is not really in doubt.
The letsrun community is a self-selected group. We are at the right side of the bell. (How many standard deviations to the right, I don't know.) However, the shape of this subset, this portion of the curve is very different from that of the general populace. It is not a bell; rather, it slopes downward quickly, kind of like an upright hockey stick pointing right.
As runners, how does this affect our perceptions? Because of the shape of the right hand part of the curve, within this subset, the world looks like a pyramid. 5 minute milers become a dime a dozen. In a competitive arena, "For every player [runner] who is 10 percent above the average [runner], there are probably twenty players who are 10 percent below average." This perception will hold double for egalitarian elites like Kaitainen, who with a generosity of spirit maintain that they are nothing special. If you are fast but consider yourself intrinsically average, it will seem like there should be a lot of sub 5 minute milers.
Plus, there is hindsight bias. Most of us like to think that we did not reach our potential, if only because we are now aware of things we could have done differently, whether improved training methods, peaking, tactics, whatever. "If only I knew then what I know now." This bias tends to boost our perceptual mean of ability higher.
In the real world average is average. Maybe letsrun really is Lake Wobegon, where "all the women are strong, all the men are good-looking, and all the runners above average." Of course, the farther back we go the faster we once were....