How can sprinter Usain Bolt break his world record without expending any
additional effort? Which demands a faster reaction time, tennis or
baseball? What dates of birth give rise to the best professional
athletes? Is it better to have the inside or outside lane during a race?
And how can you improve your balance just by changing your posture?
Drawing on vivid, real-life examples, John D. Barrow shows how math and
physics can give us surprising, often counterintuitive insights into the
world of sports. For example, we learn that left-handed boxers have a
statistical advantage over their right-handed opponents and that
gymnasts performing the "giant swing" maneuver on the high bar
experience stronger g-forces than roller-coaster designers are allowed
to create. Thanks to lucid explanations and a healthy dose of humor,
Mathletics is the perfect book for sports enthusiasts and math lovers
alike.