The top echelon of hockey is always a good reminder of how our culture often limits excellence in sport and life.
Malcolm Gladwell in "Outliers" noticed that almost ALL great hockey players were born early in the year, January through March.
Why is being born early an indicator of being great in sports? No ACTUAL reason, aside from the fact that we group kids by birth year when they start out in sports we start culling the "best" right from the get go
Well, not surprisingly those kids who were born in January of a given year were more physically adept than those born almost a year later.
So we took the "best" and developed them more, leaving those with the same or more potential behind. Gladwell points out that if we adopted a system that even developed kids grouped in 6 month age brackets they'd probably have twice as many great players!
We do this in our culture and society all the time, not just in sports, but it's a great illustration.
Malcolm Gladwell's new book, "Outliers," explains why some success in sports might be more about birth dates than talent.
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Q. Do you know of any junior sports leagues that are trying to change the way they sift talent in order to level the playing field?
A. As far as I know, none. I brought up this very fact with one of the most senior officials in the Canadian national junior hockey program, and pointed out that Canada was squandering the talents of hundreds of boys with late birthdays. I asked [an official] why he didn't just start a parallel league, with a cut-off in late summer. He shrugged and said it would be complicated. Complicated! I don't think, as a society, we are always particularly smart about how to make the best use of our talent. And if we're this bad at sports, imagine how bad we are at other things -- like getting the most out of young people's brains?