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DARE TO ASK: Does race help athlete to excel?

By PHILLIP MILANO

Question:

Is there a physical difference between the races that would allow certain races to perform better at certain sports? For example, how many world-class sprinters are white?

Casey, 22, white, Reston, Va.

Replies

It is not PC to suggest genetic differences between races. You are starting to think outside the box the U.S. media has established for us.

Sid, 34, white, Birmingham, Ala.

To excel in sports requires enormous work. Searching for a racial anatomical difference belittles the training and practice these athletes undergo. After black sprinters began to win races, the press mused that perhaps blacks were good at sprinting, but that whites were better suited for distance running. Then blacks began to win marathons. The old myths developed to explain away black successes do not stand up to analysis.

R. Stewart, black, Chicago

Expert says

Whenever a football coach claims black athletes are faster than white ones — the Air Force Academy’s Fisher DeBerry was guilty of it the other week — we know readers will run (some very slowly) to Dare to Ask for facts.

Pundits, including Times-Union columnists, say speed is all about hard work and dedication. That it’s goofy or worse to say genetics play a role.

But we’re not talking about pitting Mike Freeman against Dan Hicken in the 100 (for all we know, Donna Hicken would kick their respective aspirations). We are talking, according to researcher Jon Entine, only about elite athletes.

Entine, a journalist, pored over scientific studies for his book Taboo: Why Black Athletes Dominate Sports and Why We’re Afraid to Talk About It (Public Affairs). He learned that different subgroups of people developed different body characteristics over time relative to their terrain and living conditions. “It’s not an issue of race, it’s about population genetics,” Entine said. “Certain body types tend to do better in certain sports than others. It’s not controversial unless you put it in racial terms.”

For example, West Africans tend to have more-developed fast-twitch muscles (necessary for fast burst activity), less body fat, longer arms and legs relative to the torso, and smaller lung capacity (for greater sprinting efficiency). Eurasian peoples have bigger torsos and shorter arms, which makes them better at strength events such as weightlifting. And on and on with other groups.

Entine’s critics say performance differences among the so-called “races” fall along cultural and environmental lines, and that using genetics as the primary reason discounts individual effort, opportunity, self-image, discipline, interests and expectations.

Yes, Entine responds, individual athletes of any race can perform at top levels in various sports if they work hard, have great coaching and use their smarts. But some groups of people on average are more suited to certain sports and tend to do better at the very highest levels, where a tenth of a second is a huge difference.

“The coach touched a nerve … but the truth is that 494 of the top 500 100-meter times in the world are held by a person of central West African ancestry.”

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