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Are left-handed people better athletes?

 
 
Reply Mon 22 Jun, 2009 07:50 am
Are lefties better at sports?
by Robert Lamb
6/22/09

Are lefties better at sports?
Left-Handed Advantage
The Left-Handed Fist

Left-handedness has long been associated with awkwardness and evil, but does it also portend amazing athletic ability?

­Bring up left-handedness in a conversation and the lefties in your midst will inevitably steer the discussion into all-too-familiar territory. Unless you happen to live in a culture where southpaws are still persecuted as witches, you'll quickly find them talking up just how freaking awesome they think they are.

Perhaps this brash pride stems from childhoods full of right-handed scissors and writing desks. Maybe it's all that elbow bumping with righties at the dining table. Whatever their reasons, give them enough time and they'll inevitably bring up some of the notable celebrities and historical figures who share their bizarre physical condition, everyone from Phil Collins to Charlemagne.

If you have to endure a rant from a left-handed sports fan, they'll probably rattle off such superstars as Arnold Palmer, Bobby Orr, John McEnroe and Oscar De La Hoya and Babe Ruth (although the Babe supposedly wrote right-handed). All told, the list of southpaw sports stars is actually pretty impressive, especially when you consider that lefties only account for roughly 10 percent of the human population -- a number that has remained steady for more than 10,000 years [source: Faurie and Raymond].

While the same can't be said for lefties, numbers don't lie. A disproportionately high percentage of left-handed athletes have long dominated the world of sports. So what gives? Do they really have something special going for them, or are cabals of devious lefties merely trying to spin a right-handed world in their favor?

In this article, we'll explore the impact that left-handedness has on the world of sports, as well as brutal hand-to-hand combat. We'll also look at the way in which similar examples of polymorphism, or genetic variation, are expressed in other organisms and how it affects the biggest game of all: survival of the fittest.

http://health.howstuffworks.com/left-handed-sports.htm
 
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Reply Mon 22 Jun, 2009 08:43 am
I think it is more about athletes mostly facing righties. This gives a lefty an important advantage in any head to head sporting event. If you want to watch a less than stellar sporting event, watch a tennis match between two lefties. Both of them are used to playing righties and make silly mistakes.
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Reply Mon 22 Jun, 2009 08:48 am
You are probably right as demonstrated by a team's coach usually replaces a pitcher to be the opposite of a left or right batter.

BBB
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Reply Mon 22 Jun, 2009 11:31 pm
I suspect this article was written by a lefty trying to prove he's better than right handed people.
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