TomTerrific
Member
I just finished reading Scorecasting: The Hidden Influences Behind How Sports are Played and Games are Won by Moskowitz and Wertheim. In the first chapter, Whistle Swollowing, the authors suggest that human behavior is sometimes influenced by omission bias or the understanding that omission-the absence of an act-is far less harmful than act of commission-the committing of an act-even if the outcomes are the same or worse. In the case of referees, they learn early on that fans come to see the players and not them. Therefore, many come to understand that the outrage fans direct toward them when they swallow their whistles at the end of a game is less than the outrage fans express if they believe the officials denied the players a chance to decide the game's outcome. I found Scorecasting quite entertaining because of its use of statistics to challenge many of sports most widely accepted truisms. I especially enjoyed the last chapter: Are the Chicago Cubs Cursed?