Do Lefties Have An Advantage?

marc45

G.O.A.T.
NYT:

SCIENCE

Do Lefties Have an Advantage in Sports? It Depends



By STEPH YIN

NOV. 21, 2017


  • Violins, cameras, school desks, computer mouses, can openers — these are just a few items that demonstrate how routinely disadvantaged left-handers are in this world.

    One notable exception may be sports. Whether it’s Lou Gehrig in baseball, Wayne Gretzky in ice hockey, Martina Navratilova in tennis or Oscar De La Hoya in boxing, some of the best athletes in history have been portsiders.

    But even in this realm, the southpaw advantage may vary, being more pronounced in sports where a player has less time to react to an opponent, like table tennis, according to Florian Loffing
    , a sports scientist at the University of Oldenburg in Germany and author of a study published Wednesday in Biology Letters. In such games, he found a higher proportion of lefties than in those with longer intervals between players’ actions.

    Including an analysis of the pressures of time shows “that there is an additional effect” in left-sider sports dynamics, said Kirsten Legerlotz, a professor of sport sciences at the Humboldt University of Berlin who was not involved in the research. Dr. Loffing’s “conclusion appears convincing,” she added, although it would need to be examined in other sports and verified with lab experiments.

    Dr. Loffing chose to analyze baseball, cricket, table tennis, badminton, tennis and squash, because they lent themselves to a standardized measure of time pressure, he said. For baseball and cricket, this involved the average time that elapsed between ball release and bat-ball contact in professional games. For the racket sports, he considered the intervals between racket-ball contact made by players in professional matches. He then tallied the number of lefties among each sport’s top 100 players, or pitchers and bowlers in the case of baseball and cricket, from 2009 to 2014.

    Comparing all six sports against one another, he found the proportion of southpaws increased as the time available for players to act decreased. Nine percent of the top players were left-dominant in the slowest contest, squash, while 30 percent of the best pitchers were lefties in the fastest, baseball. Over all, left-handedness was 2.6 times more likely in the sports with higher time constraints (baseball, cricket and table tennis) than in ones with lower time pressure (badminton, tennis and squash).

    His results are couched in a broader “nature” versus “nurture” discussion of why left-dominance may be an asset in sports.

    The “nature” hypothesis posits that left-handers may innately be better athletes, perhaps benefiting, for instance, from the fact that the right brain hemisphere is in charge of both their dominant hand and visual-spatial awareness.

    The “nurture” explanation suggests that left-handers’ relative rarity gives them a competitive edge because opponents are worse at anticipating their movements or are even used to employing strategies that play directly to lefties’ strengths (hitting balls toward the right in racket sports, for instance).

    This “nurture” idea is supported by studies that have found a higher incidence of left-handers in professional interactive sports compared with the general population, but not in non-interactive ones like darts, bowling or golf.

    Beyond sports, this explanation could account for why lefties have made up just 10 percent or so of the human population for thousands of years.

    “From a Darwinian perspective, there seems to be something wrong with being left-handed,” Dr. Loffing said. “But the question is, why doesn’t it wash out? Why isn’t the world only right-handed?”

    In 1996, a team of French researchers proposed that lefties have a fitness advantage in duel-like situations. The same group showed that more violent and warlike traditional societies have a much higher incidence of left-handers than more pacifist societies.

    Dr. Loffing believes most of the lefties-in-sports trend can be explained by this so-called fighting hypothesis. His latest research suggests that the benefits portsiders derive from the element of unfamiliarity become greater when their opponents have less time to calculate. “We know that things like anticipation and decision-making are more difficult under time pressure,” he said.

    In previous studies, Dr. Loffing and collaborators have shown that athletes can counter or even neutralize the left-sider advantage through training. Next, it would be interesting to combine these two findings and see if there is some time pressure threshold beyond which it would be exceedingly difficult for players to train against the southpaw edge — some threshold “beyond which being rare really pays off,” he said.
 
Last edited:

kOaMaster

Hall of Fame
Weird that Badminton/Tennis/Squash are called "low time constraint"-sports compared to baseball and cricket.

But the conclusion is relatively simple and of course confirm what everybody already knows: There is a natural comparative advantage for a left-hander. This can be neutralised & maybe even countered but it needs an extra effort and additional training.
 

Sudacafan

Bionic Poster
I think it’s just more simple than that.
Because of the existing proportion of lefties, these are more used to play righties than the other way round.
It’s mostly a training process advantage.
 
D

Deleted member 733170

Guest
Lefties also seem to be able to get more angle. Maybe it’s an optical illusion, but the angles that Nadal and McEnroe generated appeared more extreme than any righties.
 

Shaolin

G.O.A.T.
Lefties absolutely have an advantage.

It's not just the ad-serve wide that they have which everyone talks about its the fact that they are used to playing righties but righties arent used to playing them.

Where I lived there were no lefties to practice with so when I played a tournament it was a nightmare to play a leftie. OTOH those lefties always had the ability to practice with righties.

Its an unfair advantage but just how it is.
 

Raindogs

Hall of Fame
The lefty forehand crosscourt to righty backhand gives minions of the unclean hand/lefthand path a huge advantage, especially at the amateur levels where the novelty at playing one exists for many players.

It puts the lefties most natural and lowest margin-for-error shot againt the biggest liability for most righties all match long.

 

Sudacafan

Bionic Poster
Lefties absolutely have an advantage.

It's not just the ad-serve wide that they have which everyone talks about its the fact that they are used to playing righties but righties arent used to playing them.

Where I lived there were no lefties to practice with so when I played a tournament it was a nightmare to play a leftie. OTOH those lefties always had the ability to practice with righties.

Its an unfair advantage but just how it is.
Side thoughts:

1. In a lefty vs lefty match, anything could happen. It's like strangers playing each other.:D

2. About the ad-side advantage for lefties: I would like to challenge that concept a little bit. Before getting to the ad side you must always have a point played at deuce, so you must get there to have the advantage. Games either end with equal quantity of points started to play from the deuce and ad courts, or at least with one point more started at the deuce side (when winning after 40-15).

3. From here we can digress to another discussion. In a doubles match, which player should return from which side, the stronger or the weaker of the team? Common knowledge says the stronger should return from ad court, to save or finish the game. But I would say that the one who returns from deuce court, will either return the same quantity of points, or at least one more point than his teammate (in the case the game ends in 15).
 
Last edited:

Krish872007

Talk Tennis Guru
I have an easier time with lefties than I do with right-handers to be fair (and I'm left-handed). Probably because it's easier to pick the angles and change direction by effectively mirroring as opposed to assuming convention.
 

Krish872007

Talk Tennis Guru
So the 90% of the time it gets more difficult for you, right? Then tennis is hard for you.
Or do you play in a lefty’s only club? :D

Haha, bear in mind I am quoting from a rather small sample size :D
Just that I have played a total of about 25 matches against left-handers and never lost, whereas I have lost enough times to right-handers. There is probably some selection bias in there, as maybe the lefties I played were simply weaker than righties
 

Sudacafan

Bionic Poster
The lefty forehand crosscourt to righty backhand gives minions of the unclean hand/lefthand path a huge advantage, especially at the amateur levels where the novelty at playing one exists for many players.

It puts the lefties most natural and lowest margin-for-error shot againt the biggest liability for most righties all match long.

Well, myself being right handed I would punish the lefties of this world playing them my heavy topspin crosscourt forehands. Why wouldn’t that work for me as well?
 
D

Deleted member 733170

Guest
;););)
Haha, bear in mind I am quoting from a rather small sample size :D
Just that I have played a total of about 25 matches against left-handers and never lost, whereas I have lost enough times to right-handers. There is probably some selection bias in there, as maybe the lefties I played were simply weaker than righties

You should challenge Rafa or actually let us know how you get on against Verdasco first. Should be a close match if Verdasco doesn’t choke ;)
 

Krish872007

Talk Tennis Guru
;););)

You should challenge Rafa or actually let us know how you get on against Verdasco first. Should be a close match if Verdasco doesn’t choke ;)

Two conditions for playing Verdasco: he must be given a handicap - one serve only. And we must commence the match at 6-6 in a deciding set tiebreak.
 

Shaolin

G.O.A.T.
The lefty forehand crosscourt to righty backhand gives minions of the unclean hand/lefthand path a huge advantage, especially at the amateur levels where the novelty at playing one exists for many players.

It puts the lefties most natural and lowest margin-for-error shot againt the biggest liability for most righties all match long.


Excellent point and bonus credit for the Samhain video. I used to listen to them and misfits way back in the day.

Lefties have that safe high percentage FH crosscourt which goes into the righties BH which is usually their weakness. Once they hit this well it is very hard to get it to the lefties backhand again if they are any good. Such a huge weapon to have.

I used to play a 5.5 lefty that had an amazing wide ad slice, he'd pull you outside the alley with it and then set up for a FH which he could put behind you back to the ad side as you recover or go DTL. Kind of a mini Rafa…it was pretty miserable trying to break him.
 

Legend of Borg

G.O.A.T.
do they get naturally more topspin on their strokes?

also, can one "become" a lefty in tennis? like being naturally right handed but grinding really hard to learn the lefty playstyle?

i've been thinking about starting over in my tennis journey as a lefty and re-inventing my strokes but not sure if worth the effort
 

Sudacafan

Bionic Poster
The lefty forehand crosscourt to righty backhand gives minions of the unclean hand/lefthand path a huge advantage, especially at the amateur levels where the novelty at playing one exists for many players.

It puts the lefties most natural and lowest margin-for-error shot againt the biggest liability for most righties all match long.

And why wouldn´t that work the other way round? The righty wide slice serve on the deuce court to the lefty? Or the topspin righties crosscourt forehands to the lefties backhand?
About serves, if the righty manages to win the game in 15, he would have played three points serving from deuce court and only two from adcourt. You are implying that lefties backhand are superior than those of righties?
 

Raindogs

Hall of Fame
Agreed that it could be the same advantage for the righties hitting crosscourt to a lefty backhand; the ony difference being that those that play righthanders predominantly aren't accustomed to doing so whereas lefties get used to probing the RH backhand ALL DAY LONG.

I agree that at a certain level a right-hander SHOULD be able to neutralize a lefty advantage in the way you mentioned.
 

PMChambers

Hall of Fame
No longer on tennis, not since graphite era. Prior yes, hitting topspin on BH was problematic. The only benefit of a LH is they get to play against RH more often.
This was definitely not always the case in era where there was a marked disadvantage between FH and BH.
Today's game the RH get advantage of leading during a game assuming their nature breaker always wins the point, which is a LH assumption in winning Ad side. Most player, not all, play better when leading.
Most pro BH are more consistent and safer. This is reflected in stats though mainly for DHBH players, SHBH tend to have more errors.
End of the day comes back to individual, are they balanced, can they swing serve both ways, are they better leading or chasing.
 

Max G.

Legend
Lefties also seem to be able to get more angle. Maybe it’s an optical illusion, but the angles that Nadal and McEnroe generated appeared more extreme than any righties.

I think righties, with practice, could generate the same angles like Nadal or McEnroe, but in the opposite direction.

However, there's much less of an advantage to this, because most of the time this would be going in to the opponents' forehands, whereas lefties can do that angle thing into the opponents' backhands.

Comes down to experience. Lefties have a lot of experience exploiting their differences from righties, but the opposite isn't true. That's also why faster sports give less of an advantage to lefties - the less time there is, the more the shot reaction relies on instinct and habit and the less time there is to adjust to something unusual.
 
D

Deleted member 733170

Guest
I think righties, with practice, could generate the same angles like Nadal or McEnroe, but in the opposite direction.

However, there's much less of an advantage to this, because most of the time this would be going in to the opponents' forehands, whereas lefties can do that angle thing into the opponents' backhands.

Comes down to experience. Lefties have a lot of experience exploiting their differences from righties, but the opposite isn't true. That's also why faster sports give less of an advantage to lefties - the less time there is, the more the shot reaction relies on instinct and habit and the less time there is to adjust to something unusual.

Very fair counter argument to my point.

However I’m confused by your concluding remarks, as they contradict the gist of the article!?
 
Top