this post was submitted on 11 Jun 2023
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No, my MMA teacher was female and she'd kick my arse regularly
Now you're undermining your first point, you're not comparing same heights and weight. Physics is real.
Okay.
Ellyse Perry, the fastest bowler in women's cricket is 176cm at 60kg (amazing athlete, represented Australia at both Cricket and Football world cups!). Her fastest ball was 130.1kph
Shoaib Akthar, the fastst bowler in men's cricket is 180cm at 80kg. His fastest was 161kph
Laws of cricket dictate that women should use a ball that is between 415β16 and 55β16 ounces (139.98 and 150.61 grams); which could be up to 13β16 ounces (23.03 grams) lighter than the ball used by the men.
Also made me think, the whole height-weight distinction will only work in purely physical sports like boxing (maybe even some american sports like baseball and nfl). It is not going to work in global sports like Cricket and Football. Think about the greatest footballers of our generation. Cristiano was 183cm (6ft) and Messi 169cm (5ft 6in).
So his mass is 33% more and the ball goes 23% faster? Momentum is mass x velocity iirc.
Do you understand why this statement is wrong?
Youβre mixing the mass of the person throwing the ball with the mass of the ball.
This would matter if he was flying himself at the batsman.
I'm not trying to be difficult, I just probably don't understand. It's been at least 30 years since I did physics.
There's only 3 things in the equation?
The ball gets its momentum from the mass and velocity, so size and speed of the bowler?
Add in levers from long whippy limbs and you get the fastest ball for the size of bowler?
Do biological males have longer whippier limbs? If not, then I don't understand how a bowler of the same size and weight of either sex would have an advantage, assuming identical levels of access to playing and coaching from a young age.
Because the bowler is giving momentum to the ball?
Correct. The bowler is contributing to the velocity part of the equation