| 1.
The education of any athlete begins, in part, with an
education in the racial taxonomy of his chosen sport-in the
subtle, unwritten rules about what whites are supposed to be
good at and what blacks are supposed to be good at. In
football, whites play quarterback and blacks play running
back; in baseball whites pitch and blacks play the outfield. I
grew up in Canada, where my brother Geoffrey and I ran
high-school track, and in Canada the rule of running was that
anything under the quarter-mile belonged to the West
Indians. This didn't mean that white people didn't run the
sprints. But the expectation was that they would never win,
and, sure enough, they rarely did. There was just a handful of
West Indian immigrants in Ontario at that point-clustered in
and around Toronto-but they owned Canadian sprinting,
setting up under the stands at every major championship,
cranking up the reggae on their boom boxes, and then
humiliating everyone else on the track. My brother and I
weren't from Toronto, so we weren't part of that scene. But
our West Indian heritage meant that we got to share in the
swagger. Geoffrey was a magnificent runner, with powerful
legs and a barrel chest, and when he was warming up he
used to do that exaggerated, slow-motion jog that the white
guys would try to do and never quite pull off. I was a miler,
which was a little outside the West Indian range. But, the way
I figured it, the rules meant that no one should ever outkick
me over the final two hundred metres of any race. And in the
golden summer of my fourteenth year, when my running
career prematurely peaked, no one ever did.
When I started running, there was a quarter-miler just a
few years older than I was by the name of Arnold Stotz. He
was a bulldog of a runner, hugely talented, and each year
that he moved through the sprinting ranks he invariably
broke the existing four-hundred-metre record in his age class.
Stotz was white, though, and every time I saw the results of a
big track meet I'd keep an eye out for his name, because I
was convinced that he could not keep winning. It was as if I
saw his whiteness as a degenerative disease, which would
eventually claim and cripple him. I never asked him whether
he felt the same anxiety, but I can't imagine that he didn't.
There was only so long that anyone could defy the rules. One
day, at the provincial championships, I looked up at the
results board and Stotz was gone.
Talking openly about the racial dimension of sports in
this way, of course, is considered unseemly. It's all right to
say that blacks dominate sports because they lack
opportunities elsewhere. That's the "Hoop Dreams" line,
which says whites are allowed to acknowledge black athletic
success as long as they feel guilty about it. What you're not
supposed to say is what we were saying in my track days-that
we were better because we were black, because of something
intrinsic to being black. Nobody said anything like that
publicly last month when Tiger Woods won the Masters or
when, a week later, African men claimed thirteen out of the
top twenty places in the Boston Marathon. Nor is it likely to
come up this month, when African-Americans will make up
eighty per cent of the players on the floor for the N.B.A.
playoffs. When the popular television sports commentator
Jimmy (the Greek) Snyder did break this taboo, in 1988-
infamously ruminating on the size and significance of black
thighs-one prominent N.A.A.C.P. official said that his remarks
"could set race relations back a hundred years." The
assumption is that the whole project of trying to get us to
treat each other the same will be undermined if we don't all
agree that under the skin we actually are the same.
The point of this, presumably, is to put our discussion of
sports on a par with legal notions of racial equality, which
would be a fine idea except that civil-rights law governs
matters like housing and employment and the sports taboo
covers matters like what can be said about someone's jump
shot. In his much heralded new book "Darwin's Athletes," the
University of Texas scholar John Hoberman tries to argue that
these two things are the same, that it's impossible to speak of
black physical superiority without implying intellectual
inferiority. But it isn't long before the argument starts to get
ridiculous. "The spectacle of black athleticism," he writes,
inevitably turns into "a highly public image of black
retardation." Oh, really? What, exactly, about Tiger Woods's
victory in the Masters resembled "a highly public image of
black retardation"? Today's black athletes are multimillion-
dollar corporate pitchmen, with talk shows and sneaker deals
and publicity machines and almost daily media opportunities
to share their thoughts with the world, and it's very hard to
see how all this contrives to make them look stupid.
Hoberman spends a lot of time trying to inflate the
significance of sports, arguing that how we talk about events
on the baseball diamond or the track has grave consequences
for how we talk about race in general. Here he is, for
example, on Jackie Robinson:
The sheer volume of sentimental and intellectual energy
that has been invested in the mythic saga of Jackie
Robinson has discouraged further thinking about what his
career did and did not accomplish. . . . Black America has
paid a high and largely unacknowledged price for the
extraordinary prominence given the black athlete rather
than other black men of action (such as military pilots and
astronauts), who represent modern aptitudes in ways that
athletes cannot.
Please. Black America has paid a high and largely
unacknowledged price for a long list of things, and having
great athletes is far from the top of the list. Sometimes a
baseball player is just a baseball player, and sometimes an
observation about racial difference is just an observation
about racial difference. Few object when medical scientists
talk about the significant epidemiological differences between
blacks and whites-the fact that blacks have a higher incidence
of hypertension than whites and twice as many black males
die of diabetes and prostate cancer as white males, that
breast tumors appear to grow faster in black women than in
white women, that black girls show signs of puberty sooner
than white girls. So why aren't we allowed to say that there
might be athletically significant differences between blacks
and whites?
According to the medical evidence, African-Americans
seem to have, on the average, greater bone mass than do
white Americans-a difference that suggests greater muscle
mass. Black men have slightly higher circulating levels of
testosterone and human-growth hormone than their white
counterparts, and blacks over all tend to have proportionally
slimmer hips, wider shoulders, and longer legs. In one study,
the Swedish physiologist Bengt Saltin compared a group of
Kenyan distance runners with a group of Swedish distance
runners and found interesting differences in muscle
composition: Saltin reported that the Africans appeared to
have more blood-carrying capillaries and more mitochondria
(the body's cellular power plant) in the fibres of their
quadriceps. Another study found that, while black South
African distance runners ran at the same speed as white
South African runners, they were able to use more oxygen-
eighty-nine per cent versus eighty-one per cent-over
extended periods: somehow, they were able to exert
themselves more. Such evidence suggested that there were
physical differences in black athletes which have a bearing on
activities like running and jumping, which should hardly come
as a surprise to anyone who follows competitive sports.
To use track as an example-since track is probably the
purest measure of athletic ability-Africans recorded fifteen out
of the twenty fastest times last year in the men's ten-thousand-
metre event. In the five thousand metres, eighteen
out of the twenty fastest times were recorded by Africans. In
the fifteen hundred metres, thirteen out of the twenty fastest
times were African, and in the sprints, in the men's hundred
metres, you have to go all the way down to the twenty-third
place in the world rankings-to Geir Moen, of Norway-before
you find a white face. There is a point at which it becomes
foolish to deny the fact of black athletic prowess, and even
more foolish to banish speculation on the topic. Clearly,
something is going on. The question is what.
2.
If we are to decide what to make of the differences
between blacks and whites, we first have to decide what to
make of the word "difference," which can mean any number
of things. A useful case study is to compare the ability of men
and women in math. If you give a large, representative
sample of male and female students a standardized math
test, their mean scores will come out pretty much the same.
But if you look at the margins, at the very best and the very
worst students, sharp differences emerge. In the math portion
of an achievement test conducted by Project Talent-a
nationwide survey of fifteen-year-olds-there were 1.3 boys for
every girl in the top ten per cent, 1.5 boys for every girl in
the top five per cent, and seven boys for every girl in the top
one per cent. In the fifty-six-year history of the Putnam
Mathematical Competition, which has been described as the
Olympics of college math, all but one of the winners have
been male. Conversely, if you look at people with the very
lowest math ability, you'll find more boys than girls there,
too. In other words, although the average math ability of
boys and girls is the same, the distribution isn't: there are
more males than females at the bottom of the pile, more
males than females at the top of the pile, and fewer males
than females in the middle. Statisticians refer to this as a
difference in variability.
This pattern, as it turns out, is repeated in almost every
conceivable area of gender difference. Boys are more variable
than girls on the College Board entrance exam and in routine
elementary-school spelling tests. Male mortality patterns are
more variable than female patterns; that is, many more men
die in early and middle age than women, who tend to die in
more of a concentrated clump toward the end of life. The
problem is that variability differences are regularly confused
with average differences. If men had higher average math
scores than women, you could say they were better at the
subject. But because they are only more variable the word
"better" seems inappropriate.
The same holds true for differences between the races.
A racist stereotype is the assertion of average difference-it's
the claim that the typical white is superior to the typical
black. It allows a white man to assume that the black man he
passes on the street is stupider than he is. By contrast, if
what racists believed was that black intelligence was simply
more variable than white intelligence, then it would be
impossible for them to construct a stereotype about black
intelligence at all. They wouldn't be able to generalize. If they
wanted to believe that there were a lot of blacks dumber than
whites, they would also have to believe that there were a lot
of blacks smarter than they were. This distinction is critical to
understanding the relation between race and athletic
performance. What are we seeing when we remark black
domination of élite sporting events-an average difference
between the races or merely a difference in variability?
This question has been explored by geneticists and
physical anthropologists, and some of the most notable work
has been conducted over the past few years by Kenneth Kidd,
at Yale. Kidd and his colleagues have been taking DNA
samples from two African Pygmy tribes in Zaire and the
Central African Republic and comparing them with DNA
samples taken from populations all over the world. What they
have been looking for is variants-subtle differences between
the DNA of one person and another-and what they have found
is fascinating. "I would say, without a doubt, that in almost
any single African population-a tribe or however you want to
define it-there is more genetic variation than in all the rest of
the world put together," Kidd told me. In a sample of fifty
Pygmies, for example, you might find nine variants in one
stretch of DNA. In a sample of hundreds of people from
around the rest of the world, you might find only a total of six
variants in that same stretch of DNA-and probably every one
of those six variants would also be found in the Pygmies. If
everyone in the world was wiped out except Africans, in other
words, almost all the human genetic diversity would be
preserved.
The likelihood is that these results reflect Africa's status
as the homeland of Homo sapiens: since every human
population outside Africa is essentially a subset of the original
African population, it makes sense that everyone in such a
population would be a genetic subset of Africans, too. So you
can expect groups of Africans to be more variable in respect
to almost anything that has a genetic component. If, for
example, your genes control how you react to aspirin, you'd
expect to see more Africans than whites for whom one aspirin
stops a bad headache, more for whom no amount of aspirin
works, more who are allergic to aspirin, and more who need
to take, say, four aspirin at a time to get any benefit-but far
fewer Africans for whom the standard two-aspirin dose would
work well. And to the extent that running is influenced by
genetic factors you would expect to see more really fast
blacks-and more really slow blacks-than whites but far fewer
Africans of merely average speed. Blacks are like boys.
Whites are like girls.
There is nothing particularly scary about this fact, and
certainly nothing to warrant the kind of gag order on talk of
racial differences which is now in place. What it means is that
comparing élite athletes of different races tells you very little
about the races themselves. A few years ago, for example, a
prominent scientist argued for black athletic supremacy by
pointing out that there had never been a white Michael
Jordan. True. But, as the Yale anthropologist Jonathan Marks
has noted, until recently there was no black Michael Jordan,
either. Michael Jordan, like Tiger Woods or Wayne Gretzky or
Cal Ripken, is one of the best players in his sport not because
he's like the other members of his own ethnic group but
precisely because he's not like them-or like anyone else, for
that matter. Élite athletes are élite athletes because, in some
sense, they are on the fringes of genetic variability. As it
happens, African populations seem to create more of these
genetic outliers than white populations do, and this is what
underpins the claim that blacks are better athletes than
whites. But that's all the claim amounts to. It doesn't say
anything at all about the rest of us, of all races, muddling
around in the genetic middle.
3.
There is a second consideration to keep in mind when
we compare blacks and whites. Take the men's hundred-metre
final at the Atlanta Olympics. Every runner in that race
was of either Western African or Southern African descent, as
you would expect if Africans had some genetic affinity for
sprinting. But suppose we forget about skin color and look
just at country of origin. The eight-man final was made up of
two African-Americans, two Africans (one from Namibia and
one from Nigeria), a Trinidadian, a Canadian of Jamaican
descent, an Englishman of Jamaican descent, and a Jamaican.
The race was won by the Jamaican-Canadian, in world-record
time, with the Namibian coming in second and the Trinidadian
third. The sprint relay-the 4 x 100-was won by a team from
Canada, consisting of the Jamaican-Canadian from the final, a
Haitian-Canadian, a Trinidadian-Canadian, and another
Jamaican-Canadian. Now it appears that African heritage is
important as an initial determinant of sprinting ability, but
also that the most important advantage of all is some kind of
cultural or environmental factor associated with the
Caribbean.
Or consider, in a completely different realm, the
problem of hypertension. Black Americans have a higher
incidence of hypertension than white Americans, even after
you control for every conceivable variable, including income,
diet, and weight, so it's tempting to conclude that there is
something about being of African descent that makes blacks
prone to hypertension. But it turns out that although some
Caribbean countries have a problem with hypertension,
others-Jamaica, St. Kitts, and the Bahamas-don't. It also
turns out that people in Liberia and Nigeria-two countries
where many New World slaves came from-have similar and
perhaps even lower blood-pressure rates than white North
Americans, while studies of Zulus, Indians, and whites in
Durban, South Africa, showed that urban white males had the
highest hypertension rates and urban white females had the
lowest. So it's likely that the disease has nothing at all to do
with Africanness.
The same is true for the distinctive muscle
characteristic observed when Kenyans were compared with
Swedes. Saltin, the Swedish physiologist, subsequently found
many of the same characteristics in Nordic skiers who train at
high altitudes and Nordic runners who train in very hilly
regions-conditions, in other words, that resemble the
mountainous regions of Kenya's Rift Valley, where so many of
the country's distance runners come from. The key factor
seems to be Kenya, not genes.
Lots of things that seem to be genetic in origin, then,
actually aren't. Similarly, lots of things that we wouldn't
normally think might affect athletic ability actually do. Once
again, the social-science literature on male and female math
achievement is instructive. Psychologists argue that when it
comes to subjects like math, boys tend to engage in what's
known as ability attribution. A boy who is doing well will
attribute his success to the fact that he's good at math, and if
he's doing badly he'll blame his teacher or his own lack of
motivation-anything but his ability. That makes it easy for
him to bounce back from failure or disappointment, and gives
him a lot of confidence in the face of a tough new challenge.
After all, if you think you do well in math because you're good
at math, what's stopping you from being good at, say,
algebra, or advanced calculus? On the other hand, if you ask
a girl why she is doing well in math she will say, more often
than not, that she succeeds because she works hard. If she's
doing poorly, she'll say she isn't smart enough. This, as
should be obvious, is a self-defeating attitude. Psychologists
call it "learned helplessness"-the state in which failure is
perceived as insurmountable. Girls who engage in effort
attribution learn helplessness because in the face of a more
difficult task like algebra or advanced calculus they can
conceive of no solution. They're convinced that they can't
work harder, because they think they're working as hard as
they can, and that they can't rely on their intelligence,
because they never thought they were that smart to begin
with. In fact, one of the fascinating findings of attribution
research is that the smarter girls are, the more likely they are
to fall into this trap. High achievers are sometimes the most
helpless. Here, surely, is part of the explanation for greater
math variability among males. The female math whizzes, the
ones who should be competing in the top one and two per
cent with their male counterparts, are the ones most often
paralyzed by a lack of confidence in their own aptitude. They
think they belong only in the intellectual middle.
The striking thing about these descriptions of male and
female stereotyping in math, though, is how similar they are
to black and white stereotyping in athletics-to the unwritten
rules holding that blacks achieve through natural ability and
whites through effort. Here's how Sports Illustrated described,
in a recent article, the white basketball player Steve Kerr,
who plays alongside Michael Jordan for the Chicago Bulls.
According to the magazine, Kerr is a "hard-working
overachiever," distinguished by his "work ethic and heady
play" and by a shooting style "born of a million practice
shots." Bear in mind that Kerr is one of the best shooters in
basketball today, and a key player on what is arguably one of
the finest basketball teams in history. Bear in mind, too, that
there is no evidence that Kerr works any harder than his
teammates, least of all Jordan himself, whose work habits are
legendary. But you'd never guess that from the article. It
concludes, "All over America, whenever quicker, stronger gym
rats see Kerr in action, they must wonder, How can that guy
be out there instead of me?"
There are real consequences to this stereotyping. As the
psychologists Carol Dweck and Barbara Licht write of high-
achieving schoolgirls, "[They] may view themselves as so
motivated and well disciplined that they cannot entertain the
possibility that they did poorly on an academic task because
of insufficient effort. Since blaming the teacher would also be
out of character, blaming their abilities when they confront
difficulty may seem like the most reasonable option." If you
substitute the words "white athletes" for "girls" and "coach"
for "teacher," I think you have part of the reason that so
many white athletes are underrepresented at the highest
levels of professional sports. Whites have been saddled with
the athletic equivalent of learned helplessness-the idea that
it is all but fruitless to try and compete at the highest levels,
because they have only effort on their side. The causes of
athletic and gender discrimination may be diverse, but its
effects are not. Once again, blacks are like boys, and whites
are like girls.
4.
When I was in college, I once met an old acquaintance
from my high-school running days. Both of us had long since
quit track, and we talked about a recurrent fantasy we found
we'd both had for getting back into shape. It was that we
would go away somewhere remote for a year and do nothing
but train, so that when the year was up we might finally know
how good we were. Neither of us had any intention of doing
this, though, which is why it was a fantasy. In adolescence,
athletic excess has a certain appeal-during high school, I
happily spent Sunday afternoons running up and down snow-covered
sandhills-but with most of us that obsessiveness soon
begins to fade. Athletic success depends on having the right
genes and on a self-reinforcing belief in one's own ability. But
it also depends on a rare form of tunnel vision. To be a great
athlete, you have to care, and what was obvious to us both
was that neither of us cared anymore. This is the last piece of
the puzzle about what we mean when we say one group is
better at something than another: sometimes different groups
care about different things. Of the seven hundred men who
play major-league baseball, for example, eighty-six come
from either the Dominican Republic or Puerto Rico, even
though those two islands have a combined population of only
eleven million. But then baseball is something that
Dominicans and Puerto Ricans care about-and you can say the
same thing about African-Americans and basketball, West
Indians and sprinting, Canadians and hockey, and Russians
and chess. Desire is the great intangible in performance, and
unlike genes or psychological affect we can't measure it and
trace its implications. This is the problem, in the end, with the
question of whether blacks are better at sports than whites.
It's not that it's offensive, or that it leads to discrimination.
It's that, in some sense, it's not a terribly interesting
question; "better" promises a tidier explanation than can ever
be provided.
I quit competitive running when I was sixteen-just after
the summer I had qualified for the Ontario track team in my
age class. Late that August, we had travelled to St. John's,
Newfoundland, for the Canadian championships. In those
days, I was whippet-thin, as milers often are, five feet six and
not much more than a hundred pounds, and I could skim
along the ground so lightly that I barely needed to catch my
breath. I had two white friends on that team, both distance
runners, too, and both, improbably, even smaller and lighter
than I was. Every morning, the three of us would run through
the streets of St. John's, charging up the hills and flying down
the other side. One of these friends went on to have a
distinguished college running career, the other became a
world-class miler; that summer, I myself was the Canadian
record holder in the fifteen hundred metres for my age class.
We were almost terrifyingly competitive, without a shred of
doubt in our ability, and as we raced along we never stopped
talking and joking, just to prove how absurdly easy we found
running to be. I thought of us all as equals. Then, on the last
day of our stay in St. John's, we ran to the bottom of Signal
Hill, which is the town's principal geographical landmark-an
abrupt outcrop as steep as anything in San Francisco. We
stopped at the base, and the two of them turned to me and
announced that we were all going to run straight up Signal
Hill backward. I don't know whether I had more running
ability than those two or whether my Africanness gave me
any genetic advantage over their whiteness. What I do know
is that such questions were irrelevant, because, as I realized,
they were willing to go to far greater lengths to develop their
talent. They ran up the hill backward. I ran home.
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