Disagree about Phelps-Cavic photo finish
by
Ketone
08/25/2008, 10:20 AM #
The above-water photos Saletan cites are not as clear as the below-water ones published in Sports Illustrated (<link>). In the fifth photo of the series, you can clearly see the fingers on Phelps' hright and being significantly bent, while to me it looks as if Cavic is still about a centimeter away with his right hand, and it's a little hard to see on his left hand (the sixth photo is a zoom picture of Cavic's hands), but I think it still hasn't touched. Of course, one has to be careful because on a forceful finish like Phelps had the fingers will bend more than on a slow, gliding finish, but as best as I can tell it still looks like Phelps won.
Also, bear in mind that in this event, the swimmers' speeds were about 2.0 meters per second, so a 0.01 second difference in time would corresponds to about a 2 cm difference in distance at the finish. (This is just a ballpark estimate using a 100 m distance swum in about 50 seconds; in reality there are accelerations at the start and turn that affect the estimate of the swimming speed, and obviously the actual arm speed at the finish can vary by a lot depending on the type of finish.) I don't believe that Saletan can distinguish that difference with his eyes from any shot other than the underwater slow motion. In the same vein as his Human Nature articles I would say that his eyes (or rather, brain) deceived him by making a projection forward in time and space based on the previous time history of the swim, whereas in reality his eyes and brain were not good enough to resolve the difference at the actual moment of finish.
One interesting point about the race, given the asymmetrical touch by Phelps (his left fingers are bent "long" before his right ones) -- in butterfly, one must touch the wall simultaneously with both hands in order to avoid disqualification. Given that no one will ever touch the wall with both hands exactly simultaneously, how close in time do the hands have to touch in order to avoid disqualification? The timer pad does not record this (as far as I know). What if Phelps touched with one hand, then Cavic touched with both his hands, and then Phelps touched with his other hand, all wihtin about 0.01 second? Should that count as a tie?
Also, what are the actual rules of swimming? Is the official time linked to the time the sensor registers the touch, or can it be overuled by photo evidence showing that one swimmer's fingers touched before another's but did not trigger the sensor? It's possible that the photo evidence is taken just in case there is a timer malfunction and the timer data cannot be used officially. After all, the high-speed photo evidence is not used to resolve ties that were recorded within 0.01 second.
Finally, pages and pages of journalistic ink have been spilled over the Phelps-Cavic finish, but no one comments about the Lauterstein-Crocker finish in the same race where Crocker lost the bronze medal by 0.01 second. Let's look at that one in slow motion too, so we can get used to seeing what a 0.01 finish looks like. How about the Steffen-Torres finish in the 50 m freestyle where Torres lost the gold by 0.01 second after Steffen came from behind? How about the Lezak-Filho tie (within 0.01 second) for bronze in the 100 me freestyle? I'll bet that there are at least a few other close races out there where the eyes play tricks on you when viewing in real time from over the water. No matter how many times I see that Phelps-Cavic race in real time from the side, I always think Cavic won. But the timing result and the slow motion underwater photopgraphy convinced me otherwise -- I would have said Cavic beat Phelps by at least 10 cm and maybe more based on the real-time footage, but obviously the race was a lot closer than that.