World Cup soccer players (typically the top 20  or so players from each of the top soccer countries) are born in equal amounts in the  first half and last half of the year (although misreported in the New York Times  by guess who?). Yet, there is a birthday bias among NHL hockey players, currently  running at 59-41 for those born in the first half of the year compared to the  second half.
Let me try to sum up the implications of the hockey example and relate them to  Dr. Levitt’s ambitious statements about the relative importance of nature and  nurture.
To be drafted by the NHL at age 18, a Canadian youth must pass through an ever  narrowing funnel of selection. In particular, he must distinguish himself in  youth hockey competitions at the national and world levels that are restricted  to 17-and-under players. This gives an advantage to those 17-year-olds who are  almost 18 compared to those 17-year-olds who have just turned 17.
Let’s assume for the moment that this 59-41 difference in first half versus  last half of the year birthdates in the NHL reflects a genuine difference in  mature performance level rather than a market inefficiency, and that it stems  solely from the early-born people getting better nurture than the late people.
So, does this fact settle the nature vs. nurture debate inaugurated so long ago  by Sir Francis Galton?
Well, the nature glass is part full and part empty, just as the nurture glass is  part full and part empty. But, what are the proportions?
Very roughly speaking, one in every ten thousand Canadian males between 18 and  40 is playing in the NHL.
One factor influencing who gets into the NHL appears to be the luck of the birth  date. Somebody born in January is about 1.7 or so times more likely to make the  NHL than somebody born in December. So, the odds for somebody with the good luck  to be born early in the year might be 1/7,500 versus 1/12,500 for somebody born  late in the year. (These are just back-of-envelope estimates of relative  magnitude.) 
So, that is a significant role for nurture, but not an overwhelming one, since  in a national sport like hockey in Canada subtle opportunity effects matter  mostly to the far right edge of the bell curve for athleticism.
I'm sure there are a huge number of other nurture factors like quality of  coaching, parental fanaticism, and so forth. But, let's take a rough swing at  estimating the magnitude of nature and nurture in the chances of a Canadian  making it to the NHL.
I think it’s safe to say that nobody in the NHL is less than one standard  deviation above the mean in natural hockey athleticism, which eliminates 84% of  the population. The best training in the world will never make a mediocre or  below average athlete into an NHL player.
Further, I would guess that almost nobody in the NHL is less than two standard  deviations above the mean (although I could be wrong), so that would be 97.7% of  the population that doesn’t have a chance.
Among the remaining 2.3%, however, I would imagine that nurture is highly  important.
This is not to say somebody at the 99.9999th percentile in natural talent has no  better chance than somebody at the 97.3rd percentile. For example, here is  Wikipedia's profile of the early years of The Great One, Wayne Gretzky. Although  Gretzky was born January 26th, that made little difference in his youth career  since he constantly played against older athletes.
Taught by  his father Walter, Gretzky was a classic prodigy. At age 6 he was skating with  10-year-olds. At age 10 he scored 378 goals and 139 assists in 85 games, and the  first story on him was published in the Toronto Telegram. At 14, playing against  20-year-olds, he left Brantford to further his career and signed with his first  agent.
He played a season in the Ontario Hockey League at the age of 16 with the Sault  Ste. Marie Greyhounds...
He became the youngest player to compete in the World Junior Championships, when  he participated in Montreal in 1978 at age 16. Despite being the youngest player  in the tournament by far, he finished as the tournament's top scorer, was voted  to the All-Star team and Best Forward of the tournament.
That year (1978-79) he signed with the Indianapolis Racers of the World Hockey  Association (WHA) as an underaged player. The National Hockey League (NHL) does  not allow the signing of players under the age of 18, but the WHA had no rules  regarding such signings. Racers owner Nelson Skalbania signed the 17-year-old to  a personal contract worth between 1.12 and 1.75 million dollars US over 1 to 2  years.
While I was living in  Houston in 1979 or 1980, a college roommate told me that everybody in Canada  knew that this teenager named Wayne Gretzky was going to be the the greatest  hockey player of all time, and the only question was whether he was already the  great player.
Keep in mind, though, that ice hockey in Canada is of course one of the most  competitive selection environments in the world. In less popular sports,  however, flukes of environment matter far more. The chance of an American kid  making it to the NHL is much more driven by things like geography (e.g., a  Minnesotan is a lot more likely to make it than a South Carolinian).
To take an extreme example of the dominance of nurture over nature, in the 1970s  an American college student read that Team Handball would be an official sport  at the 1976 Olympics. So, he convinced his fraternity brothers to take up the  game and practice it for a few years. The fraternity qualified en masse to  represent America in Team Handball in Montreal, and presumably had a blast (at  least while they weren’t getting thrashed on the court by countries that  actually cared about the sport).
The mean natural athleticism of those fraternity brothers was probably only  slightly above average, but in the utterly non-competitive environment of Team  Handball in the USA 30 years ago, they were able to leverage their nurture  advantage to become the best in America.
So, this comparison reflects a general principle that the the more meritocratic  and competitive a competition becomes, the more nature outweighs nurture.
My published articles are archived at iSteve.com -- Steve Sailer
 
 
 
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