clickclickboom;742391 wrote:You guys are pretty convinced that men are far more superior that women aren't you? Bobby Riggs thought the same thing too.
Based on evidence, I am persuaded to believe that men and women, given training regimens and dietary plans being equal, are not the same, physiologically. Statistics (for example, the ones I mentioned earlier) indicate that upon hitting puberty, boys do tend to athletically surpass their female counterparts. It doesn't mean men are better human beings or win at life. It means that men are naturally predisposed to being bigger, faster, and stronger. That's all. Call it testosterone. Call it genetic evolution. Call it whatever you like, but other than atypical anecdotes like the one you mentioned, you will find overwhelming evidence in the concept that men's physiology simply predisposes them to being able to compete in athletic events at a higher level on average. Exceptions will naturally exist, but they will be rare. Take the worst team in the NBA and put it up against the best team in the WNBA. Who wins? The worst team in the NFL against the best team in the IWFL or any other female football league. Take rugby. Take soccer. Take track. Swimming. Hockey. Hell, even golf. I'm betting you find that men will outperform their female counterpart in the respective sports. Again, I go back to the fact that the fastest women EVER to have run the 100m sprint (not just in the Olympics) was never fast enough to hold the Ohio high school boys record for the same race. Same with the 200m, the 400m, the 800m, the 1600m, the high jump, and the long jump.
So, I am convinced ... but only because that's what the statistics seem to say.
So the question being raised here is, at what level are women and men able to compete closely? I don't think we're far off. The D1 schools I'm talking about could honestly beat a lot of small men's college teams (DIII colleges). An average D1 school will be much taller than 5' 11". This year's Akron St. V-M team averages (including their bench players) 6' 2".
OSH;742522 wrote:I have refrained from saying anything about soccer, I don't want this to turn into a "soccer sucks" topic.
The USWNT regularly plays exhibitions and friendlies against U17, U16, and U15 club teams in the United States. They use these friendlies to prepare for playing other national teams. In 2009, the USWNT got beat 5-1 by a U17 SoCal ODP team -- reports have it being a lot worse than the score already shows. This isn't the only time they've been beaten, it is rather commonplace for them to play boys club teams and be beaten. All of these club teams aren't always classified as "elite" either.
If the USWNT, which is believed to be top 3 in the world in women's soccer, loses to boys U17, U16, and U15 club teams...I believe it isn't out of the question that WNBA teams could be beaten by many boys high school basketball teams.
Soccer sucks.

I kid, I kid.
This is a perfect example. It's just a fact of nature that on average, men are physically built and predisposed to being better at athletics. Doesn't mean they're extra special human beings or anything. Just means their bodies are different.