Which [sports] teams win is largely a function of which teams have the best players, and each league has its own way of determining which players end up on which teams. So, in a sense, Team 1 vs. Team 2 is no more a contest of athletic prowess than chess is a test of whether queens are more powerful than bishops. The real battle is between groups of executives, and the sport is player acquisition.
This seems like explaining vs. explaining away. The process by which better players pick up wins is by winning the “contest of athletic prowess.” The game itself is interesting to watch because we like to see competent people play, and when upsets happen, they often happen for reasons that are easily displayed and engaged with in terms of the mechanics of the game.
This is similar to choosing strict determinism over compatibilism. Which players are the “best” depends on each of those players’ individual efforts during the game. You could extend the idea to the executives too, anyway—which groups of executives acquire better players is largely a function of which have the best executives.
Efforts are only one variable here, and the quote did say “largely a function of”. Those being said, look at how often teams replay each other during a season with a different winner.
-- Adam Cadre
This seems like explaining vs. explaining away. The process by which better players pick up wins is by winning the “contest of athletic prowess.” The game itself is interesting to watch because we like to see competent people play, and when upsets happen, they often happen for reasons that are easily displayed and engaged with in terms of the mechanics of the game.
This is similar to choosing strict determinism over compatibilism. Which players are the “best” depends on each of those players’ individual efforts during the game. You could extend the idea to the executives too, anyway—which groups of executives acquire better players is largely a function of which have the best executives.
Efforts are only one variable here, and the quote did say “largely a function of”. Those being said, look at how often teams replay each other during a season with a different winner.