I was contacted earlier today by  IBWM’s resident boffin, Liddletowers, who wanted to draw my attention to something  he’d read in New Scientist..........and when did you last hear Jim White say that on Sky eh? We have a resident boffin, see the calibre of what you are dealing with  here Football365?  
Now I’m not stupid, despite a fairly comprehensive charge sheet, but advanced science to IBWM usually  starts and ends with Johnny Ball.  However this little bit of physics  relates to football, so I’m duty bound to take notice.
Yes, that's us 
Now rather than try and pick out  selected quotes, IBWM has took the easy option and just copied and  pasted large chunks of text, which goes against the grain, but it’s  actually one of the most interesting pieces I’ve read this year.  Get this:
FEBRUARY 2007. Brazilian football  team Flamengo are playing a South American cup match in Bolivia. Their  opponents, Real Potosi, are based in the high Andes and the stadium is  nearly 4000 metres above sea level. In lashing rain, Flamengo fall 2-0  behind. Many of their players need bottled oxygen to alleviate the  effects of altitude. Though they eventually fight back for a 2-2 draw,  Flamengo announce after the game that they will no longer play matches  at altitude. 
So began football's "high altitude  controversy". Flamengo's case was taken up by the Brazilian Football  Confederation, which complained to the world governing body FIFA that  venues in the high Andes were not suitable for football. In May 2007, FIFA ruled that  "in the interests of player health", international matches could no  longer be played above 2500 metres. 
If Brazil thought that meant victory,  they were not reckoning on a comeback by Bolivia, Ecuador and Colombia,  who complained to FIFA that this would put a stop to international  matches in their national stadiums. In response, FIFA suspended the ban  pending further studies. 
Fast-forward to June 2010 and  altitude is again an issue in football. The World Cup in South Africa will be the first for 24 years to stage games at venues significantly above sea level. The main stadium, Soccer City in Johannesburg, is at 1701 metres. That's not quite the high Andes, but it is still high enough to have an effect. Six other venues are at altitude.
FIFA invited leading medical  scientists to a conference in its home city of Zurich, Switzerland, in  October 2007 to discuss what was known about the effects of altitude on  football. 
The first thing they looked at was  physical performance. They concluded that below 500 metres there are no  effects. Above 500 metres, negative effects such as increased heart  rate, breathlessness and reduced stamina become noticeable and get  progressively worse the higher you go.
The standard way of minimising this  decline in performance is a few days of acclimatisation. The FIFA team  recommends spending three to five days at altitude, although it is never  possible to recover full sea-level fitness levels in this way. 
There is, however, a wild card. Some  researchers at the meeting noted that there are reports of athletes who  are acclimatised to altitude suffering a decline in performance after  suddenly descending to sea level. 
This effect may put them at a  corresponding disadvantage when they come down to play a team  acclimatised to sea level.  This could influence the latter stages of  the tournament, as both semi-finals will be played at sea level between a  team that won its quarter final at altitude and a team that won at sea  level. 
It's not just physical performance  that is affected. The FIFA team also concluded that altitude is likely  to alter the aerodynamics of the ball in a way that could catch players  out.
The key to this is the reduced  density of the atmosphere, which affects how fast the ball moves through  the air and also the bend of a spinning ball. Every 1000 metres  increase in altitude reduces atmospheric pressure - and hence the  density of the air - by about 11 per cent.  Other things being equal,  Johannesburg has an atmospheric pressure around 81 per cent that of Cape  Town. 
Temperature also has an effect, with  air density falling 3 per cent for every 10° C rise. So the difference  in air density during a chilly winter evening in Cape Town (7° C) and a  relatively balmy winter afternoon in Johannesburg (11° C) could be over  20 per cent. Such differences are quite possible during the World Cup. 
To see what this difference would  mean in practice, consider a ball struck from just outside the penalty area - and aimed at the  top left-hand corner of the goal. Say that at sea level, the shot  travels at an average speed of 22.8 metres per second and crosses the  goal line after 0.817 seconds 
What happens at higher altitude?  Since drag force is proportional to air density, an identical shot at  1700 metres travels faster than at sea level, reaching the goal line  after 0.801 seconds - about 2 ball diameters ahead of where it would be  at sea level. This gives it less time to dip, and it hits the crossbar. 
With acclimatisation, players will  learn to hit the ball slightly lower while applying more spin to get the  ball around the wall and into the top corner. The shot now crosses the  goal line 0.030 seconds (or more than 2 ball diameters) ahead of its  equivalent at sea level. If the goalkeeper reacts as he would at sea  level, the ball would be in the back of the net before he gets to it. 
Azteca Stadium in Mexico  City, which is 2288 metres above sea level. 
According to the data,  provided by UK-based football performance analysts Prozone, the number of shots from  outside the penalty area increased with altitude while the number of  shots from inside the area decreased. The implication is that, at  altitude, players might be coached to have a go at goal from longer  distances to take advantage of the straighter, faster trajectories. 
It is worth noting that in the 1986 World Cup in Mexico, the last time altitude was a factor, eventual winners  Argentina played all their matches above 2000 metres. All the other  leading contenders had to change altitude. Did that give Argentina an  advantage? If it did, it won't happen this year. Whoever wins the  tournament will have switched from altitude to sea level and back again  at some point. 
The key message for the World Cup,  then, is that teams need to take into account transition,  acclimatisation and tactics. Players will need to adapt to changes in  altitude, especially the effect this has on the flight of the ball.  Teams that use high altitude to their advantage - or that are already  used to switching from low to high altitude - will profit. That points  to a win for a South American team. 
Well.  I think you’d say that New  Scientist are probably on their way to the bookies right now.  All this is  very relevant though and I thought it was worth sharing it with you.Argentina demonstrated in their 6-1 loss to Bolivia in qualifiers what an impact altitude can  have.......taking nothing away from Bolivia that night though, Argentina were shy-ite.
"I'll have a tenner on Chile"
Of course what we also need to factor in to all this is that ball.  
Everyone and their granny has been  complaining about it already, so IBWM donned it's best kipper tie and went at the blackboard in true Open University fashion.
Sines, cosines, lambda x, pi and a cheese pastie were all involved and I threw in some of those percentages that  new scientist mentioned above regarding density etc.  
The result?  
Well according to IBWM's calculations, just about every game should resemble the last five minutes of cheggers plays pop, with  balls flying around all over the place.......and Fabio Capello saying "away you go.....".
But if a team's problems start after they've come back down from altitude, then England could well find that their game against Algeria might be a bit sticky, having just dropped the bast part of 2000 metres in 6 days.  Things are a bit more straightforward for Diego's mob....although being brought down to sea level for a semi final might just add to the mix.
Should be a laugh though.......


 
 
1 comments:
Rubbish, despite being slam-dunked out of the competition, Mexico '86* is possibly the most entertaining tournament I can remember (despite '90 being close to my heart)... To many people making excuses and creating a news atmosphere... And as far as the ball's concerned, they bleat on every time there's a new one...
*Played at much higher temperatures as well...
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