Is there any truth to John McEnroe's statements? Is there anything wrong with what he said apart from whether or not the statements are true? What were his motivations and are those motivations relevant to judgments about the propriety of making such statements? — geospiza
It's about as pointless as saying Floyd Mayweather would be 7000th in the world if he fought as a heavyweight. — Baden
being McEnroe we kind of understand he does not intend offence. If someone else said it, it may have been different — TimeLine
Do I understand you to be saying that these additional facts confirm McEnroe's comments? — geospiza
Is there any truth to John McEnroe's statements? Is there anything wrong with what he said apart from whether or not the statements are true? What were his motivations and are those motivations relevant to judgments about the propriety of making such statements? — geospiza
No. It's just the best thing we have to assess his claim. From that we have to compare Serena then to Serena now and compare Braasch then to the current world #700.
But even then, short of having her actually compete regularly ('cause upsets happen all the time) in the men's circuit, it's probably impossible to say. — Michael
Anything that doesn't refute a claim is consistent with a claim. Consistency isn't sufficient for confirmation. — Michael
Yes, but not confirmation of McEnroe's statements. So, contrary to your claim here, that "the best thing we have to assess the claim is evidence that is consistent with the claim" is not "confirmation nevertheless". — Michael
We agree that consistency is not sufficient for confirmation, however you seem to be arguing that the fact that I ate cereal for breakfast is equally relevant to the issue in question as the fact (alleged by you to be "the best thing we have to judge the claim") that a professional male tennis player formerly defeated Serena. — geospiza
I do however claim that those facts are more than merely consistent with McEnroe's statements; they provide confirmation of those statements.
I don't have any problem with anyone having whatever opinion they do. There's simply no reason to put much weight on it (well, unless you're betting on a game and the person has a good track record so that their predictions have a better than random percentage of making you some money). — Terrapin Station
I'm not saying that. I'm disagreeing with your claim that my suggested consistent evidence is confirmation of McEnroe's claim. — Michael
But as a person of some influence, will not others put weight on his comments, even if they shouldn't? — geospiza
Isn't everything okay to say?... — Wosret
It isn't in fact true. In marathon conditions, the gap closes. Women tend to weigh less, so that things that require less explosive force, and more continuous effort, the more body weight becomes more and more disadvantageous. — Wosret
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