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Snitch
- Joined
- Jan 17, 2012
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- 43,414
Is there one in football?
There's one obvious advantage, as in teams usually prefer to have at least 3 left footers in there teams nowadays (LB, RW and also increasingly LCB) - which makes up just less than a 1/3 of a football team, when left footers only make up about a 1/10th of the population IIRC.
Outside of that, do left footers have other advantages in the game itself? I was listening to the sky sports football podcast the other week - England's analyst pointed out, left handed bowlers have a clear advantage over right handed bowlers.
In summary, the key advantage is that batsman come across them far less so their movements/patterns are much harder to predict - especially in a sport where the balls whizzing past the batsman at 90mph. Do left footed footballers enjoy the same advantage? Just in terms of their dribbling movement? Is it harder for a goalkeeper to read a left footed striker, than a right footed one?
There's one obvious advantage, as in teams usually prefer to have at least 3 left footers in there teams nowadays (LB, RW and also increasingly LCB) - which makes up just less than a 1/3 of a football team, when left footers only make up about a 1/10th of the population IIRC.
Outside of that, do left footers have other advantages in the game itself? I was listening to the sky sports football podcast the other week - England's analyst pointed out, left handed bowlers have a clear advantage over right handed bowlers.
In summary, the key advantage is that batsman come across them far less so their movements/patterns are much harder to predict - especially in a sport where the balls whizzing past the batsman at 90mph. Do left footed footballers enjoy the same advantage? Just in terms of their dribbling movement? Is it harder for a goalkeeper to read a left footed striker, than a right footed one?