

With crowds roaring with delight and heavy with expectations, going mano-a-mano against Tiger is always difficult for his competitors.
Professors Richard Rendleman and Robert Connolly wrote that players paired with Tiger in all rounds between 1998 and 2001 played nearly a half-stroke worse than usual. However, that differential increased to 0.857 strokes higher when paired with Tiger in the final round.
Some people call Tiger's intense focus a special killer instinct. Dr. Ken Ravizza, a noted sports psychologist, described Tiger's killer instinct, "To succeed in the same group with Tiger, you have to prepare for it. You have to get comfortable with being uncomfortable."
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At the 2005 World Swimming Championships, Larisa swept by American Margy Keefe and multiple world champion Edith van Dijk in the smooth-water rowing basin in Montreal, Canada.


The results were the same, even though the finishing times were closer in the jellyfish-strewn 10K over Great Britain's Cassandra Patten and Kate Brookes-Peterson.
At the 2008 World Open Water Swimming Championships, Larisa won from behind after trailing behind Cassandra Patten and Yurema Requena of Spain for most of the race. The outcome and strategy was the same in the 5K with a close victory over Russian teammate Ekaterina Seliverstova and American Chloe Sutton in the warm river in Sevilla, Spain.

Similar to Tiger's decade-long dominance, Larisa has won numerous championship races throughout the world during her streak from 2004 to 2008.

Top photo of Larisa by Kevork Djansezian of the Associated Press. Bottom photo of Larisa (in middle) by Giorgia Scala of Deep Blue Media.
2 comments:
Just an FYI:
Professor Rendleman is now teaching at the Tuck School of Business at Dartmouth.
http://oracle-www.dartmouth.edu/dart/groucho/tuck_faculty_and_research.faculty_profile?p_id=QE3XEL
Thank you very much for the update on the professor. We'll try to keep up with his fascinating research.
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