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If you’re anything like me, you’ve been watching the Summer Olympics for the past week or so. I’ve found myself enjoying the brief respite from the Cubs continuing to tread water by watching Olympic swimmers who are doing nothing but treading water when they’re in the pool.
Of course, there is one obvious Cubs connection here. For those who are unaware, Dansby Swanson’s wife, Mallory Swanson, has scored three goals for the United States women’s national soccer team as they continue their quest for a gold medal.
While watching the start of the track and field events, I couldn’t help but wonder how Pete Crow-Armstrong would fare in a sprint against the top talent in the world. PCA is one of the fastest guys in baseball, and watching him sprint around the bases resembles Noah Lyles running 100 meters on a track.
Statcast’s sprint speed statistic can do much of the heavy lifting for us here. This stat is listed in feet per second and measured during the player’s fastest one-second window on any individual play. According to Baseball Savant, PCA is fifth in baseball in sprint speed at 30.1 feet per second.
Saturday morning was the preliminary and first round of the Olympic men’s 100-meter race. Since he’s the most known American athlete in this event, we’ll continue to use Noah Lyles as a measuring stick. He ran 100 meters in 10.04 seconds, though according to Sports Illustrated and some of his comments after the fact, he may have been holding back somewhat. To Lyles’ credit, his fastest time is much better, at 9.81 seconds.
Ok, let’s do some math! One hundred meters is about 328.084 feet. If Crow-Armstrong runs at about 30.1 feet per second, 328.084 divided by 30.1 is 10.90 seconds. PCA would run the 100-meter dash in roughly 10.90 seconds.
But hold on, not so fast! Pun intended. You might have noticed in the explanation that Sprint Speed is calculated as a player’s “fastest one-second window.” This is taken directly from the explanation on Baseball Savant. So, by my logic, not only would Noah Lyles still beat Crow-Armstrong by quite a bit in a 100-meter race, but Lyles’ time factors in the time it takes him to hit top speed, while PCA’s time assumes he is running at his top speed the entire time.
This might seem picky, but every little bit counts when talking about a race that usually takes about 10 seconds to finish. Statcast also has running splits listed on Baseball Savant. It takes the rookie center fielder about 50 feet to reach his top speed of 30.1 feet per second. At this point, 2.42 seconds have already elapsed, on average. So he would still have about 278 feet to run, and if we assume he runs it at 30.1 feet per second, he would run that final 278 feet in about 9.24 seconds. Add the 2.42 seconds it took him to get to top speed to that, and you get 11.66 seconds.
The other factor here is that he might hit a higher top speed than 30.1 feet per second if he knew he was running 100 meters in a straight line rather than shifting directions every 90 feet. But remember that sprint speed is calculated at the player’s fastest one-second window in a given play, so I am comfortable saying that it might help his time, but not by a ton. I’d venture to guess PCA would clock in somewhere in the 11.40-11.60 range on a 100-meter dash.
In round one on Saturday, only the slowest finisher recorded a time in that range, and he was so far behind the rest of the field that I’d assume it was an anomaly for him. Of the 69 athletes who completed round one (three were disqualified), he was the only one who recorded a time greater than 11 seconds. So, PCA is fast. Really fast. But he’s nowhere near Olympian level fast.
If you were curious, Lyles averaged 32.68 feet per second in his run this morning, significantly faster than Bobby Witt Jr.’s baseball-leading 30.4 feet per second figure. We’ve seen fast players like Terrance Gore stick around and end up on playoff rosters every year with one role: pinch runner. Would anyone bite if Lyles were to make himself available to baseball teams every August to fill the pinch runner role? Given PCA has yet to be caught stealing this season, I just cannot see anyone being able to throw him out. Imagine the viral potential of Noah Lyles pinch running as the winning run in the bottom of the ninth of a playoff game.
Alas, it will never happen because Noah Lyles is incredibly successful in a different sport. But a guy can dream. If you tune in to watch any Olympic action, allow this to serve as a reminder of how impressive the physical accomplishments of these athletes are. If you think PCA is fast, Noah Lyles, and anyone else competing in the men’s 100-meter dash, would make him look slow.







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