其实没太看懂为什么是FMMF最好,不过这样大家以后都用这种就行了? 转:Just a disclaimer: this is just quick back-of-the-envelope calculation. I haven't analyzed every swimmer's capabilities, but I feel like no one on the US team did any math, and it shows. Comparing the current Olympic records, the largest gaps between men and women are in breaststroke (7.25s) and butterfly (6.03), while the smallest gaps are in backstroke (5.6s) and freestyle (4.8s). It looks like 4 teams figured this out and went with FMMF, while 3 other teams decided to start strong and see what happens (MMFF). Every other team realized that having a male swim the breaststroke (2nd leg) and a female swim the freestyle (last leg) made the most sense. The US is the only team that went MFFM, the opposite of optimal strategy.
转:Just a disclaimer: this is just quick back-of-the-envelope calculation. I haven't analyzed every swimmer's capabilities, but I feel like no one on the US team did any math, and it shows. Comparing the current Olympic records, the largest gaps between men and women are in breaststroke (7.25s) and butterfly (6.03), while the smallest gaps are in backstroke (5.6s) and freestyle (4.8s). It looks like 4 teams figured this out and went with FMMF, while 3 other teams decided to start strong and see what happens (MMFF). Every other team realized that having a male swim the breaststroke (2nd leg) and a female swim the freestyle (last leg) made the most sense. The US is the only team that went MFFM, the opposite of optimal strategy.