Those who have risen to the top of their game have farther to fall—and statistically speaking, fall they will. In successive measurements, the best tend to get worse, and the worst tend to get better. "Once Tiger Woods has won all four majors, there's nowhere to go but down," says Trevor Price, a biologist at the University of Chicago.
This tendency toward mediocrity—sometimes called the Sports Illustrated jinx because an athlete is likely to enter a career lull after appearing on the cover—is a variation on a mathematical principle known as regression to the mean. As long as there is any element of chance, competitors swap places in a hierarchy. "There are always random factors conspiring to make you better or worse than you inherently are," Price says. A morning cup of coffee could make the difference. "The most worst is not only inherently bad but feeling particularly grotty."
Price ...