Why Perfect Goalkeeping Is Impossible in Football
Perfect goalkeeping is impossible because reaction time, xG, shot speed, deflections, positioning, pressure, and human limits make every save uncertain.
Perfect goalkeeping is impossible because reaction time, xG, shot speed, deflections, positioning, pressure, and human limits make every save uncertain.
Rahul Dravid’s greatest achievements were built through patience, discipline, and rare Test-match endurance. Some records can be broken, but repeating his career is far harder.
Rohit Sharma’s cricket records may never be broken because his six-hitting, ODI double centuries, World Cup dominance, and timing created rare milestones.
MS Dhoni’s cricket records may never be broken because his captaincy, finishing, wicketkeeping, longevity, and pressure control created a rare legacy.
These IPL records may never be broken because they were built through rare dominance, perfect seasons, consistency, pressure, and T20 cricket’s changing nature.
Muttiah Muralitharan’s 1,347 international wickets may be cricket’s most unbreakable record because modern bowlers face fewer Tests and heavier workload limits.
Humans cannot run 100 km/h because muscle power, stride limits, ground contact time, bone strength, air resistance, and biology create hard speed limits.
A 300 km/h tennis serve is almost impossible because human biomechanics, racket limits, reaction time, control, and injury risk create hard limits.
The hardest batting records in ODI and Test cricket may never be broken because modern formats, workload, pressure, and shorter careers limit long-term dominance.
A 100% penalty conversion rate is impossible in football because pressure, goalkeeper decisions, fatigue, technique, psychology, and randomness always interfere.