Updated
Updated · The New York Times · Jul 17
MoMath Offers 1 Soccer Ball Geometry Tutorial for World Cup Finale Weekend
Updated
Updated · The New York Times · Jul 17

MoMath Offers 1 Soccer Ball Geometry Tutorial for World Cup Finale Weekend

1 articles · Updated · The New York Times · Jul 17

Summary

  • New York’s National Museum of Mathematics is staging a Friday hands-on session, “The Secret Geometry of the Soccer Ball,” to open the World Cup’s final weekend near MetLife Stadium.
  • The event focuses on the classic 32-panel black-and-white ball, which outreach mathematician Chaim Goodman-Strauss called the most symmetrical pattern possible on a sphere.
  • Goodman-Strauss, who leads the presentation, specializes in symmetry and said the tutorial will show the structure behind one of the world’s most recognizable shapes.
  • Adidas football innovation lead Hannes Schaefke echoed that view, saying the ball represents a balanced system regardless of how it is rotated.

Insights

Is the new four-panel World Cup ball sacrificing geometric beauty for technological perfection?
Will sensor-packed balls designed for perfect flight make player skill less important in the World Cup?
What aerodynamic secrets allow a four-panel ball to outperform the classic 32-panel design?