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When you watch Yamal, you will agree he’s better than Olise.
When you watch Olise, you will agree he’s better than Yamal.
The difference between Lamine Yamal and Olise is mainly in how they approach the game and impact it.
Yamal is a Pure winger. Direct, fearless, loves to take on defenders 1v1. Very explosive with quick touches and sharp dribbling.
Olise is More of a creator. Slower tempo, but very smooth. He picks passes, controls rhythm, and plays with composure.
Yamal attacks you. Olise studies you.
Yamal is an Aggressive dribbler. Beats players with speed and unpredictability.
Olise is an Elegant dribbler. Uses body feints, close control, and timing rather than pace.
Yamal Creates through chaos, dribbles, quick decisions, final-third actions.
Olise Creates through vision, key passes, crosses, set pieces, and through balls.
Both are currently the best RW in the world now, just how they impact games is different.
There's a physicist at Stanford named Safi Bahcall who modeled this exact principle and the math is wild.
He calls it "phase transitions in human networks." When you're stationary, your probability of a lucky event is limited to your existing surface area: the people you already know, the places you already go, the ideas you've already been exposed to. Your opportunity window is fixed.
When you move, your collision rate with new nodes in a network increases nonlinearly. Double your movement (new conversations, new cities, new projects) and your probability of a serendipitous encounter doesn't double. It roughly quadruples. Because each new node connects you to their entire network, not just to them.
Richard Wiseman ran a 10-year study at the University of Hertfordshire tracking self-described "lucky" and "unlucky" people. The single biggest differentiator wasn't IQ, education, or family money. Lucky people scored significantly higher on one trait: openness to experience. They talked to strangers more, varied their routines more, and said yes to invitations at nearly twice the rate.
The "unlucky" group followed the same routes, ate at the same restaurants, and talked to the same 5 people. Their networks were closed loops. No new inputs, no new collisions.
Luck isn't random. Luck is surface area. And surface area is a function of movement.
The lobster emoji is doing more work than most people realize. Lobsters grow by shedding their shell when it gets too tight. The growth requires a period of total vulnerability. No protection, no armor, soft body exposed to the ocean.
That's the cost of movement nobody posts about. You have to be uncomfortable first. The new shell only hardens after you've already moved.