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The other day I was reading ESPN’s Jayson Stark’s review of the strange happenings in the 2007 baseball season when I came across this nugget.
“Billy Wagner collected his 17th save of the year in the 17th inning of a July 7 Mets-Astros game — an inning that took him (what else?) 17 pitches.”
I was immediately interested in that fact because 17 is my lucky number. Besides being my birth date reversed (7/1 becomes 17), it was also my cubby number in third grade, my favorite birthday and the jersey number of some of my favorite athletes (Anderson Varejao, Braylon Edwards, Lance Berkman and Cristiano Rinaldo).
But 17 isn’t just my lucky number. Princeton mathematician Edward Feller also had a fondness for the number, selecting only 17 students each year to advise and always choosing it as his “random” integer when solving problems. According to a variety of studies, it’s also the “most random number“; if you ask a group of people to choose a number between 1 and 20, you’ll get an excess of people choosing 17. Knowing my adoration for the number, a friend turned me on to this site from a French professor who tracked occurrences of the number seventeen. From that site and some others, here are some interesting tidbits.
Darrell Waltrip won his first and only Daytona 500 in 1989. It was his 17th attempt at NASCAR’s biggest race, and he won in car number 17.
posted by Mike on 12-27-2007 at 7:25 am
Like finding 666 in everything. I wrote about the unluckiest lottery ticket that had 666 everywhere or lots of numbers that can make 6’s.
posted by GoingLikeSixty on 12-27-2007 at 8:30 am
I’d like to make a really dorky correction. A haiku, when written in Japanese, contains, not 17 syllables, but 17 hiragana.
posted by Sarah on 12-27-2007 at 8:43 am
As a Mark Grace fan, I can appreciate the info on 17. I was stunned to find out the amount of trivia about 23 - especially when it led to a movie (I heard it was pretty bad, so I didn’t see it.) Maybe it’s just something about prime numbers?
posted by Debi on 12-27-2007 at 8:50 am
J-Plautz: You ain’t seen nothin’ yet! This will sound wacky if you haven’t heard of it before, but try googling “Yellow Pig Day.” There is a whole world of 17 fans out there, particularly Prof. David Kelly.
posted by Betsy on 12-27-2007 at 9:37 am
Wow. As much as this may all be true, the whole study was thrown off by the misspelling of ’statiscally’ and ‘preponderance’. Get a spell-checker program. Otherwise…interesting.
posted by Joseph on 12-29-2007 at 5:37 am