Go ahead, James Holzhauer. Be excellent.
Everybody loves a winner — except, it seems, when it's someone running the board day after day and toppling records on "Jeopardy." Then suddenly that person is compared to a robot and told to "give someone else a chance."
Nonsense.
Holzhauer, a Naperville (Ill.) North High School graduate and University of Illinois alumnus, had prevailed over his opponents for 16 episodes as of Thursday, tallying up $1.2 million. A professional sports bettor with a mathematical mind, he dominates early, casting big bets with his signature "all in" hand gesture.
We've noticed some viewers squawking at his dominance as somehow unfair. We say appreciate the man's game while it lasts. No one wins forever.
We suggest that everyone, especially the Holzhauer Haters, study his keys to superiority:
Master the subject area. Technique aside, Holzhauer only wins if he gets answers right — in the form of a question! — and he does, over and over again. Bravo.
Master the tools. He's agile on the buzzer — he practiced using a homemade version — and his timing is impeccable. And he knows how to assess a wager. The strain of mental calculations is not slowing his roll.