Abstract
In Getting Causes from Powers (2011) Stephen Mumford and Rani Anjum published a novel
approach to the metaphysics of dispositional properties, according to which causal powers
are to be viewed as vectors. More recently they have employed a similar system to represent
prowess in sport. In this paper l discuss the Mumford/Anjum ‘tendential theory of sporting
prowess’. I question their motivation for the tendencies account, concluding (contra
Mumford and Anjum) that a belief in determinism would not take away from the enjoyment
of spectator sports. Nonetheless, I deem the tendential theory of prowess plausible. In
addition to criticising their motivation, then, I develop the Mumford/Anjum thesis, applying
the multi‐dimensional aspect they themselves apply to ‘complex causal situations’, to the
metaphysic of sporting prowess.