Maize (Zea mays L.) yields have risen continually wherever hybrid maize has been adopted, starting in the U.S. corn belt in the early 1930s. Plant breeding and improved management practices have produced this gain jointly. On average, about 50% of the increase is due to management and 50% to breeding. The two tools interact so closely that neither of them could have produced such progress alone. However, genetic gains may have to bear a larger share of the load in future years. Hybrid traits have changed over the years. Trait changes that increase resistance to a wide variety of biotic and abiotic stresses (e.g., drought tolerance) are the most numerous, but morphological and physiological changes that promote efficiency in growth, development, and partitioning (e.g., smaller tassels) are also recorded. Some traits have not changed over the years because breeders have intended to hold them constant (e.g., grain maturity date in U.S. corn belt). In other instances, they have not changed, despite breeders' intention to change them (e.g., harvest index). Although breeders have always selected for high yield, the need to Select Simultaneously for overall dependability has been a driving force in the selection of hybrids with increasingly greater stress tolerance over the years. Newer hybrids yield more than their predecessors in unfavorable as well as favorable growing conditions. Improvement in the ability of the maize plant to overcome both large and small stress bottlenecks, rather than improvement in primary productivity, has been the primary driving force of higher yielding ability of newer hybrid.