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It makes them skid.
If you look at any needle or other roller bearing, the speed of the inner shaft is always different to that of the outer member, so there is a speed difference at the point of contact of the roller to the inner shaft and the outer member. The roller has to skid anyway.
Look up "Roller Bearing Skid" on Google.
Example: A 1" shaft running in 1/4" roller bearings inside an outer race of 1-1/2" diameter.
Outer track length is 4.713"
Shaft track length is 3.142"
Roller track length is 0.78"
Divide the roller track into the outer and inner, they are obviously different, so there has to be slip/skidding going on.
Check my figures, it's early for such technical stuff
Peter