Consider the family of all perfect matchings of the complete graph K2n
with 2n vertices. Given any collection M of perfect matchings of
size s, there exists a maximum number f(n,x) such that if s≤f(n,x),
then there exists a perfect matching that agrees with each perfect matching in
M in at most x−1 edges. We use probabilistic arguments to give
several lower bounds for f(n,x). We also apply the Lov\'asz local lemma to
find a function g(n,x) such that if each edge appears at most g(n,x) times
then there exists a perfect matching that agrees with each perfect matching in
M in at most x−1 edges. This is an analogue of an extremal result
vis-\'a-vis the covering radius of sets of permutations, which was studied by
Cameron and Wanless (cf. \cite{cameron}), and Keevash and Ku (cf. \cite{ku}).
We also conclude with a conjecture of a more general problem in hypergraph
matchings.Comment: 10 page