Quote from: Pete3206 on August 12, 2012, 12:07:17 PMApologies if this has already been posted, but I found this quite interesting.Comparison of all 100m winnersThat’s awesome. It’s a shame that they did not try and put some sort of average line so you could see which runners were abnormal for their era. With my mind’s eye it looks like Bolt, Hines and Owen appeared to be getting times ahead of their generation.
Apologies if this has already been posted, but I found this quite interesting.Comparison of all 100m winners
Quote from: Astral Weeks on August 12, 2012, 01:28:29 PMQuote from: Pete3206 on August 12, 2012, 12:07:17 PMApologies if this has already been posted, but I found this quite interesting.Comparison of all 100m winnersQuote from: Pete3206 on August 12, 2012, 12:07:17 PMApologies if this has already been posted, but I found this quite interesting.Comparison of all 100m winnersInteresting indeed.Also interesting was a stat on the BBC the other night - no white sprinter has *ever* run 100m in less than 10 seconds.OK, so apart from that French bloke, no white sprinter has ever - officially - run a sub 10 seconds 100 metres.I'm pretty sure that's what the BBC in fact said, and I was just talking bollocks.
Quote from: Pete3206 on August 12, 2012, 12:07:17 PMApologies if this has already been posted, but I found this quite interesting.Comparison of all 100m winnersQuote from: Pete3206 on August 12, 2012, 12:07:17 PMApologies if this has already been posted, but I found this quite interesting.Comparison of all 100m winnersInteresting indeed.Also interesting was a stat on the BBC the other night - no white sprinter has *ever* run 100m in less than 10 seconds.
It's the first time i have taken an interest in the Olympics since 1972. How tawdry it makes football in general and the World Cup in particular look.Genuine joy at winning and heartfelt sorrow from he losers. No rehearsed celebrations, no shameless sense of entitlement. It genuinely seemed like they were there to enhance the event rather than the other way round.The spontaneous joy from Jade Jones and Nicola Adams together with Anthony Joshua talking about being an amateur and wanting to stay an amateur to improve were the highlights for me.On the final day a very promising young footballer decides to retire to Man City's bench for a contract or two and cry all the way to the bank. What a contrast.It doesn't matter whether Joshua stays true to his word. His thoughts in victory were of wanting to improve, and not 'great, I'm rich' or 'I am now the centre of the universe'.In order to get her gold Jones had to follow up years of dedicated training by producing excellence three times in a day. What a refreshing change from having to put up with serial big event bottlers like Rooney and Lampard.What a contrast also with those who think 3 or 4 million a year is not enough to keep their waistline in check or take umbrage at being asked to move 70 miles or whatever so that they actually spend more time training than they do travelling.Even the TV coverage was a comparative revelation. The presenters were on the whole good, the commentators did a fine job and with one or two exceptions (notably the footballers) the assorted ex-athlete studio guests were articulate and worth listening to.Best of all, no Sky. Not a damp squib Super Grand Slam Sunday in sight.If he ever loses the desire to run, Usain Bolt could always set up a charm school. 'How to have a massive ego and still be very likeable'. Essential learning for most top flight footballers, not to mention Kevin Pietersen.It may take a while and is probably too much to hope for anyway, but maybe more events like this will put football in a position where it has to trade in the Ferraris and once more give us sportsmen who are worth cheering and believing in.
Apparently, the luvverly young lady from Belarus that won the shotput has failed a drug testBelarus ?!?...................... More like Bella EmbergThe Gold now goes to New Zealand