sprintstar
Master
I see the Duck women won the 4x100m relay at the Penn relays without Hannah Cunliffe running, anyone know why she didnt run?
Pleasantly surprised to see Teeters run the anchor leg on the USA 4x100m at the Penn Relays this morning. Could not tell you the last time I saw a white man on a USA 4x100.
With it being a World Championship Year, I'm suprised how few of our guys have run so far. It's mid May. I wouldn't wait too long as you need enough races to get the rust out and work on mechanics and form. They need to make sure they are peaking right around the world champs which is easier said than done. Hope our guys & girls have a break through year!
While the major sports have added so many games that they are basically year round, track season gets smaller every year. The colleges are running fewer meets and almost no dual meets, and they sit out their stars most of the time. There are nowadays hardly any pro meets, and most athletes are in the habit of skipping all but a few each year. They act like they need to be in perpetual training, never competition. What's worse, the European season starts several months after the US season, so European athletes are never as ready for the Olympics or Worlds.
I think one consequence of this is that times, except for the best of the best, are actually getting slower. For example, here are a few sprint names from the weekend. Like Sourapas, these were good enough to score points at conference championships, but the times aren't promising enough to suggest they will ever attain world class:
BIG 10: Devin Quinn (10.21) finished 3, Karson Kowalchuck (10.22) finished 4, and Cole Henderson (10.42) finished 8 in the 100, but those were extremely wind-aided. A 16-yr-old Jack Hale once destroyed these times in a similar wind.
Dan Chisena finished 3 and Collin Hoffacker finished 5 in the 400. Times in the 46's, not bad for a windy day.
Pac12: Logen Casavant finished 5 in the 400 (slow time, though) and 7 in the 200, where he finished behind Sourapas (3) and Jacopo Spano (6). Times still nothing special. Hopefully, these three have saved something for the NCAAs. I think Casavant has potential, but he needs to improve quickly.
Hannah Cunliffe came back from injuries to pick up two thirds in the Pac-12 sprints. She's capable of better if she can stay healthy, and we all know about her supreme hotness. By the way, a week or two ago there were some great articles about how she tweeted she could beat anyone on the Oregon football team at 40 yrds. I would LOVE to see that demonstration take place.
While the major sports have added so many games that they are basically year round, track season gets smaller every year. The colleges are running fewer meets and almost no dual meets, and they sit out their stars most of the time. There are nowadays hardly any pro meets, and most athletes are in the habit of skipping all but a few each year. They act like they need to be in perpetual training, never competition. What's worse, the European season starts several months after the US season, so European athletes are never as ready for the Olympics or Worlds.
I think one consequence of this is that times, except for the best of the best, are actually getting slower. For example, here are a few sprint names from the weekend. Like Sourapas, these were good enough to score points at conference championships, but the times aren't promising enough to suggest they will ever attain world class:
BIG 10: Devin Quinn (10.21) finished 3, Karson Kowalchuck (10.22) finished 4, and Cole Henderson (10.42) finished 8 in the 100, but those were extremely wind-aided. A 16-yr-old Jack Hale once destroyed these times in a similar wind.
Dan Chisena finished 3 and Collin Hoffacker finished 5 in the 400. Times in the 46's, not bad for a windy day.
Pac12: Logen Casavant finished 5 in the 400 (slow time, though) and 7 in the 200, where he finished behind Sourapas (3) and Jacopo Spano (6). Times still nothing special. Hopefully, these three have saved something for the NCAAs. I think Casavant has potential, but he needs to improve quickly.
Hannah Cunliffe came back from injuries to pick up two thirds in the Pac-12 sprints. She's capable of better if she can stay healthy, and we all know about her supreme hotness. By the way, a week or two ago there were some great articles about how she tweeted she could beat anyone on the Oregon football team at 40 yrds. I would LOVE to see that demonstration take place.
Shadowlight, I do hope she regains enough of her stamina by the NCAA West Regionals if not she will struggle to make it to the NCAA finals. She regularily beats her teamates in both the 100/200m and is the reason the 4x100 set the 42.12 time earlier this season. I also agree that Hannah Cunliffe is a beauty to behold but on the other hand she likes negro men...how sad. Sage Watson is also a beauty and is a Canadian which for me is a plus!I watched both of these events last night. Let me just add that Lisanne Hagens from AZ won the High Jump and Sage Watson won the 400 MH. ILL David Kendziera won the 400 MH and placed 2nd in the 110MH. Claire Kieffer-Wright won the Big Ten HJ.
Remarkably ESPN and the sports world in general have neglected track and field for years now despite the fact it is black dominated for the most part in the glory events. There was a time when tennis and track and field were seen as important sports and Sports Illustrated used to cover them with great care and detail.
As for Hannah Cunliffe , the main reason I tuned in, she lacked the after burners and I am guessing her recent illness sapped her strength. Too bad as I was anticipating her putting on a show. Be that as it may I confess she is the epitome of a women that just screams out beauty and raw sexuality. In other words I am completely smitten.
Young rising star Jan Volko (20 years of age) ran a new p.b. and national junior
record time of 10.21 wind legal in Praha recently. This kid continues to slowly rise to
the world class level. I see alot of upside in the near future. I think he can get down to
around 10.10 this summer if everything goes well and he stays healthy. Remember this
kid is only 20 years of age. One to keep a very close eye on!
yes, it's a new PB (just) and with negligible wind. He'll be 27 end of this month which is traditionally a time the sprinter starts to peak. At 187cms (6'1.5") and 80 kgs (176lbs) he's certainly got a decent frame for performance.
The good thing about having Jac Ali Harvey as an import to Turkey is the competition Guliyev needs for his starts and acceleration.
He also ran 20.08 legal for 200 on the same track last weekend (interestingly in his country of origin, Azerbaijan).
He is virtually where he was in 2009, perhaps going a little past it since it's early in the season for such good results.
What a shame he missed some great years after his dad/coach died in June 2010. Moving to Turkey early the next year to get some decent coaching, the IAAF put a 3 year ban on running for anyone but Azerbaijan (who couldn't pay him or coach him). He deserves any success he gets.
Nice to see Guliyev running fast early this year. If he can run a few more times around the 10 flat mark, he'll surely break the 10 second barrier at least once! On the youtube channel there was a video titled 9.9, anybody know if that was hand timed? I didn't see it on the iaaf website.
Hi mate ... just a heads up on legal wind assistance, although you probably know it. It's 2 metres/sec or about 4.5mph.Not sure on the 9.9 race but I'm assuming it was hand timed or more than likely wind aided. Any wind above 2.0 mph is considered not legal to be reckonized as a valid time.
Hi mate ... just a heads up on legal wind assistance, although you probably know it. It's 2 metres/sec or about 4.5mph.
That 9.9 looked like he was running against very mediocre guys - probably hand timed I guess.