lol.......Lemaitre should just focus on the 200, he has a better shot of running 19.9 later in the season...the 100, I believe he wont break 10.1Wow - Lemaitre ran 2 races in one day!
He will need a full month off now to recover.
Meanwhile, Guliyev ran his 3rd high quality 200m vs international competition, in a week, and still beat Lemaitre.
Wow - Lemaitre ran 2 races in one day!
He will need a full month off now to recover.
Meanwhile, Guliyev ran his 3rd high quality 200m vs international competition, in a week, and still beat Lemaitre.
For whatever reason, Lemaitre peaked at the age of 21.
That was in 2011.
2012 was his last good season.
Since then he's had a couple of good races here and there, but has mostly been a disappointment.
He can peak for one championship race per season, and that's it.
It's best not to have any expectations for him, and instead focus on Guliyev, Tortu, Gemili, Volko, and Hortelano.
All are better sprinters than Lemaitre these days.
I agree that he "was" carrying the weight of the world at one time but that was several years ago, there are more than a few whites running fast times and will eventually run faster than he did. He is physically gifted for sprinting( I wish) but it appears to the outsider that he is mentally weak. No one but his family, coach and himself actually know for sure. Could be he is satisfied with his accomplishments and like MM said he is ready to just be a very good club runner.
Personally I would love to see him stretch out to the 400m to see if he could do well at that distance. My old sprint coach told me that the worst day in a sprinters life is when he finds out he is best at the 400m lol thankfully I sucked badly at anything further than 200m.
He's been at that peak for a major meet form for years, it seems like there has been a slow diminishing level of racing form through the rest of the season since 12', I suspect he will never get world class form at the 100 meters again, but because the 200 extracts less of a toll on his legs and demands less pure speed he could still be in the mix for a major medal until Tokyo.For whatever reason, Lemaitre peaked at the age of 21.
That was in 2011.
2012 was his last good season.
Since then he's had a couple of good races here and there, but has mostly been a disappointment.
He can peak for one championship race per season, and that's it.
It's best not to have any expectations for him, and instead focus on Guliyev, Tortu, Gemili, Volko, and Hortelano.
All are better sprinters than Lemaitre these days.
Fair enough Guliyev is obviously better than him at this point, but both Gemili and Hortelano have had injuries, I wouldn't rate them as obvious favorites over a healthy Lemaitre in the 200. When you throw in the rest of the world Lemaitre would need a near miracle major final to medal again, but I contend if he is healthy that he should be able to final in a major off of recent form.Tortu, Gemili, Guliyev, Nascimento, Reus, Volko, Stromsik, Smelyk, Tsakonas, Kilty, and Hortelano are all white Europeans that have run faster than Lemaitre over the past 3 seasons.
That's how far he has fallen.
He might be able to beat most of them in a one-time 200m, but if they had to race 5 or 6 times in the course of a season, I suspect Lemaitre would be about #5 in the 200m amongst this group. I would take Tortu, Gemili, Guliyev, and Hortelano over him.