ToughJ.Riggins said:
Bolt improved from 10.03 to 9.69 (it would have been a 9.55 if he doesn't let up) from just before his 21st birthday to just before his 22nd birthday. So lets see here- that's a 0.34 improvement or you could say a 0.48 improvement in one year- which is a bigger improvement than a 0.6 improvement in 200 meters when you are only 19. I realize he didn't run a lot of 100 meter races before 2007, but come on a 0.48 improvement? Something like improving your start wouldn't take off 0.48.
Gotta disagree. Just because he ran a 10.03 in his only (ever?) 100m race, doesn't necessarily mean he was a 10.03 guy. How do we know he didn't have a bad race? How do we know he didn't ease up at the end? How do we know he was 100% healthy?Did you know he crushed WallySpearmon (10.20) in that same race?And that Spearmon ran a legal 9.96 that season? If he spanked Spearmon by .17 in his only ever 100m,and Spearmon was a sub-10 guy, wouldn't it be reasonable to assume that 10.03 might not bereflective of his all-out speed?
If he had five 10.03's, or ten 10.00-10.10's, then dropped a 9.7, you'd have a point.. but one single solitary 10.03 doesn't really prove anything. How do we know we wouldn't havedropped a9.93 or 9.83 if he had actually ran it again withmore 100m-specific training?
I see so much Bolt in Guliyev. Being a 200m specialist for years helped him buildup so much endurance and stamina, that by the time he dropped down to 100m, it was a walk in the park. He was so strong, he was able to maintain his speed down the stretch and throwdown a 10.08 out of the blue.
It seems to me that Bolt may be the most gifted 100 meter sprinter of all time anyway, but lets face it Jamaica is doing basically nothing to stop PED use. The IAAF is going to have to up the ante on testing the Jamaicans because they aren't doing enough yet.
Gotta disagree again. That's pure mythology. WADA (The World Anti-Doping Agency) and the IAAF have
ALREADY adopted that same testing regimen for Jamaica'smost elite sprinters (22 of them in 2008) that the US Anti-Doping Pilot Program has for our elite. Jamaican's not being rigorously tested is a falsehood cooked up by the jealous Carl Lewis types, and Jamaica's competitors.
Powell and Boltare BY FAR,
THE MOST TESTED sprinters on the planet..bar none. Powell was tested
at least 13 times in 2008. Bolt was tested
at least 11 times. Winners get tested far more frequently than those who don't place. Since they win almost every time they run, they get tested almost every time they run as well.
WADA/IAAF JamaicaDrug Testinghttp://voices.washingtonpost.com/olympics/2008/08/iaaf_bolt_tested_at_least_11_t.html
In Tyson Gay's case, he promptlyvolunteered for the US Pilot Program without even knowing what the testing procedures entailed. You don't do that if there's even a hint that you might be dirty. The fact that he still runs 9.75's, 9.77's, and 19.58'sunder the scrutiny of the most stringentdrug testing policy in the world,proves that it can be done cleanly. And, if he can do it,why can't Bolt?
And if you are talking about Justin Gatlin "only" running a 4.42/ 4.45 40, I would say his 10 yard burst wasn't as good as a guy like Chris Johnson. Stan Zwinggi ran a 4.26 at a Texas A+M camp while still in H.S, but there's no way he beats Gatlin over 100 meters. Zwinggi has the 10-20 yard burst which is more important for football- McGuffie, Weddle, Wegher and Woodhead all run the 10 yard dash in the 1.4 second range.
Zwinggi's hand-times have always been all over the place. He had plenty of buzz leading up to his Pro Day, and could really haveput his name on the map with one of his alleged"4.18", "4.21", "4.25", "4.26" times. He ran a 4.47 with a "
stiff wind at his back". His teammate ran a 4.49 with the same stiff wind. Unless the teammate is a "4.18"/"4.26" guy also, I don't buy it. But that's all besides the point.
White short sprint specialists aren't competitive against the elite 100m black specialists. That goes from Morne Nagel on down. To inferthat a white sprinter's (Zwinggi) not beingable tooutrun Gatlin in the 100m is proof that a specific black sprinter (Johnson), with years of sprint-specific training, would never be able to outrun Gatlin, with historical times as a precedent, logically doesn't hold water.. reason being since a white sprinter has neverrun a sub-10, while several dozen black sprinters have done it, and have beaten Gatlin in the past.
The last thing I will say is that I think the British and American sprinters would be less inclined to use steroids with the extremely tough testing methods. We'll see if the times continue to slow up a bit- like they have been for the British or Americans not named Tyson Gay.
Again, I just don't know where you're getting this stuff, but that's patently false.Times aren't slowing down at all.In the 5 years leading up to 2008:
2003 - 4 U.S. guys went sub-10
2004 - 5
2005 - 3
2006 - 3
2007 - 3
2008 -
*7*.. Five of whomwere new to the sub-10 club.
On the female side:
2003 - 3 U.S. womenwent sub-11.05
2004 - 2
2005 - 2
2006 - 3
2007 - 7
2008 -
*10*
Edited by: ArizState03