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Friday, August 16, 2013
The ten second barrier
Pei Meng Zhang -- 10.00 in the 100m in the semis at the IAAF World Championships 2013. Same time as Christophe Lemaitre, who was allowed to advance ahead of Zhang. At 6"1 190 Zhang is pretty big for a sprinter. With his skinny upper body I'm guessing he's clean ;-)
Given the wind reading Zhang has the best performance yet for an Asian, slightly ahead of Koji Ito (also 10.00, 1998). On the world all-time list this is around 100th best among all individuals. Lemaitre is the fastest European, with PR 9.92 (about 35th best). He's a very unusual 6"4 160 (at least according to Wikipedia).
Labels:
100m,
athletics,
China,
physical training
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12 comments:
Adjust for quickness of track, and Marian Woronin's 10.00 in 1984, or Valery Borzov's 10.07 in 1972, were certainly faster than Lemaitre has run, and lead him in the non-black division.
The population of Jamaica is less than 3mm, but they have 4 of the top 5 100m times. I would assume that if global nutrition improves we can see continued progress on these sprints ...
I looked up "Peiming Zhang" but found nothing. Turns out his name is Peim*e*ng Zhang not Peim*i*ng Zhang, with the "e" in place of the "i". Would be great if you could make the correction, Steve. Thanks!
Oops, thanks for catching that. I think it's actually misspelled on the IAAF site. To make things worse, there's a string theorist named Peiming :-)
How much faster would Lemaitre or Zhang be if they were on the Jamaican juice?
Perhaps times aren't comparable, but Armin Hary ran 10.0 in 1960.
Lemaitre ran an actual 9.92 in 2011, track "adjustments" for other sprinters be damned. Lemaitre was undoubtedly advanced over Zhang due to his Silver and Bronze medals earned at the 2011 World Championship in Daegu.
This indicates Lemaitre finished ahead by .009s http://english.cntv.cn/program/sportsscene/20130813/101687.shtml
Also includes a video.
As long as the higher quality food, for Benin or Togo, also has the "special sauce" from Jamaica.
I think improved nutrition has reached its point of maximum return. Jamaican sprinters are starting to reach for illegal drugs to enhance their times.
http://news.sky.com/story/1115711/five-jamaican-athletes-fail-drug-tests
Jamaican sprinters are almost certainly all descended at least in part from a very limited number of West African tribes: the Akan, Igbo, Fon, and Kongo peoples.
Jamaican coaches scout for talented runners from a very young age to sign them up for contracts and training and the same thing is happening in Ghana, Nigeria, Cameroon, and the Congo. It's way beyond merely better nutrition now and the same thing is happening among the East African tribes for long-distance runners. All the top male and female distance runners are recruited and trained at a young age from Kenyans and the occasional Ethiopian from tribes originating in the 7000 foot highlands of the Great Rift Valley.
Whites still mange to be somewhat competitive in middle distance events.
Hand timing, add 0.24 used to be the rule of thumb.
The 17 year old Japanese sprinter Yoshihide Kiryu ran 10.01 (+.9) this year which is a World Junior record (which were set by men one year older). If he breaks the 10 second barrier this year or next he will be the youngest person to go sub 10 (breaking Yohan Blake's age record). He already owns the world Youth record for the 100m (10.19) breaking his own record set earlier this year.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yoshihide_Kiryu
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lcUDtvn4sx4
Personally, I think just about all world class sprinters are on drugs nowadays. I think Kiryu can run faster because if you look at his race, he did not have much leg lift in the last 40 meters. This is usually because of a lack of strength (upper, mid and lower body). As he gets older and stronger, he should be able to run relaxed and have higher leg lift in the last half of the race and thus run much faster.
I personally think Chinese sprinters are much more gifted than Japanese simply because Chinese sprinters seem to have longer legs to torso ratio.
Non-black sprinters often set their best times while still young and then fail to develop. Shirvington, Lemaitre ... maybe Kiryu and Gemili will join that list.
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