0.25 is about 2.5% of his 100m performance, of course.
Centro is further than that from the world 1500 lead.
0.25 is about 2.5% of his 100m performance, of course.
Centro is further than that from the world 1500 lead.
Ho Hum wrote:
PrZ wrote:To what citizens is over a quarter of a second in a 100 not a lot? I guess if you're Russian you can always dope your way down
If only Russians would emulate American 100m runners, the absolute pinnacle of cleanliness.
😂😂😂
Americans are lecturing the world about doping in the sprints now.
Wake me when "St John 162" can name an Olympic sprint final NOT affected by US doping.
😂😂😂
good try guy wrote:
Ho Hum wrote:If only Russians would emulate American 100m runners, the absolute pinnacle of cleanliness.
😂😂😂
Americans are lecturing the world about doping in the sprints now.
Wake me when "St John 162" can name an Olympic sprint final NOT affected by US doping.
😂😂😂
Why are you dragging me into a drug conversation? I sad nothing about drugs. PrZ mentioned drugs.
All I said and continue to contend is that to an average person 0.27 seconds is a very very short amount of time. The writer was wrong by objective T&F standards. As best as I can figure out the piece was a promotional story about The Freeze aimed at the general public and meant to indicate that The Freeze was an actual T&F athlete.
Even if the writer said he Freeze failed to reach the OT standard by 2.7 % the fan in the stand would think that is a narrow margin.
TVToni's blog
So let’s not disparage a costume-wearing groundskeeper with fine sprinting form, or a new athletics venture trying out innovative ideas in an attempt to re-animate a moribund sport that has been ill-served by its anachronistic presentation model and crushed by its corrupt officials.
https://tonireavis.com/2017/07/13/tracktown-freeze-out/#more-17611
Mr. Freeze Schwartzenaeggar wrote:
He is a necessary evil. Like Mr. Freeze in Batman. He actually generates attention for our sport.
+1 This guy is classic, a real-life Kick-a$$.