19-year-old Max Dehning 🇩🇪 has gone out to a stunning 90.20m in the men's Javelin Throw at the German Winter Champs in Halle!
He becomes the youngest man ever to surpass the 90 metres barrier in the Javelin, shattering his PB of 79.11m from last year. pic.twitter.com/AQkCT9vg4T
Thought exercise, host an official meet a day or two before a major hurricane comes into the US coast with all the best javelin throwers. Have it aimed for max tailwind, what is the WR?
Thought exercise, host an official meet a day or two before a major hurricane comes into the US coast with all the best javelin throwers. Have it aimed for max tailwind, what is the WR?
Thought exercise, host an official meet a day or two before a major hurricane comes into the US coast with all the best javelin throwers. Have it aimed for max tailwind, what is the WR?
Thought exercise, host an official meet a day or two before a major hurricane comes into the US coast with all the best javelin throwers. Have it aimed for max tailwind, what is the WR?
But if the hurricane carried away all the best throwers, who will compete at the meet?
Based on the ambiguous comments from a couple people on this thread it would seem that the furthest throws come with headwind javelins during a headwind event? I'd appreciate someone chiming in with some basic knowledge on this. I can kind of see the physics working out that way - a headwind with a properly weight javelin makes it fly straighter and with less oblong wind resistance(?)