Originally posted by TimberWolf
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Big strong athletes better than small weak ones
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Originally posted by TimberWolf View PostThe fastest land animal is the cheetah, which is pretty light.
You must not confuse intra-population comparisons with inter-population comparisons. Otherwise you will come up with true but unhelpful observations, like the negative correlation between shoe size and longevity: it looks like a foot difference but really it's a gender difference.Comment
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Originally posted by Mich the Tester View PostThe researcher chappy says “In antiquity, body weights were roughly 70 per cent less than they are today,”
Were the Athenians and Romans really that small? Little two foot tall guys weighing 4 stone?
I'll tell you what; a two foot tall man running a 14 second 100 metres would be, inch for inch, phenomenal. Think what a 6 ft Athenian could have done!
I think not; did he actually say 17 percent and the journalist didn’t care to think about what he’d written down?The court heard Darren Upton had written a letter to Judge Sally Cahill QC saying he wasn’t “a typical inmate of prison”.
But the judge said: “That simply demonstrates your arrogance continues. You are typical. Inmates of prison are people who are dishonest. You are a thoroughly dishonestly man motivated by your own selfish greed.”Comment
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Originally posted by expat View PostA cheetah is faster than a lion, say, but the question here is, is a bigger cheetah faster than a smaller cheetah, and a bigger lion faster than a smaller lion?
You must not confuse intra-population comparisons with inter-population comparisons. Otherwise you will come up with true but unhelpful observations, like the negative correlation between shoe size and longevity: it looks like a foot difference but really it's a gender difference.Comment
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Originally posted by Mich the Tester View PostThe researcher chappy says “In antiquity, body weights were roughly 70 per cent less than they are today,”
Were the Athenians and Romans really that small? Little two foot tall guys weighing 4 stone?
I'll tell you what; a two foot tall man running a 14 second 100 metres would be, inch for inch, phenomenal. Think what a 6 ft Athenian could have done!
I think not; did he actually say 17 percent and the journalist didn’t care to think about what he’d written down?
Which is bodies they've dug up, and measured.Insanity: repeating the same actions, but expecting different results.
threadeds website, and here's my blog.Comment
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Originally posted by Mich the Tester View PostBelieve it or not, for sports scientists it’s quite interesting, although perhaps the conclusion appears obvious to others; it confirms something I’ve thought for a long time. Look at the sprint events; lots of people suggest that it’s always going to be black athletes winning, because mostly black athletes have won the 100 since the war; all sorts of theories abound as to the genetic reasons for this. What people appear to have missed though is that it’s nearly always the tallest athlete who wins the race; Bolt, Bailey, Christie, Lewis and Wells were all 6ft+ and the tallest men in the race. So when scouting for the sprinters of the future, perhaps sports coaches should take a bit more notice of height and care a little less about ´race´. Tall runners have long legs and their skeletons offer plenty of room for developing large muscles without the leg muscles getting in each others´ way. The german hurdler Florian Swarthoff, who rivalled Colin Jackson as the best of his time, was a very tall man who ran 13.05 for the 110 hurdles. His 10.57 PB for the 100m would not indicate an ability to run a time like that over hurdles; the problem for a tall sprinter is coordination; sort out the coordination and he’ll gain metres; that’s what happened with Usain Bolt; he sorted his coordination out and improved by half a second in a couple of years.
Obviously there’ll always be exceptions, but a good big guy will usually beat a good little guy.Comment
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Originally posted by Bunk View PostI thought that most sprinters were average height but powerfully built for explosive acceleration. Usain Bolt is the exception; nobody thought he would make a good sprinter because of his height. He usually doesn't start that well but his top speed is so much faster than everyone else that by about half way he's way out in the lead.Insanity: repeating the same actions, but expecting different results.
threadeds website, and here's my blog.Comment
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Originally posted by threaded View PostI a 'high heels / stilleto' sprint race on ?ITN? news this morning. The winner was the tallest.Comment
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Originally posted by Bunk View PostI thought that most sprinters were average height but powerfully built for explosive acceleration. Usain Bolt is the exception; nobody thought he would make a good sprinter because of his height. He usually doesn't start that well but his top speed is so much faster than everyone else that by about half way he's way out in the lead.
As for Bolt, his problem waas similar to that of Christie; coordination at the start of a race. Christie had a tendency to push his body from side to side in the first few paces, losing time doing so. Bolt struggled for a while to coordinate the power from his long legs and went all over the place for the first 20m; once Christie got all his strength going in the right direction he started winning and could take advantage of his long strides; same goes for Bolt; his big improvement came from coordination, perhas partly through well considered training, but also physical maturity. Remember that 100m is actually won and lost in the second half of the race when the runners actually start to slow down a little; you can only hold absolute top speed for 1 or 2 seconds; the guy who's able to hold his speed best is the winner, and if the tall guys are there or thereabouots at 60m they'll tend to hold on to their speed well as their long paces make it easier; the little guys have to keep powering through while the tall guys use long paces and momentum to slow down less than the others.Last edited by Mich the Tester; 18 July 2009, 10:52.And what exactly is wrong with an "ad hominem" argument? Dodgy Agent, 16-5-2014Comment
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