BRIGHT ON Q
Well-known member
- Jul 5, 2003
- 9,248
Amazing feat and 20 seconds under as well.
Amazing feat
Compelling viewing and sport at its finest with the very best in the world running as pacemakers and working as a team to make it happen.
The scenes at the end were magical as athletes who would normally be rivals were united in the celebrations and being part of something truly extraordinary.
A truly great sporting moment in our lifetimes.
This. Seen a lot of comments saying it wasn’t ‘genuine’ due to the lasers, pacers etc........I don’t care. It’s still a truly remarkable piece of running up there with Bannister’s sub 4 - the raw pace, the splits (every km between 2.48 and 2.52 I think) and how he looked at the end (like he’d been out for a Sunday jog). Amazing.
This. Seen a lot of comments saying it wasn’t ‘genuine’ due to the lasers, pacers etc........I don’t care. It’s still a truly remarkable piece of running up there with Bannister’s sub 4 - the raw pace, the splits (every km between 2.48 and 2.52 I think) and how he looked at the end (like he’d been out for a Sunday jog). Amazing.
Fantastic achievement and proves it can be done but I hope we don’t see this contrived event happening more and more for other shorter distances where science and technology could be used to smash other genuine competitive records, eg 1500m
did the pace setters run the whole distance too, or have a couple of teams?
Being totally pedantic, there is no world record for the marathon, merely the world's fastest time. This is because there is no circuit uniformity as there is for other events run over a uniformly flat track. Marathons are run over a set distance but with individual undulations, so none are the same,.
Fantastic achievement and proves it can be done but I hope we don’t see this contrived event happening more and more for other shorter distances where science and technology could be used to smash other genuine competitive records, eg 1500m
I am campaigning to have Bannister's time expunged from the records because of the use of pacemakers. They also delayed the race to benefit from the wind dropping and waited for near ideal conditions. It was an assisted time and as such, should not have been allowed. The first man to break the 4 minute barrier should have been John Landy, who, only a short time after Bannister and in an unassisted race, ran 3:58:00 smashing the previous time and going on to hold the record for three years.
( I am still awaiting a reply from the IAAF )