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| 800 Meters Mad Scientist |
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It would be so cool to see an elite run a first lap in 52... well behind the leaders... then bust a 49.xx second lap to smoke everyone. Not sure if it's physiologically possible (or if the way the 800 goes down would prevent it) but it would sure be fun to see some random flying past everyone on the back straightaway of the second lap for the come-from-behind victory. |
| casual commentary |
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http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5LHid-nC45k the closest you'll get at the top ranks. |
| A Duck |
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Rudisha could do it. |
| den bosch |
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That's like saying why don't more marathoners start out in 64... well behind the leaders at 62:00... then bust out a 60:xx to smoke everybody. That's an unnecessarily difficult way to win. |
| look here |
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| Sammy plays with yo Mammy |
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Negative splitting is inefficient. |
| toro |
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Here is Kipketer in positive splits: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H_C5SDNRyDw 48/53 - 1:41 And Kipketer in negative splits: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=APWABpNlStE 53/52 - 1:45 |
| ventolin^3 |
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the main ( only ) argument in favour is the atp-cpk system ( commonly quoted as "use it or lose it" in 1st coupla 100m ) however, atp-cpk regenerates & is only exhausted in a flat out sprint ( 100m race ) no one has offered a paper where it doesn't show that if you don't go flat out 1st coupla 100m ( which you don't in an 800m ), that you don't exhaust it all & in fact may regenerate some as well for final coupla 100m the answer to the physiology/biochem of +ve/-ve splits will come from someone doing this research |
| afasdfasdf |
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For most runners, it just doesn't work as well as a 2-3 sec positive split. Empirical results have illustrated it quite well. |
| ventolin^3 |
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anyhows, leaving aside biology, looking at physics/math, lets see what that yields if an elite goes chasing a time in tt with slower 1st lap than usual lets'say 51.0 opener now, he shoud have wabbit from 150 - 400, offering 1s/lap drafting, or 0.625s advantage in reality, he has put in 51.625s "effort" 2nd lap is flying ( & i find 0.75s is good number for that compared to open 400 from relay analysis ) 51.625 effort for 2nd lap shoud therefore be ~ 51.625 - 0.75 = 50.875 therefore, the end time for even effort from gun -> tape for 51.0 to bell, with wabbit 150 - 400 is ~ 51.0 + 50.875 = 1'41.87 with error involved, i'd just call it running even splits for the 2 laps |
| ventolin^3 |
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ryun's splits :
were by "accident" rather than design http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rkTPCspfwCI ill & on top that a 1'50 in his legs from just 3 hours before obviously, healthy & rested ( no prelim ), he wouda gone helluva lot quicker than 1'44.4 ( 1'44.9y ) i've read it was primitive semi-synthetic track made by grasstex ( tyre shavings + some detritus combo, to allow racing in rain ( "all-weather" track ), rather than any conscious effort to make a faster track ) offer him 1s compared to '70s synthetic ( instead of 2s for normal dirt ) + 1s for not being ill/1'50 prelim & you gotta believe that was low-1'42 at worst he was much stronger/faster in '67 when he smashed his 1500pb by 2.5s ( & that was shit race, jogging for 300m before taking off in 95F ) that's a reason i reckon high/mid-1'40 shape in '67 |
| sub 1:42 |
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Almost nobody can run 1:41.xx period. While it certainly would be cool to see someone run sub 1:42 while negative splitting, I'm not really surprised that it never happens. |
| ummmmmmmmm no |
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Ummm...actually no. Wrong on both counts. 1) An even split works best. 2) You are going to have to show "empirical results" to claim them. And no, a few non-randomly selected data points do not constitute empirical results. |
| Sammy plays with yo Mammy |
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Are you suggesting that the anaerobic alactic fuel stores replenish DURING an 800? It's hard to tell based on your triple negative sentence there. |
| Funny to Hear |
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Interesting to listen to the commentary on that video. "He's got one Kenyan..." as if these are not individuals but rather the Kenyan robots. Similar to many Americans' attitudes today in looking at marathon runners. There are a bunch of individuals and there are the Kenyans. |
| Too much |
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would be cool but it is very very very likely not possible physically/physiologically. If it were, people would be doing it. Ask any top 800 guy and they will tell you it cant be done. |
| Any way you want it |
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Apart from the fact that Rudisha just neg split at 52/50 at altitude. |
| elton |
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This is ridiculously bad writing. I'm not even taking issue with the content of the statement as it's just about impossible to parse. |
| dean moriarty |
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Indeed, and Wottle ran even splits - 26.x for every 200. |
| pr100 |
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Ummm...actually no. Wrong on both counts. 1) An even split works best. 2) You are going to have to show "empirical results" to claim them. And no, a few non-randomly selected data points do not constitute empirical results.[/quote] In the 800m most (all?) WR runs have come off a positive splits - it's not a few randomly selected data points - it's the way it goes in fast 800m races. All of Rudisha's, Kipter's and Coe's WRs came from positive splits. |
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