...but how many pulled the double 420 and were lit during one of those efforts? I bet no more than 1 or 2 tops.
How many made top 100 in the 800, 1600, and 3200?
Triple Dog Dare wrote:
How many made top 100 in the 800, 1600, and 3200?
How many made all three in one day?
Any?
Dare accepted wrote:
Triple Dog Dare wrote:How many made top 100 in the 800, 1600, and 3200?
How many made all three in one day?
Any?
I'm sure some letsrun basement dweller can put together that list... Anyone??????
This just shows us how bad college coaching is now and that people are burned out far too quickly.
Less than 300 runners broke 4:10 indoors this year in D1.
amazing stat. Good depth.
I feel slower and older.
Baconn wrote:
This just shows us how bad college coaching is now and that people are burned out far too quickly.
Less than 300 runners broke 4:10 indoors this year in D1.
True. Back in the 90s it seemed most runners saw huge improvements in college. Guys that didn't break 9 were breaking 14 their freshman year.
A lot of these hs runners drop track in college or are burned out and don't train as hard. Some get injured from the college training. But the fact is that there is huge depth on the hs level (600 hs runners breaking 4:18 every year now) and not nearly as much on the college level. The lack of distance scholarships is probably the biggest reason for that. Most college coaches do improve their athletes who try.
Jakob Ingebrigtsen has a 1989 Ferrari 348 GTB and he's just put in paperwork to upgrade it
Strava thinks the London Marathon times improved 12 minutes last year thanks to supershoes
Is there a rule against attaching a helium balloon to yourself while running a road race?
Clayton Murphy is giving some great insight into his training.
NAU women have no excuse - they should win it all at 2024 NCAA XC
Mark Coogan says that if you could only do 3 workouts as a 1500m runner you should do these
2024 College Track & Field Open Coaching Positions Discussion