Incorrect.
I met Al Howie a few times.
He would have asked you to button up if he were still with us, despite your long-running relationship with him.
I give the same advice.
Incorrect.
I met Al Howie a few times.
He would have asked you to button up if he were still with us, despite your long-running relationship with him.
I give the same advice.
Red flag: Do you just sit around thinking up phony handles? What other phony information are you posting?
Er... wrote:
Just to be clear, there isn't a single, specific aspect of the team's work that you're highlighting in your accusation of cheating. If you could please say in as simple a sentence as possible what, exactly, you believe they are doing wrong, that would be very helpful.
Bump
15 laps of a track, you will never find a runner who would give that up. If Dave still has 6 kms to go when Al’s record time passes, tell me you wouldn’t care. 6 kms every 24 hours would also put him hundreds of miles short of the record. Do you even WALK anywhere?
My advice is, come clean & apologize, many will forgive you, but probably not Al’s family. Your stealing the best memory they have of him.
You are completely and wholly delusional.
Enjoy the psychosis, probably a fun time.
If I called myself Wet Coast, that would be a delusion.
Wet Coast wrote:
Rolls into Manitoba....still only a single day out (I think)....so well below the 72-day pace of previous record.
One heck of a troll here jesseriley.
You should enter the troll Olympics, or write Donald Trump speeches.
http://athleticsillustrated.com/editorial/dave-proctor-continues-on-his-record-pace-run-across-canada/
Into Manitoba but only 45km today. His facebook post seems like his back trouble hasn't gone away and may be with him the rest of the way if he cant get it sorted out:
"We are into Manitoba! The day started at 4am to beat the heat and we crossed over the border for our 4th Province!
Dave has been having some rib pain and was feeling a bit dizzy, so it seemed to make most sense to take care of this right away, especially on such a hot day and we finished at about 45km for the day.
He was able to get a chiro appointment with the amazing Dr Gordon Rust in Brandon. Turns out Dave’s rib pain actually appears to be a herniated disk. Gordon was able to give a good amount of relief Dave is enjoying some rest and spending time in the water park watching the kids."
Tron wrote:
Into Manitoba but only 45km today. His facebook post seems like his back trouble hasn't gone away and may be with him the rest of the way if he cant get it sorted out:
Hmmm. Road camber might be a reason for the back issues. Running a long distance on a sideways slope is not the best. Taking the TransCan highway I don't see how he can avoid the camber. He could switch sides during the day to get some balance.
If he walks, he will finish. One can walk about 50 miles a day without harm.
Agree, switch sides.
“You are stealing the best memory they have of him” ??
Red flag: absence of empathy
What if Dave’s team created this jesseriley profile to get people focused on him and distract them from looking into the validity of Dave’s run?
Speaking of evidence, anyone can google “Mobility As Instinct,” my piece from 2015, long before that phony Robert Young or even these amateurs. I preach the slow buildup and consistency, hardly controversial unless you use it as evidence to compare with the fantasy numbers Proctor is hoping we won’t notice.
Even Al, great as he was, struggled through some 88-90 km days early on, though nothing like the ridiculously short stages that Proctor throws in, especially in the towns where actual people and cameras are watching. Same in “multiday races” with all those pesky competitors! He does really well in the middle of nowhere.
Not fooling us.
jesseriley wrote:
Not fooling us.
Neither are you, jesse.
Neither are you...
jesseriley wrote:
........ hoping we won’t notice. ....... Not fooling us.
Nice to see you are adopting the Spencer Hines use of the royal we. Your level of arrogance is improving. However, you are posting way too often and with too short posts to really be in DSH's league. Also, your posts are too scatter gun to be really effective. You need to concentrate on one victim at a time and reel them in slowly and then hit them with both barrels.
By the way, D Spencer Hines was the son of an admiral and served in the US Navy. His service lacked distinction. Here is what one of his fellow officers said of him as he was leaving the service
" D Spencer Hines is one of the most arrogant jackasses to ever breath and walk upon the face of earth. He hadn't a clue what leadership was all about, and in the face of intelligence evaluation, he would always ask for a point paper when one's analysis varied from his - and that was often the case.
"A towering man, of bulk and arrogance, this red headed barbarian is not worth the grey hairs many of your constituents seem to be letting themselves in for.
"He is his father's son, but nothing like his father, but rather, more a quasi-nautical south seas jester at this stage in life whose open sores apparently continue to ooze and your group are the swabs being used to absorb all that ails this sick man during his transition to senior citizenship!"
So, as you can see, you are following in his footsteps very successfully, keep up the good work. I am sure many who read this thread can identify with the previous paragraph, just substitute 'Al's team member' for 'father's son'.
Bekele would do this in under 50 days
Some frustration coming from Dave today. At 62km on the live video he said he wanted to get to Brandon but obviously something happened to make him stop. He said it was very hot but doubt that was the reason. Hopefully we get a reason why
https://www.instagram.com/p/BlYtqkIFmyF/?utm_source=ig_share_sheet&igshid=jhmm2tfy2fol
Tron wrote:
Some frustration coming from Dave today. At 62km on the live video he said he wanted to get to Brandon but obviously something happened to make him stop. He said it was very hot but doubt that was the reason. Hopefully we get a reason why
Mental fatigue has been the major issue with trying to run for 12+ hours per day, day, after day, after day. Both of the US Transcon (Sandy VI and Pete K) record setters suffered from that. Cinder Wolff who captained the Mother Ship for both of those record runs said, more or less, you wouldn't believe how hard this [day after day of running] is. Getting the runners up each morning was a major event. The body wants to stop and sleep and recover. Dave is going through exactly the same thing.
The major concern for him is his back. It is not worth a long-term injury to press on through. That is what Mimi Anderson tried to do. She ended up stopping after she eroded away her knee cartilage, and was starting to grind away the leg bones at the knee. Reluctantly she quit. According to a recent blog on her website, a year after her US Transcon attempt, she is no longer able to run. "I missed lacing up my trainers and being able to leave my front door and go for a run – I simply missed my running."
http://www.marvellousmimi.com/2018/03/29/learning-new-skills-its-not-all-plain-sailing/RIP: D3 All-American Frank Csorba - who ran 13:56 in March - dead
RENATO can you talk about the preparation of Emile Cairess 2:06
Running for Bowerman Track Club used to be cool now its embarrassing
Great interview with Steve Cram - says Jakob has no chance of WRs this year
Hats off to my dad. He just ran a 1:42 Half Marathon and turns 75 in 2 months!
2017 World 800 champ Pierre-Ambroise Bosse banned 1 year for whereabouts failures
2024 College Track & Field Open Coaching Positions Discussion