800ftw. wrote:
3hr-marathoner wrote:The 800m WR may be the weakest record on the books at a major distance. For one thing it was set by David Rudisha leading wire to wire. It almost certainly would be faster if he'd had a rabbit through 600m. There is also a very significant slow-down between between 400m and 800m pace. I could see a future generation of 800m runners taking huge chunks off that record and putting the rate of improvement since the 80s more in line with other distances.
Almost entirely incorrect.
The fact that the record has only been improved incrementally over the last 20 years since Kipketer shows exactly what it is: an extremely tough record. The 800m is a popular event and has had no shortage of talent from all over the world partaking. Maybe more than all the other events.
Rudisha is a once in a generation talent like Bolt. No doubt he could run ~1:40.5 in the right race in 2012, but that is like saying the 100m record is weak because Bolt took it down to 9.58 in a championship after rounds.
and showboating to boot. Bolt could have run faster that day you know but I'm not sure what this has to do with the 800m.
Actually, I don't follow your logic at all. Why do incremental improvements suggest that a record is tough? Improving one's own record by small increments only suggests that the athlete is already near their potential when they start breaking WRs and it may be that Kipketer and Rudisha were similar talents.
Also, can you back up the "no shortage of talent" claim? I'm not saying it's wrong but it surprised me a little. Not to knock the 800m (I'm a fan of the distance) but it's sandwiched between the relatively more prestigious 400m sprint and the 1500m/mile so I had the impression that a lot of the would-be top talent for the distance was siphoned off by those events. For instance, has a 43.x 400m runner ever taken a serious shot at the 800m?