Salvitore Stitchmo wrote:
Troothsayer wrote:
The issue is not that I don’t comprehend. It is that you are playing semantics games. You are using the language in a manner which is not typical and therefore it is misleading and inaccurate. NONE of you who have ever posted here is capable of teaching me about the language, so check yourself. If you want to say peak Kipketer was better than peak Rudisha, you may have that argument. But please do not change the meaning of words to serve an opinion which is not clearly very sound anyway.
Well clearly you don't because you are basically the only one here that doesn't appear to understand the concept of great vs best (go through and read these posts). There are no semantic games because there doesn't need to be so nice try sounding smart but that wasn't the right way to describe it.
But that's okay because I know you don't really get the language and I know that because you wrote this,
"NONE of you who have ever posted here is capable of teaching me about the language, so check yourself"
Which is full of grammatical errors (I hate being the grammar guy but it's so ironic and funny you spoke "language" in a sentence where you got it all messed up).
If you could read, a number of us actually said/agreed/implied/had the opinion that peak Kipketer was better than peak Rudisha which is the entire concept of saying someone is "best" - and when you are talking about the top two guys in the event ever, that means best as in best of everyone that ever ran the event.
Mate, just give this up. You're not smart enough to have this argument. I mean the mere fact you had a tantrum about "knowing the language" and in the midst of communicating it you f-ed your language up, gives you zero credibility now so do yourself a favor and just stay quiet. Cheers.
If you are of the view that peak Kipketer was better than peak Rudisha (despite not being as fast) and was therefore the "best", then how can Rudisha be the "greatest" if he is not also the "best"? Apart from how those terms are being used, it is purely speculative that Kipketer would have been better than Rudisha if they had met - and this while we know that Rudisha had the faster times, plus superior Olympic achievements. Setting aside word definitions, that had Kipketer inhabited the same competitive universe as Rudisha the claim that he might have been faster, while being possible, is incapable of proof. As interesting as the debate is it doesn't really allow for a "correct" answer.