ventolin^3 wrote:
those quirks shoud manifest in their 400 & 1500 as well, obviously to an extrapolated level compared to their 10k
I don't think that's necessarily true. I think Nick Symmonds' 800m ability would be quite well predicted off of his all-out 400m/1500m combination, but I see him as having a "fall-off" point at much over a mile.
I bet Jonathan Johnson would be the same. Since his 800m ability is superior to his 400m, it looks like he's getting stronger as the distance increases, so you'd probably get a quick 5k prediction (though we all know that wouldn't happen).
ventolin^3 wrote:
51/1'55 ->15'34
i woudn't expect a high-school kid's endurance to last anywhere close to 5k distance, so he woud get nowhere close but i'd expect the experienced, mature M guy to get close
Meaning there are other factors than just two numbers involved in determining what someone can run at a particular distance.
ventolin^3 wrote:
no
i've never mentioned ever about how anyone shoud improve
obviously, if one can somewhat maintain speed but improve endurance your times will improve - that is simply goal of training
However, it does imply that, while maintaining your top-end speed, when you improved your 800m ability you made a comparable (and predictable) improvement in the marathon, and vice versa.
ventolin^3 wrote:
your problem
if you can refute this : go ahead
http://users.erols.com/jimsue/running/racing/drafting.htmAnother researcher to study the benefits of drafting was Californian Chester R. Kyle (1979). His calculations suggest that at world-record mile pace, a runner running 2 m behind the lead runner would save about 1.66 seconds per lap, which generally confirms Pugh's estimations
So as you increase speed, in the neighborhood of WR mile velocity pace, does that go up or down (one effect from more/less time spent running, one from lower/higher velocity). I assume it would be similar for the 400m, so do you think MJ could have run 41.5 with a proper rabbit?
I'm sure you've posted it somewhere, but do you have a link to the formula? Or could you at least explain how it works (what degree polynomial)? Thanks.