Basically a worse version of this
na, come on, both videos are great.
but what i really like more in the video you have posted is the clock and that the runners can be watched the whole time. excellent, slightly negative splits.
Who knows when they did this but it would have been fun if they had gotten into the new stadium for it
Kinda slow for a 3:55 guy
JoggyHobber wrote:
Kinda slow for a 3:55 guy
fast for the #2 returning guy in cross
https://www.strava.com/activities/3569212839Labenthraub wrote:
Who knows when they did this but it would have been fun if they had gotten into the new stadium for it
Those guys have underdeveloped speed relatively to their ability at mile and 5000m. That's why they're working at it.
I think Cooper is a serious threat to win next year, don't think Mantz and Kemboi can just run away from him and nobody has better speed.
JoggyHobber wrote:
Kinda slow for a 3:55 guy
Rupp's pr is 1:50.00.
Probably showed 10 seconds total of the run. NBC quality for sure.
vespy wrote:
JoggyHobber wrote:
Kinda slow for a 3:55 guy
Rupp's pr is 1:50.00.
Rupp ran 1:49i.
And, his PR is his PR, you are right. But there was a race some years ago when Rupp was going for 1:46. But the meet got canceled. Of course.m, they weren’t going to go out their way to find another 800
I have high hopes for CT for the remainder of his college career and beyond. He’s a serious contender for NCAA titles and US teams in the future.
Normal dude runs fast af.
they are going to keep making workout videos for sure. Might as well with nothing going on.
JoggyHobber wrote:
Kinda slow for a 3:55 guy
Kinda dead on actually.
1500 time = 2 x 800 time
Ben Thomas is still one of the most under-rated coaches in the NCAA.
Cooper Teare might be the most talented runner we have had in the US in a long time. He is training at a very sensible level with lots of room to improve and also still looks like he could pass for a sophomore in high school (not a bad thing when you can already run 13:32).
I question some of the other big talents in the US long term and the "room" for improvement that they will have as they continue to mature into the post collegiate ranks: Some of our top high school athletes over the last decade already looked like they had physically matured and would not see much more physical development just as a natural progression of getting older and stronger (case in point Alan Webb... although he still was able to run the fastest mile we have seen since).
Then there are those high school talents who have poor mechanics, and you wonder if they will be able to handle the training necessary to be at a world class level... here I would cite someone like Drew Hunter, who is just coming off a stress fracture. I can not pin it exactly, but he seems to have a hitch in his stride and I have always suspected he would have trouble long term with the training load necessary to be world class (I welcome a rebuttal from the Tinman support group on this point).
Finally, there are the athletes who are already training at an elite level in high school/early college OR more commonly doing what I would call "impossible long term training" (unless doped) that you can only get away with in your teenage years when hormones are raging and you can go hard almost every single day (think Jim Ryun for example). I think a lot of the top high school runners recently have had coaches who push them to the well in workouts way too frequently, and they justify it by telling people that they are giving them room to improve by "only having them running 50-60 miles per week"... Nico Young is a perfect example of this, and if you look at the workouts his coach has posted recently, it is pretty clear he is trying to squeeze every bit of performance he can out of his guys while staying within a moderate overall training volume... I mean he has multiple freshman running 4:20 miles (how else do you accomplish that kinda development that quickly unless there is an over-abundance of intensity that tends to limit long term development??)
I do not want it to get twisted, I want the best for all the young talented runners out there, and I hope people like Drew Hunter and Nico Young prove me dead wrong... I am just so impressed with Cooper Tear and feel like he does not get the buzz that he deserves.
I also have a pet peeve with some of these high school power houses currently acting like they are not training their athletes "too hard" because they are only running 50-60 miles per week. As Canova says, "what is mileage?" Mileage is not everything, and I think a runner with a decent mileage background in high school can actually be a good thing. I would much rather take a kid coached under a philosophy similar to Tinman's where workouts are controlled and the athlete arrives able to handle larger work volumes both as weekly mileage and workout volumes than a kid who is busting out run til you puke intervals twice a week.
And who do currently or who have you coached? *bingo
It's east to have an opinion and ridicule athletes or coaches you know nothing about.
Ben Crawford is making some great youtubes
1:49.84 - 800m Freshmen National Record - Cooper Lutkenhaus (check this kick out!!)
Men who run twice a day and the women who love/put up with them
Jakob on Oly 1500- “Walk in the park if I don’t get injured or sick”
VALBY has graduated (w/ honors) from Florida, will she go to grad school??
Emma Coburn to miss Olympic Trials after breaking ankle in Suzhou