Yes Bailey let down the United States on live TV and embarrassed America and our fighting LGBTs, women, and men in Afghanistan, Iraq, and U.S. Occupied Palestine.
Yes Bailey let down the United States on live TV and embarrassed America and our fighting LGBTs, women, and men in Afghanistan, Iraq, and U.S. Occupied Palestine.
HSI and John Smith have ruined Ryan Bailey. Proves L.A. SUCKS.
If Ryan Bailey were on PEDs he would've won lol
Watching the 4x100 rekindled some of my sprint flames and made me consider training to make the team in 2016.
This is exactly what i wanted to do looool
US Men Sprints sucks
Bailey did not blow it.Outrunning Usain Bolt is no easy task.Even a fit Tyson Gay could not beat a fit Usain Bolt. Ryan Bailey is a good sprinter at sub 9.9 at only 23 years old. He will surely get faster if he continues training and refines his technique,he could be the next great sprinter,maybe even as good as Tyson,maybe even better when he peaks.
You know what you have to do wrote:
USATF has 12 months to reorganize and beat Bolt and Jamaica at IAAF 2013 WC Moscow.
The OP does exactly what the Repos do all the time, take their opponents greatest strengths and pronounce them their greatest weaknesses. Just as Obama, the Centrist, moderate and conceder on all things, is proclaimed a Socialist, so are Ryan Bailey and the 4x1 team, the greatest in U.S. history, proclaimed failures.
Sprint.geezer wrote:
Watching the 4x100 rekindled some of my sprint flames and made me consider training to make the team in 2016.
Me too man, me too.
LOL
Yea, Bailey blew it. The guy that didn't make the 100m final, hasn't run under 9.8.
Wait what? Yohan Blake wouldn't have beaten Bolt on that straightaway getting the handoff 5 meters quicker...
You know what you have to do wrote:
USATF has 12 months to reorganize and beat Bolt and Jamaica at IAAF 2013 WC Moscow.
This ranks as one of the dumbest things uttered on Letsrun---and that is saying something.
1) Of course the OP was a troll post (0/10, btw)--lighten up, people.
2) In all seriousness: on multiple occasions I've put the *slowest* of my four best sprinters on the anchor of the 4x100, and the *fastest* on leadoff.
Reasoning: a) The leadoff runner actually carries the baton the longest distance of anyone on the squad, and the anchor runner the shortest. b) Sometimes leading off with your best (and getting an initial lead) puts pressure on/distracts other teams, and they screw up their passes.
Sometimes these moves worked out, in terms of messing up other teams; *usually* they worked out, in terms of maximizing my own team's potential (as long as my anchor runner had a clear idea of her/his role).