If this is your first visit, be sure to
check out the FAQ. You may have to register
before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages,
select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below.
I think Marlow got it right -- after Fam's 13:11 is Kennedy's fastest on US soil -- 13:12.14, Eugene 1996 (which by the way ranks as #15 on BK's career list).
I think Marlow got it right -- after Fam's 13:11 is Kennedy's fastest on US soil -- 13:12.14, Eugene 1996 (which by the way ranks as #15 on BK's career list).
Marlow is a genius... I never would have come up with that...
well i thought it said in mensjournal this month (which fam was in) that he ran the 2nd fastest ever on american soil, by an american. maybe read wrong or maybe they got it wrong.
Well, because of the way you phrased the question, a good lawyer could craft a plausible case for the answer to be Juan Luis Barrios, since he ran 13:11.37 in the same race as Fam, and he could be classified as an American, in the sense that he is a person of the Americas or America, the lands comprising the two continents of the Western Hemisphere, i.e., North America and South America. However, Marlow's answer is probably what the questioner had in mind in posing the inquiry.
A modest proposal (to gh): One reasonably easy way to stimulate some additional interest in US performers in US meets would be to make this "record" category a bit more prominent...
A modest proposal (to gh): One reasonably easy way to stimulate some additional interest in US performers in US meets would be to make this "record" category a bit more prominent...
That might work in some events. But in others (the women's 100 and the men's 200 come quickly to mind) it wouldn't make any difference.
Comment