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The Wind & Oliver's 12.95 [split]

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  • #31
    Originally posted by sub13
    i am curious to know the difference in top hurdlers' pr vs. windy pr
    I'm pretty sure this stat has been posted in an old thread. I'll try and hunt it down.

    I have another question though. How much time do you think is lost by hitting hurdles? Liu seems to hit hurdles rarely whereas others will clip many, almost intentionally. Is hitting hurdles over rated with respect to losing speed?

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    • #32
      That guy sub13 thinks he knows it all!

      Marlow the way D.O. hurdles says the wind helped a lot. When he said he backed off at the end, that was not a clue to it disrupting his race it was a clue to the wind aiding him through the latter stages.
      A hurdlers waterloo is the ability to maintain and handle the last 3 or 4 hurdles at speed. When you can sit back and get a huge push in the late stages, that is heaven. All the things sub13 mentioned are eliminated. No rushing the hurdles, no push into the hurdles, just sit back get your steps in and ride the wave.

      The wind was legal, he RAN 12.95, and it was a great performance.

      Daisy, hitting hurdles is a huge variable in and of itself. It depends on how you hit a hurdle. Catch your trail leg and disaster. hit your trail kne on the way up and it is iffy. Drive your lead leg through the hurdle and it can go a thousand different ways. Sit on it on the way down and probably not bothered. Sit on it on top of your movement and you will be along for the ride while you competition runs away.

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      • #33
        Fun stats (it is my job) about the wind conditions for hurdles vs flat:

        110H that were 13.20 and better (a total of 683):
        wind aided: 11.1% (76)
        +1.6 to +2.0: 7.9% (54)
        +1.1 to +1.5: 11.6% (79)
        +0.6 to +1.0: 13.8% (94)
        +0.1 to +0.5: 19.3% (132)
        -0.4 to 0.0: 22.4% (153)
        -0.5 or less: 13.9% (95)

        100 that were 10.01 and better (a total of 712):
        wind aided: 36.0% (256)
        +1.6 to +2.0: 8.4% (60)
        +1.1 to +1.5: 10.0% (71)
        +0.6 to +1.0: 13.8% (98 )
        +0.1 to +0.5: 13.3% (95)
        -0.4 to 0.0: 11.7% (83)
        -0.5 or less: 6.9% (49)

        I'm not sure what it all means, and I did use pela's lists. I chose those cutoff times to get reasonable numbers that are nearly equal.

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        • #34
          Originally posted by Smoke
          Marlow the way D.O. hurdles says the wind helped a lot. When he said he backed off at the end, that was not a clue to it disrupting his race it was a clue to the wind aiding him through the latter stages.
          I would have to still disagree with you and will use sub13 (AJ - it's no secret) to back me up. 'Backing off' is what he'd have to do in August when he's ready to run sub-13. DO DID run sub-13 and is then, de facto, in primo condition, so the wind would not help. As I mentioned above, I think it's a net zero here, because while he did have to back off, the wind IS helping him run faster. As AJ said, whatever you run WITH wind is what you should run without it. We'll see if DO can strike while the iron's hot and get more sub-13s. It he does not, I would then tend to agree with you more, because I am indeed a believer in empirical evidence also.

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          • #35
            Originally posted by Marlow
            Someone like TT who relies on great stride length to run a fast 100, does not benefit as much (if at all) from a tailwind.
            The only two times TT has dipped under 13 seconds has been with a +1.5m/s and +1.7m/s wind.

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            • #36
              Originally posted by Jon
              Originally posted by Marlow
              Someone like TT who relies on great stride length to run a fast 100, does not benefit as much (if at all) from a tailwind.
              The only two times TT has dipped under 13 seconds has been with a +1.5m/s and +1.7m/s wind.
              And that is good empirical evidence, but there's still too many variables at play here. Sub13's comments are the most germane here and I believe his statement that when one is in peak shape, the wind is not a help.

              Comment


              • #37
                Originally posted by Smoke
                That guy sub13 thinks he knows it all!
                Unless this is a tongue-in-cheek sarcasm, it is hilarious.
                "A beautiful theory killed by an ugly fact."
                by Thomas Henry Huxley

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                • #38
                  Originally posted by Marlow
                  Originally posted by Jon
                  Originally posted by Marlow
                  Someone like TT who relies on great stride length to run a fast 100, does not benefit as much (if at all) from a tailwind.
                  The only two times TT has dipped under 13 seconds has been with a +1.5m/s and +1.7m/s wind.
                  And that is good empirical evidence, but there's still too many variables at play here. Sub13's comments are the most germane here and I believe his statement that when one is in peak shape, the wind is not a help.
                  I'm confused, didn't you say earlier that "peaking is......waaaay over-rated....." in the hurdles? In your opinion then, a world class hurdler shouldn't peak and just hope there's a big wind. Or peak and hope there's no wind? Please explain.

                  Comment


                  • #39
                    Lots of good stuff here, thanks to all, but especially sub-13 and mcgato.

                    Since you have to be in pretty good shape - able to get up to speed quickly without reaching too much etc., I would infer from D.O.'s superb time that he is closer to 'August' shape than spring shape, and thus the wind helps him a bit less than elsewise. An additional factor here is that the slow reaction mark of 0.22+ means that a quick mark would have put him well down into the 12.8s. Maybe the wind helped him early and late (especially the run-in), but he must have been on the rivets through the middle of the race with the hurdles coming at him really quickly.

                    I did some manipulation of the marks and came up with the following table: The wind is the assumed median level for the class interval (could be fine-tuned but would not affect the general results too much). The extra dots are to help alignment. The last three numbers are the weighted average of the wind speed, with the weights being the percentage of the class. This number is not a 'real' thing in itself, but the difference is a measure of the differential effect of wind, which is 0.736 and is twice the 100m weighted average. One conclusion is that the wind is helping about half as much, on average, in the 110h as in the 100m, or 0.025 seconds for a 1mps instead of the 0.05 for the sprint. -- discuss (especially the mcgatos, daisys, JRMs etc who like this sort of thing).

                    Wind 100m 110h Difference
                    2.8 36.0% 11.1% 24.9%
                    1.8 . 8.4% . 7.9% . 0.5%
                    1.3 10.0% 11.6% -1.6%
                    0.8 13.8% 13.8% . 0.0%
                    0.3 13.3% 19.3% -6.0%
                    -0.2 11.7% 22.4% -10.7%
                    -0.7 . 6.9% 13.9% . -7.0%

                    ** 1.366 0.630 0.736

                    Comment


                    • #40
                      Originally posted by marknhj
                      I'm confused
                      I agree.
                      Originally posted by marknhj
                      didn't you say earlier that "peaking is......waaaay over-rated....." in the hurdles?
                      I did indeed.
                      Originally posted by marknhj
                      In your opinion then, a world class hurdler shouldn't peak and just hope there's a big wind. Or peak and hope there's no wind? Please explain.
                      I'm so glad you asked. AJ said that he didn't have the 'pop' necessary to be hyper-fast till August, which means that his training plan is to be fully prepared then, not earlier. Oliver is obviously 'in shape' right now, and barring injury, could conceivably hold his speed all the way through August. He has obviously done all the work to be fast already, and AJ has not. At AJ's advanced age (I believe he's the same age as I, 57 (jk)), that shouldn't be too surprising. It may also just be the way he's used to doing it - ain't nothing wrong with that. I'm taking Oliver at face value (doesn't believe in peaking), because some athletes can do that. Now all he needs are some more meets and good conditions to fulfill AJ's (and mine, but adding mine to his is just sorta sad and pathetic, he being somebody and me being, well, me) expectations. Getting consistent in the 12.9s is just kinda scary.

                      Comment


                      • #41
                        Well, since we've never had a sub 13 this early, we really don't know what to expect...All I know is the guy CRUSHED the field in Doha.

                        It's an Olympic year and he's got to make the team, I would've bet a drink that Pierce was going to break the world record in the 96 OT's...by a lot. But, those pesky hurdles got in his way.

                        I hope DO makes the team and then the O final and then whoo nellie... that race will have a billion people watching. That's hard to fathom.

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