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Bolt redefined 'limit' of how fast man can run — Johnson

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  • Bolt redefined 'limit' of how fast man can run — Johnson

    Bolt redefined 'limit' of how fast man can run — Johnson
    BY PAUL A REID Observer Writer
    Monday, April 18, 2011


    MONTEGO BAY, St James — Legendary American track and field coach Brooks Johnson says that the exploits of Jamaican sprint superstar Usain Bolt is helping to change people's perception of the limit of the human body to run faster.

    Bolt, the double World Record holder in the 100m (9.58 seconds) and the 200m (19.30), Brooks said has helped to redefine expectations and also to discount the use of performance enhancers in the sport of athletics.
    BOLT... world record holder at 100m and 200m
    JOHNSON... the beautiful thing about Bolt is that he can inspire people in other events to do what he did in his events




    "The beautiful thing about Bolt is that he can inspire people in other events to do what he did in his events, to totally change the landscape, to totally change the perception of what is the limit or close to the limit of human performance and that is what you see," Johnson told a group of international journalists following a training session of his group of athletes at the ESPN Wide World of Sports Complex in Orlando Florida recently.
    Bolt's exploits over the last three years or so, argues Johnson, had forced his opponents to run faster as well, saying "Tyson Gay would not be running 9.6 unless Bolt runs 9.50-odd; we would still be wallowing in 9.76".
    Johnson, 76, who also coaches American Justin Gatlin, said, too much time was being wasted worrying about athletes who used drugs to make them perform better. "Every one is talking about drugs. I don't worry about drugs, we don't have them here... the only thing a drug person can do is show you where a clean person will ultimately go," he said.
    "I remember coaching Steve Williams who ran (a then) World Record 9.9 seconds, now ordinary people run that. Back then that was an extraordinary time," he said.
    The father of two teenaged boys said the thing to do was use the times set by athletes who used drugs to foretell what clean athletes would do in the future. "I recall when guys were running 9.8 (seconds) and people were thinking you had to be dirty to run that time, now it is ordinary. So the question is how do you shrink time down, how do you do today what mediocre people are going to do tomorrow," said the the maker of world beaters at sprints.
    Talent he said was not necessarily "the most critical thing" in running fast. "People with less talent than say Steve Williams ended up running much faster than he did, people less talented than the guys who were running 9.8 (seconds) or whatever dirty are running it clean, so I don't worry about the drugs, people get too hung up on it, that's an excuse, it is a cop out because nobody knows the limits of human experience," asserted Johnson.
    One of the things that keeps him in the sport even at his ripe old age, is his curiosity as "I want to find out where that limit is and we haven't even come close yet".
    Johnson said Gatlin, who ran 9.77 seconds in Doha in May 2006 to equal the then World Record held by Jamaica's Asafa Powell as well as winning the Olympic 100m gold in Athens, Greece on 2004 and the sprint double at the World Championships in Helsinki a year later before failing a drugs test in 2006, can run faster than he ever did before.
    "So if you ask me if Gatlin can get back to that time, the answer is yes because he don't have to be that talented to do that," noted Johnson.
    To get back there, however, he said Gatlin will have to work harder than ever before.
    "He has to get the interior muscles in shape which is difficult to do for sprinters as they don't like to do the work necessary to get the interior muscles in shape. He is a big muscled guy and the surface muscles get in shape the quickest and for a guy as talented as he is, they can make him go pretty fast, but it is interior muscles that provide the ultimate power, (while) the surface muscles allow him to run fast," said the American Johnson.
    Johnson told the group that in early March, Gatlin "warmed up in 20.3 (seconds in the 200m) at about 80 per cent so I know he can run 20 seconds flat now, but for him to run 19.30 he is going to have to get the big interior muscles in shape".
    Johnson, the US coach of the year for 2010, said he never brought up the issue of drugs with Gatlin. "I never brought it up with him. I tell you why; we are more interested in character, the inner stuff. Anybody can make a mistake or not."
    It was a chance meeting with Gatlin, he said, that helped him make up his mind in coaching the athlete. "When he was on top, I saw him with his mother and father and the respect that he had for them and how he treated them... he showed an inner appreciation, an inner value which is what we want... and so we never talked about the other stuff," ended Johnson.
    Gatlin, coached then by Jamaican Trevor Graham, served a four-year ban from track and field for testing positive for a banned substance in 2006.



    Read more: http://www.jamaicaobserver.com/sport...#ixzz1JsUAWh1c
    Solidarity is not a matter of well wishing, but is sharing the very same fate whether in victory or in death.
    Che Guevara.

  • #2
    I think you should check those world records, Sickko.


    BLACK LIVES MATTER

    Comment


    • #3
      Me? Why? Me name WADA? or USADA.....
      Solidarity is not a matter of well wishing, but is sharing the very same fate whether in victory or in death.
      Che Guevara.

      Comment


      • #4
        settle down and check di ting. no you write di report?!?

        (hint:200m (19.30))


        BLACK LIVES MATTER

        Comment


        • #5
          sigh...ma bad...have not had my third cup of mud yet....is it me or Blue Mountain not so strong again? Or them send the best stuff to Japan...
          Solidarity is not a matter of well wishing, but is sharing the very same fate whether in victory or in death.
          Che Guevara.

          Comment


          • #6
            if yuh did drink rum dat wouda nevah happen especially if yu had tried the one in T&T called "1919"
            Peter R

            Comment


            • #7
              Ongle ah jamaica eh, wi jus special ah dat ah it, nobady wid di research ting. when wi come bout wi large wi nuh play wid tings. Dem ah gwaan like seh wi nuh bad long time, once di enhancers dem gwaan dem kyaan touch wi again. Jus gi wi di trophy kah ah long time wi ready fi shine. A long time wi bad, from Herb, Wint, Laing , DJ (big belly man), Quarrie, Miller days right up to now wi ah shine bad bad, Mi boys champs gaan international right about yow. Watch it ah like penns, dem soon waan come run against wi ah dat level, membah mi tell yuh. But wah; dem kyaan touch it kah is a speciality ting.

              Comment


              • #8
                Tastes like cough syrup....you have the cold???

                Comment


                • #9
                  Maybe I should have said if he had tried one called "19.19" (what is Bolt's 200m record?)

                  I have tried the 1919 but I don't drink it... the regular rum taste better fi true.
                  Peter R

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Can it compare to the 'new' Appleton genesis?

                    Rum drinkers tell me it is one of the finest they have had. I took some to Italy with me and people were putting in orders for more...he he he
                    Solidarity is not a matter of well wishing, but is sharing the very same fate whether in victory or in death.
                    Che Guevara.

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Haven't had the new Appleton, but the 1919 is nothing special.

                      I hold the El Dorado 12 and 15 year olds as the standard ( for a high quality drink without breaking the bank), if you drink Johnny Walker Black (which I believe is the most popular of the higher end scotches sold in T&T) or even single malts, IMO these rums could convert you.
                      Peter R

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        I once covered a seminar hosted by some guy who was billed as a world leader in Whiskeys and he gave about 10 bartenders a blind taste test of three or four whiskeys and Johnny Walker came out last.

                        It proved the guy's theory that while Johnny Walker was the most popular brand that was due more to marketing than actual quality.
                        Solidarity is not a matter of well wishing, but is sharing the very same fate whether in victory or in death.
                        Che Guevara.

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          over-rated but well-marketed as you say...

                          Now go and buy yourself a bottle of El Dorado 12 yr old, leave the 15 for a later date as both are really good. Pour it on ice or drink it straight from a snifter... do not put anything in it not even coconut water.

                          Oh, and try not to think that it is a foreign (Guyanese) rum... we in the West Indies a kill wiself (hopefully not literally) a run behin' Scotch when we could be supporting each other consumimg the fantastic products that we have.

                          And lastly, enjoy! as i know you will.
                          Peter R

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