Author Topic: 2016 Rio Olympics - open thread  (Read 43348 times)

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maxent

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Re: 2016 Rio Olympics - open thread
« Reply #75 on: August 16, 2016, 12:19:24 pm »
+1
<a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=areBUihbfTs" target="_blank">http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=areBUihbfTs</a>

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adarqui

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Re: 2016 Rio Olympics - open thread
« Reply #76 on: August 16, 2016, 01:36:33 pm »
0
I think it's more likely AI could take hits well considering he was tiny in the NBA and he got bodied up and banged up all the time but yet his resilience allowed him to play through numerous injuries. I remember seeing a graphic in the playoffs where he was playing with a whole host of injuries and still beasting. I think it was the finals series against Lakers. Will try to find it.

regarding boxing: ya but direct shots to the jaw is a completely different animal.. ;f no way to know until someone actually gets in a ring and takes shots. you could be one of the toughest SOB's on the planet but have a glass jaw, it's a weird thing. There's been elite professional boxers who suffer from this; a current example is Amir Khan. Insane skills .. but if you catch him on the chin, good night. On a side note, I wonder if there's any research as to why Mexican boxer's have such good chins.

I missed Bolt/Gatlin's 200m today.. when is the finals? or is it the semis next?

also 5k and 1500m going down soon!!

I'd like to see someone challenge Farah in the 5k.. man push him to the limit. I'd like to see him pushed because I think he'd still win & run an insane time.



One thing that changed my idea about 'distance running' was watching El Guerrouj several olympics ago, set records at 1500m. I think it was Guerrouj vs Lagat in 2004, amazing race.. man were they flying.

adarqui

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Re: 2016 Rio Olympics - open thread
« Reply #77 on: August 16, 2016, 01:43:50 pm »
+1
<a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=areBUihbfTs" target="_blank">http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=areBUihbfTs</a>



ya that was a great commercial.. i used to identify alot with that & him growing up - regarding injuries. Being very injury prone, yet so dedicated & always playing so hard, really sucked.

My worst injury was breaking my wrist during an AAU practice.. I can still remember it like it was yesterday .. wish I had footage, one of the best and1's ever considering I laid it up on two dunkers and snapped my wrist in the process.. lulz.

love AI.. AI & Tim Hardaway were the people I "studied most" back then.

ok sorry for the tangent of maxent's tangent.

;d

seifullaah73

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Re: 2016 Rio Olympics - open thread
« Reply #78 on: August 16, 2016, 07:35:56 pm »
+1
Im just watching the pole vault and santiago just raised the bar, which lavillane couldn't pass and he managed to pass 6.03m
OMG, this olympics is turning out to be an awesome olympics with so many awesome performances and so many sports.
lets see how lavillane responds

Lavillane just failed 6.08, wow santiago who just got guarantee broze is now gold medalist olympic champion wow and a PB and an olympic record.
« Last Edit: August 16, 2016, 07:40:48 pm by seifullaah73 »
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   - acceleration: low heel recovery, shin angle low, drive legs back before hitting the ground and drive thighs/knee forward not up
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maxent

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Re: 2016 Rio Olympics - open thread
« Reply #79 on: August 17, 2016, 12:54:49 am »
0
not rio specific, but someone shared this on fb, cool story: http://www.filmsforaction.org/articles/the-white-man-in-that-photo/

i love this story so much. only regret is i didnt know about it before ..stopped there for bbq and didnt know bout the statue
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adarqui

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Re: 2016 Rio Olympics - open thread
« Reply #80 on: August 17, 2016, 12:55:08 am »
0
holy crap.. serious face plant in men's gymnastics, high bars.. could have been a devastating injury.

adarqui

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Re: 2016 Rio Olympics - open thread
« Reply #81 on: August 17, 2016, 01:00:13 am »
0
anyone think bolt will set a new WR in 200m? or at least a new olympic record? his 20.28 looked incredibly easy..

he needs < 19.30 for OR and < 19.19 for WR.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/olympics/2016/08/16/usain-bolt-200m-heats-live/

T0ddday

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Re: 2016 Rio Olympics - open thread
« Reply #82 on: August 17, 2016, 01:58:05 am »
+1
OMFG THAT DIVE.. amazing women's 400m final.

Aghh, I wish she hadn't fallen and won it running through....she might have got it anyway but I've seen it happen where a dive at the finish probably makes the difference.

ya after watching the replay, it looked like she didn't need to dive. when I saw it live, it looked like the dive won it for her. When Felix was coming back to (almost?) take the lead, it was nuts - i was freaking out.

Yeah... Hard to say about the dive... Personally not a fan of diving... It can win a race in hurdles or slower races - women's 400m is certainly borderline...  I mean Felix is running a probably around 13 sec hundred pace at the end of the race...  Between 7-8 meters a second, does diving really make a difference then?  I dunno if it actually does BUT it is probably better than a mistimed lean!

Funny that Felix is brought up in a thread where the side conversation is athletic potential...

I'm sorry but her race strategy and training is terrible.  Felix jogged 48.x in the semi. She is a 21.x 200m runner.  With the right training she could easily go 47.9.  Her coach Bobby Kersee really isn't getting the most out of her IMO.  I've done a ton of training with the members of the group and his basic strategy to making athletes is to get fast athletes and make them run around and around and around the track.  It's speed endurance to death.  Then he gives them the same failed race strategy lashawn Merrit used - just wait and rely on the fact that you have more endurance and will be fresh in the end... Well it doesn't work in the 200 and it doesn't always work anymore in the 400m... Merritt's case is excusable cause he lost to a WR - but Felix lost to a 49.5 which is nothing for her...  She waited, sized her up and looked far better finishing... But that didn't win her the race...  I'm not surprised because she did hardly any speed work leading up to the olympics.  What is sad is I know her coach convinced her not to double 200/400 and focus on the 400 for a guarenteed medal... How ironic that had she kept the 200 she probably wouldn't have neglected the speed work she needed to win the 400...

crazy.

would like to see the difference between Felix & Niekerk's training.

Sorry, correction.  Just talked to the training group today...  Last year was when her coach had her drop the 200m for the 400m for world championships.  She did basically all speed endurance...  This year she had an ankle injury in the weight room and basically missed out on what was going to be an abbreviated amount of speed work for the 200m (still a mistake imo).  She did try to qualify for the 200m and 400m at USA trials...

Here is the most tragic thing about it.   Felix missed out on the 200m spot and got 4th by 100th of a second.  The girl who got third and "beat" her...  SHE DOVE across the line...

<a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iIZV3-nIR2Y" target="_blank">http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iIZV3-nIR2Y</a>


Wow... In the opinion of many including myself Prandini didn't even get her torso in front of the line before Felix...  Basically she was robbed by a dive that wasn't even legit...

Truly a gracious loser by how she doesn't mention how frustrating it must be...

Quote

would like to see the difference between Felix & Niekerk's training.

I don't know much about WVN training but I know exactly what Felix does and it's a ridiculous amount of speed endurance work.  The attitude is that "she already has speed - let's make her strong" and I think it's a poor strategy...

I think WVN might cause another revolution in 400m training.  I'm not sure if your aware of the history of the event but the race has evolved a lot.  In the 1920's the 400m was run in around 50 seconds by men.  Sure the 1920's were slow for all events, but the guys ran the hundred in about 10.5 so relatively the 400m was very slow...

This is because in the 1920s the 400m was thought to be a "long race" - similar to the mile or the 800m.   Ideal race strategy was thought to be slow gamesmanship for the first 250m while holding back and allowing a sprint finish.  Athletes routinely negative split the race (second half faster).  Then in 1924 an athlete threw caution to the wind and sprinted the first 200m and set the new WR at 47.x.   Athletes then realized the 400m was a sprint of sorts and everyone's times got faster...

IMO there is still a hangover to this old thinking in the 400m.  If you watch Merrit and James run the 400m behind WVN you notice some troubling things... He runs 10.7, 9.8 for the first 200m and 10.5, 12.0 to finish.  I don't have their exact splits but they are pretty consistent at running about 21 low, so I would imagine they are running about 10.7, 10.2 or so and are about 5 meters behind him (0.4 seconds)....

However, if you watch the race they come off the turn EVEN with him.  This means that they ran pretty close SUB 10 for the back curve.  This is unheard of and it makes no sense to waste that much energy on a turn...  Then in the last hundred WVN is dead but they are completely unable to keep up and run probably the slowest last 100m even for a sub 44 race (has to be around 12.7).    Why do they do this?

Because they follow the classic coaching (that Allyson Felix also follows).   That is push hard at the start, relax off the curve, float down the back straight, push into the turn and make your move on the last 150m - catch whoever you need to catch by the straight and rely on your superior strength to carry you through...

WVN on the other hand doesn't float down the back straight - he flys down the back straight.  He runs the first 200m in only 0.5 worse than his 200m PR and then the "easiest' part of race is the back curve where he dials back ever so slightly so he can finish the last hundred without being completely out of gas...

Not surprising that WVN started running these times when he actually started running 100m and 200m seriously.   Speed is the dominant force in even the 400m - athletes are fit enough to run much faster initial 200m splits than they realize.   I think this is something that needs to be looked at...  IMO more proof of this comes from the fact that athletes occasionally run out of their mind 400m splits in the 4x400.  Sure you don't have to start but a walking handoff doesn't explain how a 48 second guy splits 46.  What does explain it is that he runs faster than usual in the first 200m to get in front of the guy he has to catch - then surprisingly he is able to hold on far more than he thought...

T0ddday

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Re: 2016 Rio Olympics - open thread
« Reply #83 on: August 17, 2016, 02:17:45 am »
+1
I think it's more likely AI could take hits well considering he was tiny in the NBA and he got bodied up and banged up all the time but yet his resilience allowed him to play through numerous injuries.

regarding boxing: ya but direct shots to the jaw is a completely different animal.. ;f no way to know until someone actually gets in a ring and takes shots. you could be one of the toughest SOB's on the planet but have a glass jaw, it's a weird thing. There's been elite professional boxers who suffer from this; a current example is Amir Khan. Insane skills .. but if you catch him on the chin, good night.

Thank you.  This misconception that boxers who can take hits are tough or that their is any evidence that AI could take a punch is really frustrating...  I've boxed enough to know that their isn't much like getting your bell rung in the ring - and certainly not anything in basketball.  The brain accelerating in the skull and causing you to go to sleep is just completely different.  If you can take anything other than boxing as evidence that someone can take a punch it would be something like how some guys just pop right up after helmet to helmet hits or something completely unrelated like how some people can be black out drunk and still functioning...

I've had one major concussion in my life and it was when an interception was thrown underneath and I was away from the play (I had run a deep go route) and jogging back toward the play when a linebacker blindsided me - I remember being lifted off my feet and the crazy feeling of my head just snapping - what I don't remember was my head hitting the ground when I landed.  I got up, walked to the sideline said something unintelligible and thouht I could still play ( I remember none of this ).  It was only when I couldn't answer basic questions that people realized something was wrong...   It wasn't for a few days that I really had my memory back and started puking a ton that night - I'm really glad I didn't go back in the game...  Does this mean I can take a punch?  Maybe.. That's the scary thing about taking a punch - your brain IS concussed when you take a massive shot.  Some people like Amir Khan go to sleep when this happens.  Other people get into a semi-lucid state where they are able to box or play football until they get their wits back.  To some extent the ability to take a punch is really the ability to subject yourself to trauma when your already in a dangerous state... The safest constitution for a fighter is to be the guy who is out cold after a big blow and then back up in 10 seconds feeling totally fine and angry that the fight is over... Not a good trait for winning boxing fights - but a very good display of your brain protecting itself...

Quote
On a side note, I wonder if there's any research as to why Mexican boxer's have such good chins.

This is a long discussed topic.  It get's pretty racist pretty quickly inside of the boxing gyms I know of...  Despite the fact the best chin of all time belong to Marvin Hagler you hear coaches say things like "blacks have skill but no chin".   There are weak and strong chins of every race.  I think the Mexican strong chin stereotype is just that - a stereotype that is reinforced by confirmation bias and socio-cultural reasons... 

I think that people with truly iron jaws are a very small minority of people.  The average guy probably has a glass jaw.  Since being born with a strong chin seems to be completely luck we see the weakest chins on people like Amir Khan - boxing prodigies who started early.  No way to know if a kid has a strong chin and odds are - he doesn't  He won't be exposed because of his skill level until he gets pretty far up but then you will find out whether he has an iron chin and odds are that he doesn't. 

The difference with a lot of mexican boxers is that you don't have necessarily the hand picked prodigies (floyd, amir khan, etc) that develop amazing skill from a young age (other than Hector Camacho jr most of them came from pretty rough backgrounds).  That and the fact that their culture has a sense of machismo and a traditional boxing style where you are supposed to stand and take a punch like a man means that out of the thousands of poverty stricken unskilled mexicans that try to box to get out of poverty - the only ones that do are the ones that can take a punch... Those who can are developed into boxer which makes it seem like they have naturally stronger chins.  That and confirmation bias does the rest.

adarqui

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Re: 2016 Rio Olympics - open thread
« Reply #84 on: August 17, 2016, 02:58:21 am »
0
OMFG THAT DIVE.. amazing women's 400m final.

Aghh, I wish she hadn't fallen and won it running through....she might have got it anyway but I've seen it happen where a dive at the finish probably makes the difference.

ya after watching the replay, it looked like she didn't need to dive. when I saw it live, it looked like the dive won it for her. When Felix was coming back to (almost?) take the lead, it was nuts - i was freaking out.

Yeah... Hard to say about the dive... Personally not a fan of diving... It can win a race in hurdles or slower races - women's 400m is certainly borderline...  I mean Felix is running a probably around 13 sec hundred pace at the end of the race...  Between 7-8 meters a second, does diving really make a difference then?  I dunno if it actually does BUT it is probably better than a mistimed lean!

Funny that Felix is brought up in a thread where the side conversation is athletic potential...

I'm sorry but her race strategy and training is terrible.  Felix jogged 48.x in the semi. She is a 21.x 200m runner.  With the right training she could easily go 47.9.  Her coach Bobby Kersee really isn't getting the most out of her IMO.  I've done a ton of training with the members of the group and his basic strategy to making athletes is to get fast athletes and make them run around and around and around the track.  It's speed endurance to death.  Then he gives them the same failed race strategy lashawn Merrit used - just wait and rely on the fact that you have more endurance and will be fresh in the end... Well it doesn't work in the 200 and it doesn't always work anymore in the 400m... Merritt's case is excusable cause he lost to a WR - but Felix lost to a 49.5 which is nothing for her...  She waited, sized her up and looked far better finishing... But that didn't win her the race...  I'm not surprised because she did hardly any speed work leading up to the olympics.  What is sad is I know her coach convinced her not to double 200/400 and focus on the 400 for a guarenteed medal... How ironic that had she kept the 200 she probably wouldn't have neglected the speed work she needed to win the 400...

crazy.

would like to see the difference between Felix & Niekerk's training.

Sorry, correction.  Just talked to the training group today...  Last year was when her coach had her drop the 200m for the 400m for world championships.  She did basically all speed endurance...  This year she had an ankle injury in the weight room and basically missed out on what was going to be an abbreviated amount of speed work for the 200m (still a mistake imo).  She did try to qualify for the 200m and 400m at USA trials...

Here is the most tragic thing about it.   Felix missed out on the 200m spot and got 4th by 100th of a second.  The girl who got third and "beat" her...  SHE DOVE across the line...

<a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iIZV3-nIR2Y" target="_blank">http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iIZV3-nIR2Y</a>


Wow... In the opinion of many including myself Prandini didn't even get her torso in front of the line before Felix...  Basically she was robbed by a dive that wasn't even legit...

Truly a gracious loser by how she doesn't mention how frustrating it must be...

Quote

would like to see the difference between Felix & Niekerk's training.

I don't know much about WVN training but I know exactly what Felix does and it's a ridiculous amount of speed endurance work.  The attitude is that "she already has speed - let's make her strong" and I think it's a poor strategy...

I think WVN might cause another revolution in 400m training.  I'm not sure if your aware of the history of the event but the race has evolved a lot.  In the 1920's the 400m was run in around 50 seconds by men.  Sure the 1920's were slow for all events, but the guys ran the hundred in about 10.5 so relatively the 400m was very slow...

This is because in the 1920s the 400m was thought to be a "long race" - similar to the mile or the 800m.   Ideal race strategy was thought to be slow gamesmanship for the first 250m while holding back and allowing a sprint finish.  Athletes routinely negative split the race (second half faster).  Then in 1924 an athlete threw caution to the wind and sprinted the first 200m and set the new WR at 47.x.   Athletes then realized the 400m was a sprint of sorts and everyone's times got faster...

IMO there is still a hangover to this old thinking in the 400m.  If you watch Merrit and James run the 400m behind WVN you notice some troubling things... He runs 10.7, 9.8 for the first 200m and 10.5, 12.0 to finish.  I don't have their exact splits but they are pretty consistent at running about 21 low, so I would imagine they are running about 10.7, 10.2 or so and are about 5 meters behind him (0.4 seconds)....

However, if you watch the race they come off the turn EVEN with him.  This means that they ran pretty close SUB 10 for the back curve.  This is unheard of and it makes no sense to waste that much energy on a turn...  Then in the last hundred WVN is dead but they are completely unable to keep up and run probably the slowest last 100m even for a sub 44 race (has to be around 12.7).    Why do they do this?

Because they follow the classic coaching (that Allyson Felix also follows).   That is push hard at the start, relax off the curve, float down the back straight, push into the turn and make your move on the last 150m - catch whoever you need to catch by the straight and rely on your superior strength to carry you through...

WVN on the other hand doesn't float down the back straight - he flys down the back straight.  He runs the first 200m in only 0.5 worse than his 200m PR and then the "easiest' part of race is the back curve where he dials back ever so slightly so he can finish the last hundred without being completely out of gas...

Not surprising that WVN started running these times when he actually started running 100m and 200m seriously.   Speed is the dominant force in even the 400m - athletes are fit enough to run much faster initial 200m splits than they realize.   I think this is something that needs to be looked at...  IMO more proof of this comes from the fact that athletes occasionally run out of their mind 400m splits in the 4x400.  Sure you don't have to start but a walking handoff doesn't explain how a 48 second guy splits 46.  What does explain it is that he runs faster than usual in the first 200m to get in front of the guy he has to catch - then surprisingly he is able to hold on far more than he thought...

damn thanks for that info. had no idea how the 400m was run way back.

All of that makes WVN's performance even more spectacular... Seems like he might have created a major turning point in 400m once again.. that's really remarkable considering it's 2016.

The only thing that would potentially blow that away would be sub-19s in the 200m by Bolt.. I don't see that happening but, that would end up being the ultimate story of the olympics.

Man imagine if WVN had gotten 42.9x ... 43.03, so close.. absolutely incredible.



I think it's more likely AI could take hits well considering he was tiny in the NBA and he got bodied up and banged up all the time but yet his resilience allowed him to play through numerous injuries.

regarding boxing: ya but direct shots to the jaw is a completely different animal.. ;f no way to know until someone actually gets in a ring and takes shots. you could be one of the toughest SOB's on the planet but have a glass jaw, it's a weird thing. There's been elite professional boxers who suffer from this; a current example is Amir Khan. Insane skills .. but if you catch him on the chin, good night.

Thank you.  This misconception that boxers who can take hits are tough or that their is any evidence that AI could take a punch is really frustrating...  I've boxed enough to know that their isn't much like getting your bell rung in the ring - and certainly not anything in basketball.  The brain accelerating in the skull and causing you to go to sleep is just completely different.  If you can take anything other than boxing as evidence that someone can take a punch it would be something like how some guys just pop right up after helmet to helmet hits or something completely unrelated like how some people can be black out drunk and still functioning...

I've had one major concussion in my life and it was when an interception was thrown underneath and I was away from the play (I had run a deep go route) and jogging back toward the play when a linebacker blindsided me - I remember being lifted off my feet and the crazy feeling of my head just snapping - what I don't remember was my head hitting the ground when I landed.  I got up, walked to the sideline said something unintelligible and thouht I could still play ( I remember none of this ).  It was only when I couldn't answer basic questions that people realized something was wrong...   It wasn't for a few days that I really had my memory back and started puking a ton that night - I'm really glad I didn't go back in the game...  Does this mean I can take a punch?  Maybe.. That's the scary thing about taking a punch - your brain IS concussed when you take a massive shot.  Some people like Amir Khan go to sleep when this happens.  Other people get into a semi-lucid state where they are able to box or play football until they get their wits back.  To some extent the ability to take a punch is really the ability to subject yourself to trauma when your already in a dangerous state... The safest constitution for a fighter is to be the guy who is out cold after a big blow and then back up in 10 seconds feeling totally fine and angry that the fight is over... Not a good trait for winning boxing fights - but a very good display of your brain protecting itself...

damn @ being concussed in football. did you end up getting migraines and such?

i've never had migraines in my life, other than when I boxed.. that started to worry me a bit. I got my bell rung once in all-out-sparring, that was an interesting experience.. I really didn't understand what "getting your bell rung" actually meant, until that moment. I basically went on defense & kept moving, as all I could hear was a high pitched ringing sound.. I felt like I was being hunted... or like I was just in a bomb blast in a scene from some movie, HEH!

My chin seems decent but it's definitely not bionic. I got knocked down once from a chin shot (and a few times from body shots, those were 10000x worse lmao).. I don't remember anything other than just out of nowhere i'm on the ground and I sprung up to continue fighting, but they broke it up. Pretty crazy to just go "blank".. out of nowhere your computer sleeps & restores. That hit you took was more like a reboot, RAM = toast.

FWIW, i'm glad I didn't continue boxing.. I'm not sure if it did any actual damage to my brain but it could have.. and I've chosen fields that have me relying on my brain alot. My focus/brain power definitely seems to have diminished since my early 20's, but that's probably normal & due to aging etc. But i've taken some serious head shots (in boxing & basketball - head to head collisions) that have always made me wonder.



Quote
Quote
On a side note, I wonder if there's any research as to why Mexican boxer's have such good chins.

This is a long discussed topic.  It get's pretty racist pretty quickly inside of the boxing gyms I know of...  Despite the fact the best chin of all time belong to Marvin Hagler you hear coaches say things like "blacks have skill but no chin".   There are weak and strong chins of every race.  I think the Mexican strong chin stereotype is just that - a stereotype that is reinforced by confirmation bias and socio-cultural reasons... 

I think that people with truly iron jaws are a very small minority of people.  The average guy probably has a glass jaw.  Since being born with a strong chin seems to be completely luck we see the weakest chins on people like Amir Khan - boxing prodigies who started early.  No way to know if a kid has a strong chin and odds are - he doesn't  He won't be exposed because of his skill level until he gets pretty far up but then you will find out whether he has an iron chin and odds are that he doesn't. 

The difference with a lot of mexican boxers is that you don't have necessarily the hand picked prodigies (floyd, amir khan, etc) that develop amazing skill from a young age (other than Hector Camacho jr most of them came from pretty rough backgrounds).  That and the fact that their culture has a sense of machismo and a traditional boxing style where you are supposed to stand and take a punch like a man means that out of the thousands of poverty stricken unskilled mexicans that try to box to get out of poverty - the only ones that do are the ones that can take a punch... Those who can are developed into boxer which makes it seem like they have naturally stronger chins.  That and confirmation bias does the rest.

ya i wasn't even thinking when I typed it.. I'd agree with that. great response. glad you called me out on it.

T0ddday

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Re: 2016 Rio Olympics - open thread
« Reply #85 on: August 17, 2016, 04:43:41 am »
+1
^^^ As far as side effects from my biggest concussion I don't think I had any long term ones... I'm the same as you in so far as my brain power and focus doesn't seem quite where it was in my early twenties... I don't think it's from concussions (but this might be wishful thinking) or aging but rather a lack of motivation.  In my early twenties I was doing my phd in a competitive environment and making 25k a year...  Now I'm done w school and I have a real career and a 401k... It's hard to motivate myself as hard to learn more math when it's not even essential to continuing my career... I wish I had some motivation to write though...

As far as acute side effects I had tons.  It was really scary.  After the concussion I was taken to the hospital because I didn't know my phone number or who I was.  It was really a trip... I remember ride back from the game and looking at a teammate and thinking "I wonder who this guy is."  So weird... I knew I was a guy and it was America and everything but I didn't really know much else and my concussed brain didn't think this was weird - it just wanted to figure things out...

One of the weirdest things ever was I remember I had a roommate but I didn't remember who it was.  They told me when they took my home and I still didn't remember... Then I got home and saw him and it clicked - a rush of information and memories about who he was flew into my brain... Nuts. 

The best way to describe the side effects was the I was just basically stupid for a week.  Like couldn't think well... No migraines really but I'm kinda weird in so far as I recently realized I've never really had a headache... I have had a brain freeze and I kinda imagined that's what people were talking about but when someone broke it down for me I realized I've probably never really had a headache or serious migraine...

Yeah concussions suck.  Boxing is such a beautiful sport but it needs to change or die - it's just not right to do that to people.  I think the same about football- in the long run I hope they make it safer...

T0ddday

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Re: 2016 Rio Olympics - open thread
« Reply #86 on: August 17, 2016, 04:45:59 am »
+1
If bolt goes sub 19 then he is doing the best job pretending he isn't fit ever... If he goes sub 19 he needs to jump in a 400m! 

I don't think he will this year.  I think he will cruise in sub 19.5 and win but I just don't see it... Next year I think he may... I hope I'm wrong though!

Mikey

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Re: 2016 Rio Olympics - open thread
« Reply #87 on: August 17, 2016, 06:39:43 am »
0
If bolt goes sub 19 then he is doing the best job pretending he isn't fit ever... If he goes sub 19 he needs to jump in a 400m! 

I don't think he will this year.  I think he will cruise in sub 19.5 and win but I just don't see it... Next year I think he may... I hope I'm wrong though!

Yeah I see Bolt running 19.5/19.6 based on his 100. I'm not sure if Bolt will even run next year. I'd love to see him try and break his own 200m WR before retiring, but with his back issues he might retire.
"IMO, It didn't happen if it's not on vid/official"- adarqui

It's easier to keep up than it is to catch up...

Mikey

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Re: 2016 Rio Olympics - open thread
« Reply #88 on: August 17, 2016, 08:06:55 am »
+1
<a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=33Ox9_JOFSU" target="_blank">http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=33Ox9_JOFSU</a>
"IMO, It didn't happen if it's not on vid/official"- adarqui

It's easier to keep up than it is to catch up...

adarqui

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Re: 2016 Rio Olympics - open thread
« Reply #89 on: August 17, 2016, 09:09:39 pm »
+1
uhhhhhh.. bolt, 19.7 EASY AS FU*K.. dude, this final might be incredible if he runs it all out 100%.. which i think he will.