I think u did a good job bringing perspective on how good the 80's jumpers were. I didn't know they were that good. I knew that sotomayor was in a league of his own, didnt know this big of a gap. Great video, jump man likes to talk about jumping man ofc
S/O Stefan Holm for jumping 2.40m for such a tiny little man :) Is 33yr old Barshim carrying on to next yr's Tokyo WC cos would love him to win his 10th career WC/OLY Medal before retiring?
@@footballvidshd5421 Stefan Holm's 5' 9' or 1.81m compared to the likes of Sjöberg 2m, Thränhardt 1.99m, Bondarenko 1.98m, Sotomayor 1.93m, Paklin 1.91m & Barshim 1.89m. So yes, he's a 'tiny little man' in that context :)
Hey, is it possible to do a summary video of the yr's best non-Mondo/Yaroslava jumps across all 4 Jumps? :) Thinking of ppl like Miltiadis Tentoglou, Sam Kendricks, Emmanouil Karalis, Nina Kennedy, Molly Caudery, Malaika Mihambo, Tara Davis-Woodhall, Thea LaFond, Jordan Alejandro Diaz Fortun, Pedro Pichardo etc.
You know that's a sick idea hahaha. Might get around to it sometime in the next couple months. But otherwise I got a few silly ideas in line for now while it's off season.
It always takes me back to when I first got into track and field when I hear the commentators talking in some Eastern European language I don’t recognize 😂😂
Great video, the way Ukhov approaches the jump is like a gymnast gathering momentum you make a great point about Barshim jumping too many times on the day before trying for a record/pb, recently in the Olympics McEwen and Kerr looked like they had a 2.40+ but both got too tired I dont think PEDs do anything to raise the potential of an athletes high jump, but they would allow athletes to not get as tired. The high jump seems to be a really nicely balanced event where a full sprint is sub optimal and the actual jump is based on genetics and kinetic linking and would be hindered by adding extra muscle and weight, certainly the extra muscle an athlete can put on naturally would be more than sufficient to reach optimal shape. Its actually difficult to think of another event that is effectively immune to doping abuse like the high jump is.
@@cattycats4 Your neurological recovery process would be at greart advantage from taking peds. As after a heavy ploy session/block of training it take some time for the reactiveness/codination to come back. It can take 7 to 10 days during the season. 2008 Beijing silver medalist lost out to peds. The coach and a number of the athlete's where ban.
@@djjumps11 thats all good and well, we know peds allow athletes to recover faster, it doesnt answer the question of wether peds would allow athletes to improve their natural potential ceiling of performance in context to a high jump (probably not imo)
@@cattycats4 You would be missing a few light bulbs up stairs, to think it didn't add something. Jumping 2.40+ is hard on the whole system. I don't think i have seen anyone yet put 2 olympic cycles together without some sort of system break down. I think peds have been used in rehabilitation. It is very hard to get that condition back. Mental, physical and rhythmicaly. After all the events is only a run, a jump and a bit of gymnastics. All in less than 4 second. Well over 1000 complex movement patterns. You have 2 have the skill level first.
High jump is very cruel in the way the best jumps of an athlete's career can be historical footnotes as the bar just wasn't set high enough *on that jump* to be a big deal. I wouldn't have it any other way though. That's what makes it and pole vault special. I hate the trial thing World Athletics did earlier this year with laser measured jump height in pole vault. That just sucks the soul straight out of it.
There are many great jumpers, it's just dumb to announce the GOAT, like in basketball. GOAT literally means "my favorite" nowadays, it just attracts more attention, that's why it is repeated so much.
I know you said that Barshim is not the GOAT, however I disagree. Not only did he have insane clearances but his medals and achievements made him the most decorated jumper in history. 4 Olympic medals (1 gold) 5 World Championship medals (3 gold) 2 Asian Games golds 1 World Junior Championship Gold 2 World Indoor Championship medals (1 gold) And he still plans to compete for another two years.
I think u did a good job bringing perspective on how good the 80's jumpers were. I didn't know they were that good. I knew that sotomayor was in a league of his own, didnt know this big of a gap. Great video, jump man likes to talk about jumping man ofc
Gotta love Patrik Sjoberg. The dude's mullet and he was a chain smoker.
S/O Stefan Holm for jumping 2.40m for such a tiny little man :) Is 33yr old Barshim carrying on to next yr's Tokyo WC cos would love him to win his 10th career WC/OLY Medal before retiring?
For real, Holm impresses me more than any of these formidable men.
@@kriho02 Franklin Jacobs, too...
'Tiny little man' he's 5'11
@@footballvidshd5421 Stefan Holm's 5' 9' or 1.81m compared to the likes of Sjöberg 2m, Thränhardt 1.99m, Bondarenko 1.98m, Sotomayor 1.93m, Paklin 1.91m & Barshim 1.89m. So yes, he's a 'tiny little man' in that context :)
@@AllInTheGame01181cm is 5’11, not 5’9
Hey, is it possible to do a summary video of the yr's best non-Mondo/Yaroslava jumps across all 4 Jumps? :) Thinking of ppl like Miltiadis Tentoglou, Sam Kendricks, Emmanouil Karalis, Nina Kennedy, Molly Caudery, Malaika Mihambo, Tara Davis-Woodhall, Thea LaFond, Jordan Alejandro Diaz Fortun, Pedro Pichardo etc.
You know that's a sick idea hahaha. Might get around to it sometime in the next couple months. But otherwise I got a few silly ideas in line for now while it's off season.
@@JumpmanTF 👍
2.41 is so high, I know 2.40 is the benchmark which makes this even more impressive
I see Jumpman video. I click Jumpman video.
It always takes me back to when I first got into track and field when I hear the commentators talking in some Eastern European language I don’t recognize 😂😂
Dude what's up with the background music Wirtual uses in his videos? I hear them in nearly every video I watch.
I like em. Also free to use haha
Great video, the way Ukhov approaches the jump is like a gymnast gathering momentum
you make a great point about Barshim jumping too many times on the day before trying for a record/pb, recently in the Olympics McEwen and Kerr looked like they had a 2.40+ but both got too tired
I dont think PEDs do anything to raise the potential of an athletes high jump, but they would allow athletes to not get as tired. The high jump seems to be a really nicely balanced event where a full sprint is sub optimal and the actual jump is based on genetics and kinetic linking and would be hindered by adding extra muscle and weight, certainly the extra muscle an athlete can put on naturally would be more than sufficient to reach optimal shape.
Its actually difficult to think of another event that is effectively immune to doping abuse like the high jump is.
I simply think you are very wrong.
@@djjumps11 thanks for wasting the time it took to type that
@@cattycats4 Your neurological recovery process would be at greart advantage from taking peds. As after a heavy ploy session/block of training it take some time for the reactiveness/codination to come back. It can take 7 to 10 days during the season.
2008 Beijing silver medalist lost out to peds. The coach and a number of the athlete's where ban.
@@djjumps11 thats all good and well, we know peds allow athletes to recover faster, it doesnt answer the question of wether peds would allow athletes to improve their natural potential ceiling of performance in context to a high jump (probably not imo)
@@cattycats4 You would be missing a few light bulbs up stairs, to think it didn't add something. Jumping 2.40+ is hard on the whole system. I don't think i have seen anyone yet put 2 olympic cycles together without some sort of system break down. I think peds have been used in rehabilitation. It is very hard to get that condition back. Mental, physical and rhythmicaly.
After all the events is only a run, a jump and a bit of gymnastics. All in less than 4 second. Well over 1000 complex movement patterns. You have 2 have the skill level first.
High jump is very cruel in the way the best jumps of an athlete's career can be historical footnotes as the bar just wasn't set high enough *on that jump* to be a big deal. I wouldn't have it any other way though. That's what makes it and pole vault special. I hate the trial thing World Athletics did earlier this year with laser measured jump height in pole vault. That just sucks the soul straight out of it.
There are many great jumpers, it's just dumb to announce the GOAT, like in basketball. GOAT literally means "my favorite" nowadays, it just attracts more attention, that's why it is repeated so much.
I know you said that Barshim is not the GOAT, however I disagree. Not only did he have insane clearances but his medals and achievements made him the most decorated jumper in history.
4 Olympic medals (1 gold)
5 World Championship medals (3 gold)
2 Asian Games golds
1 World Junior Championship Gold
2 World Indoor Championship medals (1 gold)
And he still plans to compete for another two years.
That's fair, sotomayor could've had more but Cuba boycotted 2 olympics in his career. He got shafted.
@@JumpmanTF I understand that, however Barshim will be considered the GOAT as soon as he leaps 2.46, otherwise Cuba still has the crown.
Muta essa barshim is The GOAT‼️😁
I don't think you watched the full video 🤔
@@RunnerGang1997 not record it is
Multiple medals
No, no he’s not, not even close 😂😂😂
I jumped on this video faster than a.....
re uppload x3?
This ones an original bro!
@@JumpmanTF this stuff is evergreen...