This Will NEVER Happen Again! || The World Record That Will Stand FOREVER

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  • Опубліковано 18 лис 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 287

  • @TotalRunningProductions
    @TotalRunningProductions  Рік тому +105

    NOTE - At 9:20 we stated that the speed at release was 42.6 km/h but it's actually 110.5 km/h. Thanks for understanding!

    • @tobiaszb
      @tobiaszb Рік тому

      30.7*3.6

    • @db-canuck
      @db-canuck Рік тому +4

      i immediately did the same math when the i saw those numbers. thanks for this!

    • @koekum2142
      @koekum2142 Рік тому +3

      Yup, to get from miles to kilometers you have to multiply by 1.6 not divide (it's actually 1.609)

    • @db-canuck
      @db-canuck Рік тому

      @@koekum2142 yeah have been converting mi to km on the fly since Canada switched to metric almost 50 years ago. its not hard with some practice

    • @nhoover
      @nhoover Рік тому +1

      Can't you add a caption to explain the mistake?

  • @souldreamer9056
    @souldreamer9056 Рік тому +169

    Your kmh speed at 9:20 is wrong. It should be 110.5km/h, but you’ve written 42.6km/h.

    • @souldreamer9056
      @souldreamer9056 Рік тому +4

      Sorry to nitpick

    • @Dr-Jan-itor
      @Dr-Jan-itor Рік тому +24

      @@souldreamer9056 I didn't think it was a nitpik. I saw same gaffe.

    • @RunnerBeanzDad
      @RunnerBeanzDad Рік тому +14

      Yep. Divided by 1.609 (1 mile = 1.609km) instead of multiplying by 1.609.

    • @jojolords4523
      @jojolords4523 Рік тому +5

      @@RunnerBeanzDad Convert m/s to km/h, that's easier, the factor is 3.6

    • @multiio1424
      @multiio1424 Рік тому +4

      @@souldreamer9056 Not a nitpick but an important correction. Maybe TRP will add an annotation to the video.

  • @LevelofClarity
    @LevelofClarity Рік тому +33

    Love when TRP cover field events, especially historically significant athletes or performances. Keep up the great work!

  • @theerictalbert2841
    @theerictalbert2841 Рік тому +176

    The fact that he hurled this 16 pound hammer further than most elite javelin throwers could throw a javelin boggles my mind. I understand that the techniques are vastly different, but it doesn’t take away from the fact that most javelin throwers would be ecstatic to hit a mark of that distance.

    • @fakeaccntsoicanlogin
      @fakeaccntsoicanlogin Рік тому +28

      if they didn't change the Jav people would likely be tossing it out of the stadium by now

    • @Zakariah1971
      @Zakariah1971 Рік тому +2

      Angular momentum. Physics…

    • @callumbush1
      @callumbush1 Рік тому +9

      They changed the design of the javelin after 1986 so it couldn't be thrown as far!

    • @apollosun2913
      @apollosun2913 Рік тому +5

      That's a terrible analogy due to the different techniques. If they tried throwing that ball with a javelin technique, they wouldn't throw it even 10 metres. No javelin thrower would be happy with 10 metres.

    • @andrehof7876
      @andrehof7876 Рік тому +6

      Ll, look up the time that some Spanish dudes threw the javelin like hammers.. And set unbeatable records.. The iau had to ban the technique for javelin

  • @lyonheart84
    @lyonheart84 Рік тому +117

    Although there's a question mark during that period over performance enhancing drugs to be honest his rotational speed and technique was head and shoulders above anybody else of the time and probably today. His distances were not purely power orientated. A remarkable athlete.

    • @bipolarminddroppings
      @bipolarminddroppings Рік тому +24

      thats why it make perfect sense to cheat at the tippy-top level. If you are already the best in the world, have great technique and experience, all you need is an extra 1 or 2 % and you become unbeatable.

    • @danschneider7531
      @danschneider7531 Рік тому +1

      @@bipolarminddroppings Exactly. It's the same thing that dogs the Williams sisters in tennis. It's the same reason why Mark McGwire and Barry Bonds did it.

    • @danielh3179
      @danielh3179 Рік тому +6

      He had the perfect athletic build for the event which entails a large leg mass to upper body mass ratio which enables a lower center of gravity during rotation. He and his coaches clearly understood the importance of not bulking up in the arms, shoulders, and chest with excessive upper body weight training while focusing on maximizing leg muscle development, strength and quickness for a rapid rotational angular acceleration and speed.

    • @danschneider7531
      @danschneider7531 Рік тому +1

      @@danielh3179 And steroids helps w all those things, so there is no diff between your and bipolar's claims.

    • @bipolarminddroppings
      @bipolarminddroppings Рік тому +1

      @@danschneider7531 im not actually claiming the dude cheated, I want to make that clear. Im just saying, that it makes sense to cheat when you are already the perfect athlete for your event, you dont even need to go overboard with it, so you are less likely to get caught
      It happened in an esport, top top, world elite, professional Counter Strike players were using a kind of aimbot that just basically improved your aim by a few percent, which meant it was basically impossible to tell they were cheating, we know it happened, we just don't know exactly which pros were using it.

  • @Nashvillain10SE
    @Nashvillain10SE Рік тому +38

    I love the TRP episodes covering the "less popular" events!

  • @steyndewet1191
    @steyndewet1191 Рік тому +29

    That scream on the WR is a thing of beauty. In many years of competing, I had one perfect throw. The feeling following that release is unlike anything I've ever experienced and a natural, rapid exhaling scream followed.
    Anyways, I have studied Sedykh as much as I could back in the day, I can still not understand how he could do what he did. Not mentioned in the video, he had a decent 100m sprint time, and a decent PB in the triple jump. He is truly one of the great ever athletes.

  • @waltervogel2506
    @waltervogel2506 Рік тому +9

    I met Yuri in 1975 in Sochi . We were training along side the Soviet Olympic team , Visited me in Bucharest in 1976 . A wonderful man and athlete . We lost the best ever hammer thrower in 2021 ..Rest in peace my idol .

  • @bsjeffrey
    @bsjeffrey Рік тому +30

    the record holders rotational speed looks so much faster than the others.

  • @chris.patelis1504
    @chris.patelis1504 Рік тому +7

    i love the fact that you post something like a documentary for world records . They are dope and extremely engaging

  • @bjf5027
    @bjf5027 Рік тому +10

    As a throws coach I really appreciate these thrower videos, keep them coming!!!

  • @vintagelifts
    @vintagelifts Рік тому +3

    I know NOTHING about track and field but as an olympic sport fan I watcg every single videos that you post about the history of this sport

  • @audioshark5292
    @audioshark5292 Рік тому +6

    Loved this man. Athletics is about a lot more than running fast

  • @YvonneBowe
    @YvonneBowe Рік тому +3

    I was at the meet in Cork where Litvinov and Sedyk shredded the world record. Was there to see my friend Gary Halpin who was also throwing so was well schooled about the quality of the field. Daly Thompson the olympic decathlon champion was the big draw at the meet but Sedyk and Litvinov chewed the whole thing up. It was magnificent.

  • @BigNoizz
    @BigNoizz 3 місяці тому +2

    In the 90"s I was a competitive hammer thrower. My coach was from Austria and I was taught 3 turns with a parallel finish after each turn., at the same time people were starting to experiment in my area with 4 turns and where they put the foor down sooner and fast very similar to what we see today at the elite level. It is so satisfying watching the power of 3 turns performed at this maximum level

  • @BrianHG.Ocean.Fitness
    @BrianHG.Ocean.Fitness Рік тому +4

    @9:12, You have a unit conversion mistake. 30.7 meters per second = 68.67 mile per hour OR 110.52 kilometers per hour.

  • @duncanharvey2209
    @duncanharvey2209 Рік тому +9

    Whats amazing about him is "usually" we would have questions over the era he covered and that still could be a question mark but he is not particularly large or even enormously strong compared to even modern throwers. He legitimately seemed to do it with absurd rotational speed and perfect technique...Also love these, great research and video. I remember watching him in the 1991 world championships wondering what this old guy was doing there...then i just sat back down 😂

  • @shovelhead56
    @shovelhead56 Рік тому +6

    Great Video on an event that does not receive the accolades that it deserves. Phenomenal Athleticism!! Enjoyed your informative Narrative🤙

  • @johnpsmith19
    @johnpsmith19 Рік тому +1

    Thank you for the focus on another les followed field event.

  • @nickkositsyn4597
    @nickkositsyn4597 Рік тому +1

    I'm glad that you made this video.

  • @ajoyandbasantibaksi5236
    @ajoyandbasantibaksi5236 Рік тому +4

    A good video, learned something new re Syedikh. Undoubtedly the greatest ever in the mens HT. One rather silly boo-boo is when you tried to convert his release velocity of ~68 mph to kph. You appear to have divided by 1.6 rather than multiply by the same number. His release velocity was actual almost 110 km per hour. A truly ridiculous figure, faster than most cars on freeways!

  • @himmelhero
    @himmelhero Рік тому

    i never had any interest in track and field but for some reason i can't stop watching your videos very well done and informative

  • @MikeSpille
    @MikeSpille Рік тому +3

    The speed conversion at 9:16 should show 110.52 KPH. Great vid and thank you for sharing it!

  • @noellmayoral9010
    @noellmayoral9010 Рік тому +1

    This this person on ESPN. I can't think of another time where I have been this interested in the hammer throw.

  • @justinedinger9155
    @justinedinger9155 Рік тому +2

    9:17 small math error 30.7 meters/second is equal to 110.5 kilometers/hour.
    Amazing video though overall. One of the best track and field channels out there.

  • @SilencedButNotForgotten
    @SilencedButNotForgotten Рік тому +3

    What an athlete. Perfect form.

  • @audioshark5292
    @audioshark5292 Рік тому +2

    You need to do a video on what Lasitskene has done at the champs over the past decade.

  • @twelvebears1971
    @twelvebears1971 Рік тому +3

    I was a youth league hammer thrower when he did this. Just showed that technique was more important than strength. Amazing.

  • @willstuart4504
    @willstuart4504 Рік тому +1

    Absolutely LOVE the videos about the field events and the Legends that have not received nearly the attention they deserve.
    Very interesting indeed. Great upload mate.... won't be long now and you're gonna be a very busy young man. Lol I'm betting you can't wait.. 👍👍

  • @KemoTherapy99
    @KemoTherapy99 Рік тому +2

    Again a top-notch work, thank you. 👏

  • @wilhelmw3455
    @wilhelmw3455 Рік тому +15

    Great documentary for true fans of track and field who enjoy a wide range of events but no doubt the ones with short attention spans who only enjoy a narrow range of events will find this boring and complain.

  • @trevormay101
    @trevormay101 Рік тому +2

    2 uploads in one day let’s gooo

  • @poly_hexamethyl
    @poly_hexamethyl Рік тому +2

    Very interesting video! I'd imagine the angle of release is extremely critical to get maximum range for a given launch speed, and it's not even at all obvious exactly what that angle should be. It would be around 45 degrees above the horizontal, but not exactly since aerodynamic drag and the fact that the release point is above ground level would have some effect. To be able to consistently produce the ideal release angle while spinning around at high speed is indeed superhuman!

  • @MrMezmerized
    @MrMezmerized Рік тому +1

    Undoubtedly one of the most proposterous records in all of sports, and an absolutely amazing career. So good, so consistent and for so very long. He probably took a step back after 1995, but well over 60m is still very respectable, even for a hammer thrower in his prime.

  • @marksmyth5505
    @marksmyth5505 Рік тому +1

    I enjoyed this video so much,thank you for uploaded it 😊

  • @SilencedButNotForgotten
    @SilencedButNotForgotten Рік тому +1

    I love these types of videos!

  • @philipeick-vocalmusic
    @philipeick-vocalmusic Рік тому

    Loving your more in depth videos - even when they're not about (middle-) distance running, which is my main interest.
    And I know you have your reasons, but I especially hope you advance from the type of videos that get released minutes after the event result - which have no extra benefit for me as a regular watcher of your videos, as they are just repetitions of the result with old footage. For me they just diffuse your high quality content. But do what's best for you and the channel!
    I appreciate the work!

  • @nickn2138
    @nickn2138 Рік тому +1

    You can make a video about the WR holder in women's high jump. It is standing for almost 36 years. It Is remarkable.

  • @tawon1984
    @tawon1984 Рік тому +1

    0:17 After his throw the grunt and the body language was identical to when the Hulk threw the tank in the 2003 film. I see where they got the inspiration from 💪

  • @harrypalmer7169
    @harrypalmer7169 Рік тому +1

    A discipline not for the faint hearted. Amazing skill and technique.

  • @travissalter4087
    @travissalter4087 Рік тому +5

    If the maternity ward at a hospital was ever flooded and the nearest dry land was 96 yards away… Just call this guy, and he can get every newborn to safety… They would probably need one of those Firemans trampolines on the other side or quite a few pillows… He would be a hero and it would be of great practical use lol

  • @uncharted1597
    @uncharted1597 Рік тому

    Great video, thanks

  • @andymcneil7085
    @andymcneil7085 Рік тому +2

    What an athlete.

  • @thedailystride5407
    @thedailystride5407 Рік тому +2

    Ooooooooooooo man. I know this is gonna be a banger

  • @randykubick
    @randykubick Рік тому +1

    watch how he stands up perfectly straight creating additional acceleration on his release. watch the rotational speed of figure skaters with arms extended out vs. arms straight up.

  • @Leeroy49
    @Leeroy49 Рік тому +3

    His abilities in his discipline were as rare as those of Bubka, Duplantis or McLaughlin.

    • @Maxfr8
      @Maxfr8 Рік тому +1

      steroids

    • @jamesrobert4106
      @jamesrobert4106 Рік тому

      ​@@Maxfr8No doubt whatsoever. But so were his rivals.

  • @ariopratama2286
    @ariopratama2286 Рік тому +1

    I'm so happy that TRP is covering the field events more rather than most of the track action. I'm tired about this channel just bring bunch of content about mclaughlin, lyles, also like matthew bolling stuff 😂 which is just a more repetitive stats and clickbait

  • @marcosluciosilva2433
    @marcosluciosilva2433 9 місяців тому

    Incrideble job... Total Running
    Incrdeble recod... Mr. Sedyky wooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooow

  • @RichardMigneron
    @RichardMigneron Рік тому +3

    At 9m14s, 68.67 mph is correct, but in kph it's 110.52 not 42.6 ! And at /6m/0, you have 2 2nd all-time, the last one should be 3rd all-time !!!!

  • @johnmiranda3641
    @johnmiranda3641 Рік тому +1

    You have to think his release after three rotations was responsible for both his success and honestly longevity too. Less strain & stress on his body. 204 times surpassing 80 meters we might never see occur again. 👏

  • @alanduncan9204
    @alanduncan9204 Рік тому +2

    Litvinov was 6 foot and barely over 100kg which shows how powerful he was for his build.

  • @jeythegrey
    @jeythegrey Рік тому +86

    Dude looked 45 when he was 21 lol

  • @jontyarnold8522
    @jontyarnold8522 Рік тому

    Great video…enjoyed that..

  • @stevesando6695
    @stevesando6695 Рік тому +1

    really great video. keep it going.

  • @hughmac13
    @hughmac13 Рік тому

    I don't watch hammer-throw events, so I don't know how they're presented for broadcast, but it would be amazing to see this guy compete with Trackman so that the rate of rotation and exit velocity could be captured with every throw as the athlete was still spinning and throwing.

  • @fugglie
    @fugglie Рік тому +1

    wonderful comentary on an amazing athelete, correct me if im wrong though but doesn't 30.7 meters a second convert to over 100 km/hour

  • @TVmuki
    @TVmuki Рік тому

    Such a cool video. Thank you so much for the effort you put in those projects. I would love to see one on the discus wr one day.

  • @whereismydad
    @whereismydad Рік тому

    The thumbnail is impeccable 🙈

  • @tekkerzboyjr6073
    @tekkerzboyjr6073 Рік тому +2

    Ladies and gentlemen, Sydney has been reported to have a knee injury will not compete in the world championships. Very sad to hear another awful news just like hissam asigna.

  • @hotpod12
    @hotpod12 Рік тому +7

    It’s unfortunate there will always be a certain amount of suspicion around Sedykh. I’d prefer to think naively perhaps, given he won his first major competition at the 76 Olympics and his last at the 91 Worlds, and despite the advances in drug detection over this time, he never failed a drugs test, that he was clean, a truely once in a generation athlete.

    • @headlibrarian1996
      @headlibrarian1996 Рік тому +2

      Would he have tested clean with modern testing methods? We will never know, of course. Also, substances that are banned now were legal back then.

    • @TVmuki
      @TVmuki Рік тому +10

      To me it doesn't even matter. He was very very likely on something, everyone was by that time. But the technique, the consistency, the speed and the competitve mindset are what really sets him apart from everyone else. Such athletes would have been great any era under any testing conditions.

    • @bowlchamps37
      @bowlchamps37 Рік тому +3

      His autopsy states that he was a drug user.

    • @chrism45
      @chrism45 Рік тому +1

      I don't think they were clean back then and I don't think they are clean now. We now know so much more about training and performance that it's so strange that no one is even close.

    • @willconwell
      @willconwell Рік тому +3

      Lance Armstrong went an entire career without testing positive

  • @georgec2894
    @georgec2894 Рік тому +2

    To say 86.74m has never been approached is nonsense: Ivan Tikhon's 2005 throw of 86.73m qualifies as an approach for me. He may have been banned for doping, but do we think these boys form the 1980's were squeeky clean?!

  • @marcosluciosilva2433
    @marcosluciosilva2433 9 місяців тому

    He just launched
    incredible!

  • @gGeezZusS
    @gGeezZusS 3 місяці тому

    I just came here to see how far was Katzberg from the record and after seeing how hard this was to achieve I think he has a long way ahead of him

  • @vampy5071
    @vampy5071 Рік тому

    It looks as though they are driving the speed and force through the tips of their toes, really digging in the tops of the feet on each spin.. almost like one of those spintop toys (where you push in a button on the top to make it spin faster).
    If you look at others who are getting much lower distances, they spin on their heels.. or they let the balls velocity pull them around instead of focusing on controlling the spin or attempting to speed up

  • @ЕвгенийКурашик

    The greatest athlete in this sport 👏👍🔥

  • @Michael_from_EU_Germany
    @Michael_from_EU_Germany Рік тому

    Do you know Hal Connolly (USA)? Olympic Champion in Melbourne 1956, hammer throw. I quote from a newspaper article long time ago:
    "Deep in the jumble of recent Olympic documents, a certain Harold Connolly is quoted as describing - hitherto unchallenged - the U.S. Olympic team of 1956, at least the track and field athletes, as doped without exception. He should know. He was part of it, as a hammer thrower, as a gold medalist with an Olympic record."

  • @joostprins3381
    @joostprins3381 Рік тому

    I used to throw the hammer myself, and there are a few things absolute needed. But for most his explosiveness, this is in your muscles, can be trained but your muscles needs to have the good fibers. I bet he would have run a very fast 100 m when trained.
    If you look how fast he is, he is absurd fast. Now to make that work you need loads of talent to keep this energy focused, and that is the secret. He had it, doping would have helped, but only in getting muscles faster and recover from training. But in the end his talent was great.

  • @callumbush1
    @callumbush1 Рік тому +2

    You got the kilometers and miles mixed up as 1 mile equals 1.6 kilometers.

  • @2255223388
    @2255223388 Рік тому

    He nearly closed with the obvious question mark about drugs but then immediately switched to "nah bro, GOATed"

  • @claude_k
    @claude_k Рік тому

    At 9:11 the release speed of 30.7 m/s equates to 110.5 km/h (30.7 * 3600 / 1000). The speed in miles of 68.67 mph is about correct (110.5 / 1.609 = 68.69) as we are probably missing some decimals in the original value in m/s; but the km/h speed of 42.6 has nothing to do there... I believe someone has again divided (by mistake) the mph valueof 68.67 by 1.609 as it gives 42.6 and change...

  • @actionthraxin
    @actionthraxin Рік тому

    I love this sport

  • @davidcastrillon102
    @davidcastrillon102 Рік тому

    I believe Ivan Tsikhan also is in the 86 meters ranking with 86.73 meters... He did it in 2005

  • @ig2d
    @ig2d Рік тому

    Great vid - although I see that Ivan Tikhon came within 1 cm of the WR at 86.73 - "subsequent to drugs disqualification"

  • @lolBrand0
    @lolBrand0 Рік тому

    I love these kind of vids good job

  • @NerdLifts
    @NerdLifts Рік тому

    Crazy that this record has never been beat with modern training. Yes, the Soviet athletes may have been on drugs, but so are lots of athletes now.

  • @DonLee1980
    @DonLee1980 Рік тому +1

    So a 16lb ball being chucked at 30.7m/s carries 3417j of energy. A rough estimate of each throw from the wind up till release is about 5 seconds long. That means he was able to transfer nearly a whole horsepower of energy onto the hammer for the throw, and that's not even including any of the kinetic energy on his body.

    • @thermitebanana
      @thermitebanana Рік тому

      The fact that his body comes to a complete stop so quickly after releasing the hammer shows how well he transferred that energy

  • @Sam-hc3zb
    @Sam-hc3zb Рік тому +1

    at 9:17, now im high, but those maths cant be right, km per hour is always higher than miles an hour

  • @Alan_Hans__
    @Alan_Hans__ Рік тому +1

    9:19 is yet another conversion factor error by the only major country that still uses imperial :(
    It's not a huge surprise that it was an Eastern Bloc country from the 80's that has records that stand to this day.
    Pretty incredible effort and form regardless of his dietary supplements.

  • @tyrellsawatzky3688
    @tyrellsawatzky3688 Рік тому +1

    Awesome video, I always loved this progression and it was nice to see the video with the story. At 16:20 you claim that this is the longest standing men's world record, but actually the men's discus record was set earlier that summer on June 6th. The hammer record was set on August 30th.

  • @Trizzer89
    @Trizzer89 Рік тому

    He went crazy in 1984, dang

  • @Omnis2
    @Omnis2 Рік тому

    Everyone said this about Randy Barnes's shot record, but then Ryan Crouser came along. Gonna have to overcome that massive doping hurdle that the USSR athletes had though.

  • @Oden106
    @Oden106 Рік тому +1

    The conversion from m/s to MPH and KPH is not accurate (MPH 68,67 should be 110.51 KPH). Probably a mistype because your number game is otherwise spot on!! Great video !!!

  • @villehytonen7279
    @villehytonen7279 Рік тому

    With throwers nowadays struggling to hit 80 meters, its hard to think that his record would be beaten.

  • @pahtar7189
    @pahtar7189 Рік тому +1

    Fun fact: Soviet athletes received a bonus equivalent to about a couple month's pay for each world record broken.

  • @poindextertunes
    @poindextertunes Рік тому

    God damn the kenetic energy he created 😳 fuuuggggg

  • @pauloliver1842
    @pauloliver1842 Рік тому

    Former Moscow anti-doping laboratory director Grigory Rodchenkov wrote in a book last year that Sedykh was “a huge steroid abuser” who benefited from a Soviet cover-up. Rodchenkov said one of Sedykh's samples contained such large traces of the steroid stanozolol that it contaminated laboratory equipment.

  • @David_7171
    @David_7171 Рік тому +1

    The tape measure wasn’t ever near reaching that WR hammer

  • @askaskdfasdfaksdfka
    @askaskdfasdfaksdfka Рік тому +1

    That's why Leon Edwards has the most aesthetic physique

  • @abelabner
    @abelabner 10 місяців тому

    Yes, juiced to the gills, but 3 turns and flawless technique....it is beautiful to watch for me. Most modern Hammer Throwers use 4 turns.

  • @AllInTheGame01
    @AllInTheGame01 Рік тому +2

    A Soviet Era Athlete/WR? 🤨🤨🤨

  • @wartable
    @wartable Рік тому +1

    Can’t imagine I miss the U.S.S.R.

  • @DreamteamCarlo
    @DreamteamCarlo Рік тому

    Very impressive.. How did hammer throw lose the popularity contest to shot put?

  • @tamasszanka5866
    @tamasszanka5866 Рік тому

    not just that it is 16 pounds. The pull force the hammer generates after 3 rotations equals a weight of 800 pounds! Thats the force that pulls the arms while the body needs to kept center and spind &release.

  • @jefffawcett
    @jefffawcett Рік тому +1

    His technique is just so incredible, shot putters and discus guys are always huge beasts. This dude doesn’t even look like he has any muscle tone other than an obviously solid lower body.

  • @keinKlarname
    @keinKlarname Рік тому +1

    68,67 Miles = 42.6 kilometers ? Aha.

  • @outsiderunner
    @outsiderunner Рік тому

    110 km/h throwing something is insane

  • @Michael_from_EU_Germany
    @Michael_from_EU_Germany Рік тому

    In 1974 there was a sports festival for throwers in Germany. Karl-Hans Riehm improved the old world record several times in one competition by several meters. A few weeks later, another German hammer thrower threw even further. 79.30 meters. Riehm admitted many years after the end of his career that he had started doping at that time. In the mid-1970s, a new significant stronger doping began in all disciplines. With new anabolic steroids pills. In the West as well as in the East.
    So if doping had to be done for 78 meters, why assume that those throwing over 80 meters were not doped?

  • @daveyboy5042
    @daveyboy5042 Рік тому

    Good watch

  • @Martinit0
    @Martinit0 Рік тому

    I hat to check my YT setting to make sure it was set to the usual 1.5x - nope - normal speed.

  • @BulkBrogan.
    @BulkBrogan. 8 місяців тому

    Since I started Highland Games I learned one universal law about throwing
    The bigger the yell the bigger the throw
    And this is the secret lol