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Russian Olympic Trials 2012

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Re: Russian Olympic Trials 2012

Postby Gabriella » Sun Jul 08, 2012 8:45 am

mump boy wrote:


I've just watched these races and i am so confused ever who these people are :?

In the 400 Krivoshapka has changed her hair totally, i know Guschina, no idea who came 3rd but i know Nazarova. In the 1500 i only know the old school, Tomashova, Sobelova, Yevdokimova, who are the top 2 ??



Oh mump come on! :D

400m
Lane 1 - Migunova - Not so well known, but has run on international relay legs before: 1st leg in Heats in Gothenberg 2006, Beijing 08 and 3rd leg on the winning team at 2011 Ech indoors.
Lane 2 - Litvinova - had v.good relay legs in Osaka and Beijing, the latter on 2nd against Felix.
Lane 3 - Krivoshapka, whom you know
Lane 4 - Guschina, whom you know
Lane 5 - Firova, who comes 3rd. The European Champion from 2010, and remember she came second to Felix at the World Indoors a couple of seasons ago?
Lane 6 - Nazarova, whom you know
Lane 7 - Vdovina. Not so well know but ran the 1st leg in the heats in Daegu, and lost Russia the gold in Doha Wch 2010 and nearly lost Russia the gold in Ech Paris 2011. Very poor relay runner
Lane 8 - Kapachinskaya, whom you know.
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Re: Russian Olympic Trials 2012

Postby T&F_LA » Sun Jul 08, 2012 9:46 am

That 49.16 was impressive.

However the last 100m still are a problem for Krivoshapka as they were in the past (in Berlin she almost lost two places in the last 100m).

In this race she's succesfully chasing Guschina and Nazarova the first 200m, but maybe too hard... the third 100m are superb but then she gradually runs out of gas and
still runs a 49.16 :shock:

Would a better strategy have resulted in a sub49? Well, I think: Absolutely

IMHO to adjust the strategy is necessary in order to be a threat to SRR and Montsho at the Olympics final
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Re: Russian Olympic Trials 2012

Postby lapsus » Sun Jul 08, 2012 10:36 am

Oo, just now noticed that Lebedeva jumped 14.68 - the comeback is on! Any guesses who will do better in London - Mbango or Lebedeva? :D
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Re: Russian Olympic Trials 2012

Postby aaronk » Sun Jul 08, 2012 11:00 am

fromage wrote:There has been some considerable scepticism about the Russian performances in their Trials; I wonder if they consider it strange that Chelsea Hayes with her 7 metres plus in the OT, last year could not make better than 6.50 in the LJ acc to the stats and the previous year well down on that as her seasons best.


Wasn't there a LJ'er named Bob Beamon who had not reached 27 feet (26-11??) prior to jumping 29-2 1/2???

They've called all such monster "leaps" forward in one's PR "Beamonesque" since then!!

Maybe they'll now call these "Hayesian"!! :P
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Re: Russian Olympic Trials 2012

Postby mump boy » Sun Jul 08, 2012 11:55 am

Gabriella wrote:
mump boy wrote:


I've just watched these races and i am so confused ever who these people are

In the 400 Krivoshapka has changed her hair totally, i know Guschina, no idea who came 3rd but i know Nazarova. In the 1500 i only know the old school, Tomashova, Sobelova, Yevdokimova, who are the top 2 ??



Oh mump come on!

400m
Lane 1 - Migunova - Not so well known, but has run on international relay legs before: 1st leg in Heats in Gothenberg 2006, Beijing 08 and 3rd leg on the winning team at 2011 Ech indoors.
Lane 2 - Litvinova - had v.good relay legs in Osaka and Beijing, the latter on 2nd against Felix.
Lane 3 - Krivoshapka, whom you know
Lane 4 - Guschina, whom you know
Lane 5 - Firova, who comes 3rd. The European Champion from 2010, and remember she came second to Felix at the World Indoors a couple of seasons ago?
Lane 6 - Nazarova, whom you know
Lane 7 - Vdovina. Not so well know but ran the 1st leg in the heats in Daegu, and lost Russia the gold in Doha Wch 2010 and nearly lost Russia the gold in Ech Paris 2011. Very poor relay runner
Lane 8 - Kapachinskaya, whom you know.


But they all look exactly the same with brown ponytails (in till they cut all their hair off and bleach it !!) they all run fast once, turn up at a champs, go out in Semi then disappear and get replaced by someone else who does the same ad infinitum. It's the same with the 800m women apart from Savinova i haven't got a clue !!

you can swap this for KEN 5k runners, or female tennis players in general. None of them do anything significant enough for long enough to be able to distinguish between them :? :(
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Re: Russian Olympic Trials 2012

Postby Alan Shank » Sun Jul 08, 2012 1:54 pm

EPelle wrote:
Alan Shank wrote:
EPelle wrote:
Alan Shank wrote:Alyosha Vtoroy (no Cyrillic on this computer)

No need. http://www.google.com/transliterate/


That is not the same. I need a Cyrillic keyboard. A have one in Linux, Mac, iPad and my old desktop, running Windows XP, but this is my wife's computer.
Cheers,
Alan Shank
Woodland, CA, USA

Alan, have you given that one a go? Type in your word, hit 'space', and your Cyrillic equivalent appears. It's not a translator, but a transliteration agent which enables your Russian words, spelled in English, to be transliterated into Russian. For example: Krasiva [space] becomes красива. Алёша Второй resulted from Alyosha Vtoroy.


So, instead of just typing in Russian, I would have to transliterate into English, then re-transliterate it back into Russian. No, thanks! I am back home now, and all four of my computers have Cyrillic-keyboard software.

Тэйнкс, эниуей
Alan Shank
Woodland, CA USA
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Re: Russian Olympic Trials 2012

Postby Alan Shank » Thu Jul 12, 2012 10:47 am

I found a video on YouTube of the W 1500 final:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=en ... Z0QgQ&NR=1

This is from "Russia 2", so it's their feed. I have seen others with Russian commentary, but the feed is the same as we saw on Universal Sports.

An interesting thing: the running time is stopped at the finish line, not at the 400 points. The commentator mentions the time and correctly interprets what it means (300 time was 47.67, and he said 'just a bit under 4-minute pace". He had a thorough knowledge of who each runner was and what she'd done, and so did his partner, a woman. They did not use that annoying, head-on closeup so you cannot tell when the runners cross the finish line.

ChizhEnko (same as FomEnko) set the pace for a couple of laps (700m 1:51.94 [64.27]), then SOboleva took over and Chizhenko faded. TomashOva was about 7th with a lap to go (2:57.03 [65.09] commentator noted the slight drop in pace). On the backstretch, KostEtskaya moved up on Soboleva's shoulder, and MartYnova also. In the last 200, it was Kostetskaya pulling away, but Martynova also had a good finish, and Tomashova made her usual charge, passing Soboleva for the last spot on the team.

In the last lap, these people sounded like some of us, getting excited, enjoying the race with insight into what was going on. I was understanding about half of what they said, because my ear is still very rusty and it's hard to parse the sounds fast enough.

It's a shame that we cannot get this kind of commentary on US TV.
Cheers,
Alan Shank
Woodland, CA, USA
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Re: Russian Olympic Trials 2012

Postby 7of9 » Fri Jul 13, 2012 1:25 pm

does anyone have some news of slesarenko & alminova?
according to tilastopaja alminova competed only once last year (7 jan)
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Re: Russian Olympic Trials 2012

Postby pakillo » Fri Jul 13, 2012 1:32 pm

7of9 wrote:does anyone have some news of slesarenko & alminova?
according to tilastopaja alminova competed only once last year (7 jan)


Yelena Slesarenko is pregnant and will be back next year, don't know about Alminova
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Re: Russian Olympic Trials 2012

Postby berkeley » Sun Jul 15, 2012 9:48 pm

It's been a looong time since I remember seeing a top 6 like this - in any meet, never mind a national championships:
2.39
2.37
2.35
2.33
2.31
2.31
Seoul '88 (12 men over 2.31, winner 2.38) and Atlanta '96 (7 over 2.32, winner 2.39) are the only two I can recall. Is this the best non-global-championship HJ result ever ?
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Re: Russian Olympic Trials 2012

Postby berkeley » Sun Jul 15, 2012 9:58 pm

berkeley wrote:It's been a looong time since I remember seeing a top 6 like this - in any meet, never mind a national championships:
2.39
2.37
2.35
2.33
2.31
2.31
Seoul '88 (12 men over 2.31, winner 2.38) and Atlanta '96 (7 over 2.32, winner 2.39) are the only two I can recall. Is this the best non-global-championship HJ result ever ?

... all the WCs 1987-1997 also stack up well against Cheboksary 2012. Always puzzled about what has happened to our event since then ... 2005 was the nadir with only one man over 2.30.
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Re: Russian Olympic Trials 2012

Postby nevetsllim » Mon Jul 16, 2012 1:41 am

Klishina jumped 6.93m at the Russian Cup in Yerino.

The selectors went with the top three at the Russian Champs (Sokolova, Nazarova, Kolchanova) and while it was probably the fairest way of deciding selection, I'm not sure if they will be the most successful trio in London.
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Re: Russian Olympic Trials 2012

Postby gennady » Mon Jul 16, 2012 1:53 am

berkeley wrote:
berkeley wrote:It's been a looong time since I remember seeing a top 6 like this - in any meet, never mind a national championships:
2.39
2.37
2.35
2.33
2.31
2.31
Seoul '88 (12 men over 2.31, winner 2.38) and Atlanta '96 (7 over 2.32, winner 2.39) are the only two I can recall. Is this the best non-global-championship HJ result ever ?

... all the WCs 1987-1997 also stack up well against Cheboksary 2012. Always puzzled about what has happened to our event since then ... 2005 was the nadir with only one man over 2.30.

Once again
1 WC1993 2,3600
2 OG1988 2,3567
3 WC1987 2,3550
4 WC1995 2,3517
5 Mus1993 2,3500 Eberstadt
6 OG1996 2,3450
7 NC2012 2,3433 RUS NC :D
8 Mus1995 2,3417 Eberstadt
9 WC1997 2,3383
10 GG2005 2,3383
11 OG2004 2,3367
12 OG1992 2,3350
13 WC11 2,3300
14 EC98 2,3200
15 WK1998 2,3167
16 Mus1992 2,3100
17 NC2008 2,3050 RUS NC :D
18 Mus2008 2,3000 Eberstadt
19 ALL 18 Avr. 2,3352
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Re: Russian Olympic Trials 2012

Postby norunner » Mon Jul 16, 2012 3:16 am

gennady wrote:[Once again
1 WC1993 2,3600
2 OG1988 2,3567
3 WC1987 2,3550
4 WC1995 2,3517
5 Mus1993 2,3500 Eberstadt
6 OG1996 2,3450
7 NC2012 2,3433 RUS NC :D
8 Mus1995 2,3417 Eberstadt
9 WC1997 2,3383
10 GG2005 2,3383
11 OG2004 2,3367
12 OG1992 2,3350
13 WC11 2,3300
14 EC98 2,3200
15 WK1998 2,3167
16 Mus1992 2,3100
17 NC2008 2,3050 RUS NC :D
18 Mus2008 2,3000 Eberstadt
19 ALL 18 Avr. 2,3352
It's not a fair comparison though. For example in Moscow 1980 there were "only" three guys over 2.30 or more, but at that time i'm guessing not more than 15 men had jumped 2.30 at all. So in relation that would be a better result than any in your list. I think the best high jump competition ever was Eberstadt 1984 with three men attacking the world record, Zhu breaking it with 2.39 and Mögenburg and Thränhardt both equaling the european record with 2.36 .
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Re: Russian Olympic Trials 2012

Postby EPelle » Mon Jul 16, 2012 3:47 am

19 performances at/over 2.30 were accomplished by seven men in 1980.
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Re: Russian Olympic Trials 2012

Postby gennady » Mon Jul 16, 2012 6:19 am

As is well known in the sport there are many different criteria for comparison.
I just gave absolute values​​, and no more.
Of course you can differetsiirovat according to different criteria, and the result will be different.
Their list, I would like to emphasize in the first place a very high level of Russian HJ'ers in the past five years.
I hope many will agree with this.
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Re: Russian Olympic Trials 2012

Postby gennady » Mon Jul 16, 2012 6:46 am

Certainly 1980 was a very good year for the HJ.
Three world records! :shock:
But if we take the average over the Top-6 - SB, anyway, we get 2.3333.
Yes, 2.32 in 1980 is not equivalent to 2.32 in 2012.
But a comparison of the world's Top-6 is not equivalent to the national championship.
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Re: Russian Olympic Trials 2012

Postby gennady » Mon Jul 16, 2012 7:25 am

It is difficult to compare past and present.
The same table for the 21 th century.
The best competitions century, in which the 6th was 2.30 or higher.
1 NC2012 6 2,3433 :shock:
2 GG2005 6 2,3383
3 OG2004 6 2,3367
4 WC11 6 2,3300
5 OG2000 6 2,3250
6 NC2008 6 2,3050 :D
7 Mus2008 6 2,3000 Eberstadt

It's all relative, as said the old man Einstein.
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