Kingston (Jamaica): Usain Bolt said that the progress of a surge technology that can help remove the laughable world record and that new shoes also provide unfair benefits for any athlete who do not wear it.
After athletes tore notebooks in walking distance with carbon-plated shoes, polished, technology now has moved to Sprint nails, where – although there are less time in the race to make an impact – it’s still enough to make a difference.
“When I was told about it, I did not believe that this was what we visited, you know what I mean, that we really adjust the nail to the level where now gives athletes profit to run faster,” Bolt told Reuters in An interview from Kingston.
The 100 and 200-meter world record holders competed in Puma Paku throughout his career.
“It’s strange and unfair for many athletes because I know that in their past (shoe company) actually tried and the government body said ‘No, you can’t change the nail’, so to know that now they really do it, that’s it ridiculous, “said the Olympic champion eight times.
American Trayvon Bromell is a favorite to take a 100m bolt title in Tokyo.
He is the fastest in the world above this distance with 9.77 seconds, but the 19th bronze penist of world bronze.
It is less convincing about the impact of shoes.
“I don’t think there is a lot of data to show that they experienced a big increase,” Bromell, who runs a new balance, told reporters last week.
“I know we (the new balance) constantly building what we have to make a perfect surge, but for me personally as a runner I still feel enough data to really show.” While other companies now have the same shoe model.
, Nike looks set to dominate and endanger himself as a leader in technology.
“We are just smarter about how we engineered and assemble them,” Nike said in an email to Reuters.
The company added that he worked to keep his athletes on the spearhead while staying in the rules.
Considering the development of shoe technology, Athletics World said: “The current regulation (July 2020) was designed to provide certainty to the athletes who prepared the Tokyo 2020 Olympics which were postponed, to preserve the integrity of elite competition and limit the development of technology to the current level until after the Olympics in Tokyo , at all events.
“It was said by a work group on shoes aimed at setting parameters to achieve a balance between innovation, competitive advantage and product availability.
Performing in Nike Air Zoom Maxfly, Jamaican Two-time gold medal Olympics Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce recorded the fastest 100m in 33 years on June 5 at Kingston – Best 10.63 seconds.
Only the American world record holder Florence Griffith-Joyner was faster, with 10.49 seconds in Indianapolis in 1988.
But Fraser-Pryce did not want to discount the work he had done to become the fastest woman who was still alive, even when he trained and competed in a surge.
“You can give nails to others and they might not do the same thing I have done, so I did not count himself from my hard work and coach I had entered,” four times 100 m world champion told Reuters.
“Perhaps a combination of both – have good products and good runners combined – make the final product very good.
So for me, I can’t be alone for nails.” American Sha’Carri Richardson, who lost his place at 100m in Tokyo after receiving a one-month suspension because it used marijuana, up to number six on the list of all time with 10.72 seconds in April using shoes.
Veteran Sprint coach Jamaica Stephen Francis admitted that a faster time was run in a new Sprint nike nail.
“Based on the evidence of anecdotal and based on the fact that you have people who will never run as fast as they run, I suspect there might be one point, but there is no scientific basis for making that point,” Francis told Reuters from Kingston.
Whatever the benefit, he said, anyone can benefit from Nike technology based on the rules set by Athletics World.