Hello, do you have the NBC version of the men's 200m semifinals at the London Olympics
@brianbethune6162 ай бұрын
The national record lasted till 2024 this
@amooolusina69782 ай бұрын
Is that not bolt in 3rd position?
@NavF13 ай бұрын
Interesting that Carter and Gay basically ran the exact same times that Bednarek and Lyles at Paris '24, puts into perspective how insane Tebogo's 19.46s is
@amooolusina69782 ай бұрын
Also put into perspective how fast 19.44s recorded by Blake was. The funny thing is he still finished 2nd to Bolt in the 2012 Olympics final (19.32)
@marcwhitepop3 ай бұрын
What a pathetic cut off right at the start of the interview with Allyson Felix. Shame on you. You don't deserve any subscribers with such poor quality editing!
@TheBerserker503 ай бұрын
One of the greatest 200s ever! To come back in far lane, beat Tyson gay, and run that fast. His story is one of the saddest ever.
@sixaxis-q8l4 ай бұрын
This is old as hell
@bradley75064 ай бұрын
I’m starving….
@cactusy93324 ай бұрын
Fun to see Green got smoked
@cactusy93324 ай бұрын
Omaigaaddd. 18 years ago
@blacksuperman98915 ай бұрын
Crawford got such a good start. This was the beginning of the USA having issues in baton exchanges at the Olympics
@弘历爱新觉罗5 ай бұрын
Proud of Asian❤❤❤ Proud of Liu Xiang,Greatest Chinese athlete
@MxN235 ай бұрын
thats old
@s8567.5 ай бұрын
Prior to this the US team “didn’t need” the perfect baton exchange because they were so fast they would make up for it on the straight way.
@xidiamond68515 ай бұрын
Why couldn't they tie them?
@xidiamond68515 ай бұрын
Devers was the queen of the lean. If ottey leaned she would have won more races
@xidiamond68515 ай бұрын
Perec lit the Olympic flame in Paris this year
@jjgreen52065 ай бұрын
Walter Dix was incredible. A beast from the gun shot. A 19.53 PR. One of the greats
@KeemBeckford5 ай бұрын
Veronica’s curve running is insane !!!
@juniorcampbell63735 ай бұрын
This station is noted for the most bias commentary of n history the winner is Veronica and all you hearing is Felix this Felix this .. sickening it's like no other athletes exist
@dorothyarrington43456 ай бұрын
Greene was flying ✈...that acceleration was Fye...... Baton exchanges always be the default of TeamUSA winning 🥇...buttttttt, We're getting better at it now.... Way2Go TeamUSA🇺🇲 Silver 🥈
@ccbgaming69946 ай бұрын
Xavier called Wallace Spearmon and Usain on the phone before this race and said he would destroy them and did so. Xavier was a BAD dude in his prime.
@aboredperson42024 ай бұрын
You've seen the Podcast he did with Gatlin right?
@Colourednexotic6 ай бұрын
this was that race ! this is that 200 m gold that eluded MO . VCB i couldn’t breath during that race !
@heyitsmike33006 ай бұрын
it's crazy how old all of these comments are
@leep_uq4 ай бұрын
Yup, when Obama was still president and when the whole world entered the global financial crisis
@Edcdssxf4 ай бұрын
Real
@odp94aaa4 ай бұрын
@@leep_uq Obama got elected in 2008. not 2006
@liw87186 ай бұрын
Allyson came up just a bit short of the Gold. Even tho she wasn't entirely expected to get Gold, you can see the disappointment on her face. But boy oh boy in 4 more years, Allyson would leave no doubt who was the favorite and she delivered
@JeffBrown-pb5qr7 ай бұрын
needs a jock
@thomaswoodmancy70968 ай бұрын
Doctor: "Why are your thighs bruised?" 🤔
@classicsportclassictiyl85479 ай бұрын
The Americans blew it on the second exchange Coby Miller goes off too early has to stop himself and as a result loses all his momentum. Then at 2:23 you can see that after Miller's blunder Gaitlin compounds the error by stepping on Miller's foot which meant the later had to run the 3rd with a hole in his shoe
@PabloAlfredoZayasTaquechel9 ай бұрын
I love BBC , they drive me crazy
@thomaswoodmancy70968 ай бұрын
🍆💦😝
@PabloAlfredoZayasTaquechel9 ай бұрын
I love it
@GeoAce77710 ай бұрын
the only smooth exchange for the US was the 3rd, still a riveting 3 team race
@classicsportclassictiyl85479 ай бұрын
not even that was a good exchange because Greene is looking for the baton
@unconventionalcrosy5211 ай бұрын
Not many womens team has gone sub 42
@dwightwills330311 ай бұрын
To me she's the real record holder if u know what I mean
@Johnmag1976 Жыл бұрын
Evelyn , Wilma ,who was the Greatest ?? ❤
@Johnmag1976 Жыл бұрын
Miss Ashford was the Hero of any girl doing Track in France ❤
@giulioproietti5588 Жыл бұрын
una corsa pazzesca tra due veliciste incredibili
@shams6598 Жыл бұрын
She was flying
@giulioproietti5588 Жыл бұрын
Evelyn Ashford, la piu' grande velocista natural di tutti i tempi, qui aveva solamente 19 anni
@pearlbernard7999 Жыл бұрын
VCB the goat. She gives it 110%.
@user-ev7jw4th8j Жыл бұрын
0:28 ‘’Hand off successful’’ terrible commentating
@marlyblacks3161 Жыл бұрын
Gwen refused the interview because she did not win. Wow, that speaks volumes of her as a Athens.
@nicholasbeech932 Жыл бұрын
Flawless by the GB boys
@joemorgan636 Жыл бұрын
Absolutely a Superstar she reigned From 1979 to 1986 she was untouchable seriously it was only from 87 onwards she lost her peak obviously as she was getting older than Flo Jo came in all all before that Evelyn Ashford beat Flo Jo All the time and not many people especially the people of this generation don’t know that
@magicchange4278 Жыл бұрын
Veronica changed the ball game she was the one who start the golden era
@williamnuels9240 Жыл бұрын
Gwen Torrance was always that girl loved her
@aap71 Жыл бұрын
August 22nd, 1984. When Göhr ran a 10.95 in Prague on Aug. 16, .02 under Ashford's gold medal time, Ashford went to Berlin and the very next night blazed 10.92 and 10.94 in her heat and final. Göhr-Ashford battles have often been fought on paper, by comparing times. Between them the two have run 16 of the 17 fastest women's 100s in history. It frustrated Ashford that Göhr held the world record in the event from 1977 all the way into '83; it has since nagged at Göhr that Ashford ran a 10.79 at the 7,200-foot altitude of Colorado Springs last summer to take the record away. Astonishingly, only twice since 1979 had Ashford, now 27, and Göhr, 26, met over 100 meters when both were free of leg injuries. It seems the two share not just similar builds (about 5'5", 115 pounds) and dispositions (feisty, sometimes testy) but also, alas, a tendency to push their hamstrings a bit too far. Of their nine 100-meter matchups since 1976, Ashford had won six. Most recently, however, at last August's world championships in Helsinki, Ashford's right hamstring had given out 50 meters from the finish, handing the race to Göhr. But at Zurich the handicaps seemed minor and equal: Ashford had some soreness in her legs from Berlin, while Göhr was tired from having raced 31 times since early May and from having spent 12 hours the day before traveling to Zurich from her hometown of Jena by car, bus and plane. Waiting to race, Ashford looked calm; Göhr was tense, unable to stand still. The sellout crowd of 25,000 was rapt. Both women started well, but 10 meters into the race Göhr was clear of Ashford and drawing away. "I always come to win," Göhr would say later. "Otherwise I shouldn't come at all, and hang up my spikes." At 30 meters her lead was almost a full meter, with Ashford not yet free of the six other finalists. A soft tail wind was pushing them along. As the field approached 50 meters, Ashford was gaining. Her style is to come from behind, often dramatically, and here she was doing precisely that. "I don't really accelerate until 50 meters," she would later explain. "I just get out of the blocks even, and with 20 meters left, I relax and let my legs go." At 75 meters Ashford caught Göhr. The faces of both runners were twisted with effort. This was an extraordinary race. As Ashford would say later, "I knew I was better than I've ever been. I just had to keep my body from exploding on me." When Ashford surged yet again, Göhr couldn't respond. Ashford reached the line first by two feet. A small pacing clock on the infield grass was frozen at 10.77. The wind reading was + 1.7 (3.8 mph), not enough to disallow a record. After a 10-second pause, Ashford's time was announced officially as 10.76. A world record. The crowd surged to its feet, applauding. Ashford took a jubilant victory lap, joined by her husband, Ray Washington. Another man, a stranger, jumped from the stands and hugged her. "I can't believe it," said Ashford. "I'm so tired of seeing 'Ashford 10.79' [in the record book] with an 'A' after it." (Her old mark had borne the stigma of altitude.) Afterward, even Göhr, whose time was 10.84, offered a smile and a handshake. "In the last 10 meters," said Göhr, shaking her head, "she must have listened to a voice from above."
@lloydfraser2801 Жыл бұрын
I cannot understand why in such a an almost impossible to separate race the rules cannot be pragmatic in both athletes to share the first place. Yes l know that the rules would have been in place prior that race, but why still have the same rules in place after having this happening more than once?