SectorOne wrote:Stradivarius wrote:But I have never heard anyone say that 400 m is an artificial competition because the runner isn't going flat out from the start until the finish,
Well first of all it´s quite a strange comparison but you better believe that the 400m runners are giving everything they possibly can for 400m, if they weren´t the world record would be easy to break.
I guess you should aim for the 400 m world record, then. Here's a quote from Michael Johnson on his race thoughts:
The race itself is certainly intellectual. You’re always thinking about something every step of the way. For the 400, it’s even more so, because it’s so much more of a strategic race. The 400 is much harder to pace since nobody can go out and run 400 meters full-speed from the gun. So there’s a strategy and it’s all based on pace and energy output. And then you throw into that mix what your competitors are doing. I may feel like I’m running a good race, but I’m 10 meters behind, so maybe the internal clock isn’t working. So there’s a lot of strategy involved in the 400-meter race. http://speedendurance.com/2007/06/27/mi ... 00-meters/
A better comparison is telling the runner that if he runs too fast in the beginning his shoes might start to fall of during the last couple of meters.
All in the name of "the show". And possibly we might see the third fastest driver win the sprint instead because he puts less energy into the shoes.
The whole point of this comparison was to find a real-life example that illustrates the effect that a pitstop has. If you push your tires too hard on the first stint, the effect of worn tyres will be eliminated as soon as you change the tires. Just as when the first guy running the relay hands the stick to the second guy, his condition doesn't matter any more. So he can go flat out without worrying about fatigue after 100 m, because then he is done and it doesn't matter if he is too tried to keep running. His job is to gain as much ground as possible for the first quarter of the race only.
On the 400 m, however, you can't go flat out, simply because you need to make sure you don't loose too much towards the end of the race. The speed drops significantly during a 400 m race, so it is necessary to think ahead a the start, to make sure the speed doesn't drop more than it has to.
Of course the shoe-example illustrates the same thing, but that could be claimed to be artificial, as there is never an issue during a sprint race that the shoes are wearing out. Tyres wearing out in formula 1, however, is nothing new, and my point that it isn't artificial just because they can't go flat out at all times. If you prefer, you could take 10 000 as an example instead. Clearly the first 400 meters of a 10 000 m race is not run at runner's maximum pace, as that would destroy the performance of the runner for the remaining 24 laps. Actually, you often see the lap times of the final lap of a 10 000 m race being a lot quicker than the lap times in the middle of the race. But no one complains that the competitors aren't doing their best, or that the competition is artificial.