@@TheSpiritofTruthEMIII I think am gonna have to disagree with you bro he ran 2 9.8 and one 9.7 in the span of two days and slowing down and looking over is shoulder at 60 meter in all 3 races !!
Its crazy to think that Bolt's first sub 10 100m time is 9.76, while this guy's 9.77 is like his 5th of 6th 100m time of his career that's crazy bro😂🤣🤣🤣
"Not at full throttle" is the key; he's running relaxed, which is the holy grail of sprinting. Few can do it. Flo Jo managed it, smiling when she blew away the records. When it's a big final it takes superhuman psychology to relax given how big the moment is ...
Really appreciate this breakdown and analysis of Thompson's running mechanics. It helps us to really see the technical side of this guy's running and what is happening within each stride and phase of his races. Keep up the good work bro.
Really hope Kishane can maximize this immense potential we're seeing from him and rewrite the history books regarding runners who have run 9.7s in previous Olympic years. Bolt ran 9.7 twice in 2008 before Beijing, one of which was a new world record of 9.72s, and 9.76 in Kingston before going on to marvel the world with another world record in the Olympic 100m finals. Hoping Kishane will emulate the greatest to ever do it.
@@meccunoHe is not going to beat him…. Kushan has not tap into his full potential as yet, he has not even done one full season of training because of his injuries, he just has raw speed but has not developed sprinting techniques and skills as yet..when he does, he is going to marvel the world
From 2008 ibe been telling every one in jamaica that a next jamaican will break bolts record they all laugh. I. Never wrong from i born and predict things
@@onlytruth6494thats what you'd like to believe but its clear that he started to look at the clock while slowing down from about 70m and still ran 9.77s.
All fun and games until they face Noah Lyles. The reason Noah wins its because he isn’t competing with other runners! He is trying to catch Bolt. Kishane Thompson was being catchet at the end by Oblique. Noah has a slow start but for anyone to win against him, you have start faster than him and you’re top and your end top speed strength can’t decline by 20% or even stay the same. Noah top and end speed increases by the 60 meter mark rapidly. Only Bolt did better so I’ll put my money on Noah
Agree and Noah has to be the favourite still because he’s proven he can perform when it counts on the biggest stage. Kishane needs to prove he can do the same, but he definitely looks like a big threat for the Gold medal now.
Most sources say 185cm or 6 ft 1. It's probably believable, because I've seen him next to Kemar Bailey-Cole, he looks shorter and Bailey-Cole is about 6 ft 4 or 6 ft 5
This stride length stuff is all irrelevant.... The best runners abbreviate stride to get the next power strike on the track. They're NOT triple jumping or bounding down the track... So that shows you. He is also 2 inches taller than Tyson Gay........
@TrackandFieldNation bokt ran 9.76 in May 2008 in Kingston and shocked everyone who never knew he had that in him because prior to that he had never been sub 10. He then went on to run 9.72 WR later that month @ the New York Grand Prix and put everyone on notice that he was the man to beat ...he then went on to run 9.69 and win gold in Beijing a few months later ...all that happened from May to August 2008
@TrackandFieldNation remember Bolt owned the WR of 9 72 by the time he got to Beijing. It would have had to come in 2008 cause 2007 Bolt was getting beat by Tyson Gay over 200M when he was 19 and he was never a 100M runner yet...
@@philbertgrant3744 Pretty much all of the Olympic athletes are on SOMETHING; but this dude Kishane is probably on EVERYTHING. Don’t be surprised if he gets popped.
No Noah is not. They don't have the incremental times for the 9.77 where Kishane said he didn't even run all the way through. The reason TFN brings up stride length and frequency is because thats another way to guesstimate where Kishane is speedwise. speed (m/sec) = distance(stride length) / time(frequency).