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Matthew Boling @ Olympic Trials

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Comments

  • BillyDawg1BillyDawg1 Posts: 2,866 ✭✭✭✭✭ Graduate
    edited June 2021

    Unlike some easily offended posters, I see the fact Matthew has things he can do to get faster as a plus. If his form was perfect and he was still running the times he did as a high school senior, it wouldn't bode well. Get stronger, refine his mechanics, his times will get better. I think he's a long way from where he can get in the 200.

  • donmedeirosdonmedeiros Posts: 3,379 ✭✭✭✭✭ Graduate

    Agree. I see relaxation as one of the things he can work on. I also agree the longer sprints may be more his forte as time goes on.

  • pgjacksonpgjackson Posts: 18,965 ✭✭✭✭✭ Graduate
    edited June 2021

    The top 3 100M sprinters at the trials were:

    Trayvon Bromell - 25 years old, 9.8sec

    Ronnie Baker - 27 years old, 9.85sec

    Fred Kerley - 26 years old, 9.86sec

    Boling is still very young compared to the elite level guys. It's like comparing a college kid to a seasoned NFL All-Pro.

    Looking at the results of the NCAA outdoor championships, none of the 100M spriters would have qualified for the Olympic team. The winner ran a 10.05, which would have been 7th place at the trials.

  • donmedeirosdonmedeiros Posts: 3,379 ✭✭✭✭✭ Graduate

    I was thinking Jordan Davis, but maybe Zirkel can use some running technique refinement so he can better run fake punts?

  • BillyDawg1BillyDawg1 Posts: 2,866 ✭✭✭✭✭ Graduate

    Who knows when we'll need that skill in another title game, it cost us at least once before.

  • donmedeirosdonmedeiros Posts: 3,379 ✭✭✭✭✭ Graduate

    Part of my guess about the optimal age of sprinters a bit earlier in this thread was based, in part, on the notion that older runners don't have to compete as often as college kids....they can train/rest/recover more and fresher for their major races. He may well have experienced a good bit of cumulative fatigue from indoor and outdoor seasons. That type of fatigue doesn't go away easily - takes a good amount of time off to recuperate. I hope you are right about rest (after the Trials) to get back closer to "normal".

  • AnotherDawgAnotherDawg Posts: 6,762 ✭✭✭✭✭ Graduate

    @DaddyDawg @donmedeiros

    My guess is both of you guys are 100% right. He's young. He's tired. He has some things to work on. And he still has an incredibly bright future.

  • pgjacksonpgjackson Posts: 18,965 ✭✭✭✭✭ Graduate

    I think it's more that he's competing against grown men. Not one single person in the NCAA 100M championships would have qualified for the US Olympic team. None. It's like college football players vs. veteran NFL All-Pros at that level. Give Boling 4-5 years and he'll might be competitive with the top sprinters. Right now he's just some college kid.

  • BillyDawg1BillyDawg1 Posts: 2,866 ✭✭✭✭✭ Graduate

    His times aren't improving though, that is an isolated measurment from the level of competition. I agree it doesn't mean he won't have a breakthrough, but it does reflect a lack of progress since high school. DV this all you please, he runs with tension in his body and his mechanics could be better.

  • BillyDawg1BillyDawg1 Posts: 2,866 ✭✭✭✭✭ Graduate

    Your contention might have some validity. Bolt worked professionally from the beginning, his best times came when he was 23 while Carl Lewis and Michael Johnson peaked at around 30 years old. If you're correct it suggests our best sprinters should bypass college and work in Olympic focused programs.

  • BillyDawg1BillyDawg1 Posts: 2,866 ✭✭✭✭✭ Graduate
    edited June 2021

    Matthew's best outdoor non-wind aided times in the 100 and 200 in high school was what, 10.11 in the 100 and 20.36 in the 200 ? Has he improved on those times? You seem to be agreeing that he might improve more with more singular goal focused training.

  • DaddyDawgDaddyDawg Posts: 4 ✭ Freshman

    It's hard to improve during the outdoor season after running so many events indoor and then attempting to run the same incredible number of events during the outdoor season (but expanding the 60 m to 100m). Bolling's times are actually getting slower, compared with what he was running earlier in the season, demonstrating the fatigue factor. I don't know of any other college sprinter in his first full year of running college track trying to compete in so many events for his team t/o the year and then hope to compete at his best at the Olympic trials. Laird at LSU didn't even try to compete in the 100m at the Olympic trials, and he was the NCAA champion in the event. Bolling has competed at every opportunity: his best days are ahead of him...

  • BillyDawg1BillyDawg1 Posts: 2,866 ✭✭✭✭✭ Graduate

    Boling's best times probably are ahead of him. If he lowers his times by much I believe it will be more about cleaning up his mechanics and his body maturing than other factors. I have no info on how our change in track head coach played out, but I would think working with our best prospects in their best events is an important consideration. I've said before I think Matthew's best sprint distance will end up being 200 meters.

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