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Tópico: 2021 Olympic Athletics Challenge |
62 respostas
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Could you order those upcoming predictions?
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Sure. Done!
Edit. I gotta hope for a slow 1500m final so please no Hassan to lead please ;D
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Ooh damn nice! That 100m hurdles was needed after 2 bad results.
Well, let's hope everyone has an off-day with Hammer throw. I have it a bit low lol.
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M 400m hurdles:
If you didn't see it live - you have not truly lived!
Men's 400m hurdle final had high expectations but even those high expectations were totally outdone by the duo of Karsten Warholm and Rai Benjamin. Their earth-shattering duel held until the last hurdle after which the viking found slightly more pace - and broke his own world record by uncomprehensable margin!!! The winning time and now the new world record was set to 45,94 seconds. Not only was he the first man into the 45's in history of the event (which itself already sounds so ridiculous after Kevin Young's previous untouchable WR) - but that was also the SEVENTH best ever result in the history of athletics in any event! (when comparing to the points you can get in a single event). It is even totally legit to put Warholm in the league of Bolt and Zelezny and Mike Powell now with that result.
It also speaks of the magnitude of the time that nobody was even close to that 45,94 but good job Cameron for going the lowest. Only Jukka was the other one going lower than previous world record. I am still totally confuzzled after that performance :D
Player Pred. Diff. Pts
Correct result 45,94
Cameron Halsall 46,49 0,55 25 Jukka Sireni 46,68 0,74 18 Alan Halford 46,75 0,81 15 Ania Piekarska 46,77 0,83 12 Mark Witney 46,92 0,98 10 Rytis Astrauskas 47,00 1,06 8 Quentin Rieg 47,05 1,11 6 Mikko Suhonen 47,21 1,27 4 Keith Partridge 47,28 1,34 2 Max Van Rooden 47,30 1,36 1 Mairo Toom 47,77 1,83 Greg Tierney 47,92 1,98 Jason Mathias NM
Standings after 4 / 14 events:
Alan Halford 57 Mark Witney 53,5 Cameron Halsall 45 Ania Piekarska 41,5 Mikko Suhonen 38 Jukka Sireni 37 Quentin Rieg 30 Max Van Rooden 27 Mairo Toom 23 Keith Partridge 22 Rytis Astrauskas 21 Greg Tierney 9 Jason Mathias 0
Mark and Alan still in a two-digit lead but Cameron's win here takes him back into contention. Greg has not had a fun time yet. Jason's events are starting soon too.
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lol, stop the hammer competition now, I've luckboxed and got this spot on
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W Hammer:
And so I luckboxed to the end! That's the second "spot-on" of this challenge. Anita Włodarczyk threw the furthest and won her THIRD consecutive Olympic gold medal which our commentators said was the first ever for a female competitor in athletics, or at least in athletics field events. The spot-on was 78,48 meters.
Quentin, Jukka, Rytis were also within about half a meter of the correct result.
Player Pred. Diff. Pts
Correct result 78,48
Mikko Suhonen 78,48 0,00 25 Quentin Rieg 78,84 0,36 18 Jukka Sireni 78,88 0,40 15 Rytis Astrauskas 79,00 0,52 12 Mark Witney 77,68 0,80 10 Keith Partridge 79,47 0,99 8 Max Van Rooden 77,12 1,36 6 Alan Halford 79,87 1,39 4 Ania Piekarska 79,99 1,51 2 Cameron Halsall 80,81 2,33 1 Mairo Toom 81,00 2,52 Greg Tierney 82,34 3,86 Jason Mathias NM
Standings after 5 / 17 events:
Mark Witney 63,5 Mikko Suhonen 63 Alan Halford 61 Jukka Sireni 52 Quentin Rieg 48 Cameron Halsall 46 Ania Piekarska 43,5 Max Van Rooden 33 Rytis Astrauskas 33 Keith Partridge 30 Mairo Toom 23 Greg Tierney 9 Jason Mathias 0
And just like that, I'm back in contention? But as you can see, situations can change and develop quite quickly, just takes one event.... Mark re-takes the lead!
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M Pole Vault:
Not like one world record wasn't enough for the day - Armand Duplantis really challenged for a second one in pole vault! He first cleared 602 with ease (looked like there was air for like ~630) and then after other competitors were out he raised the bar to 619 which was 1cm above the current world record. His first attempt was oh so close and barely hit the bar with his chest - second and third attempts were not as close. So in the end, three strikes from 619 meant that the winning result was indeed the earlier 602. But that's his first Olympic Gold anyway so Duplantis probably won't mind as much about the missed WR today!
And the next spot-on is offered to us by Mairo! He caught the exact amount of centimeters that Duplantis would jump.
Player Pred. Diff. Pts
Correct result 602
Mairo Toom 602 0 25 Greg Tierney 601 1 18 Mark Witney 605 3 13,5 Keith Partridge 605 3 13,5 Mikko Suhonen 606 4 9 Jukka Sireni 598 4 9 Alan Halford 608 6 5 Quentin Rieg 608 6 5 Ania Piekarska 610 8 2 Rytis Astrauskas 592 10 1 Max Van Rooden 590 12 Cameron Halsall 622 20 Jason Mathias NM
Standings after 6 / 14 events:
Mark Witney 77 Mikko Suhonen 72 Alan Halford 66 Jukka Sireni 61 Quentin Rieg 53 Mairo Toom 48 Cameron Halsall 46 Ania Piekarska 45,5 Keith Partridge 43,5 Rytis Astrauskas 34 Max Van Rooden 33 Greg Tierney 27 Jason Mathias 0
Mark maintains the lead, but see how well Mairo climbs here. Jukka is also making a steady progress. Greg triples his earlier points!
Tomorrow there is one final: M 200 meters at 14:55 CET. Decathlon also starts tomorrow but it will continue to Aug 5th too so we only will know the winning result on Thursday there.
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#38 Postado 3 Ago 2021, 15:51:26 (editado pela última vêz 3 Ago 2021, 16:00:40 por Greg Tierney)
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Quote ( Mikko Suhonen @ August 3rd 2021,07:47:30 ) If you didn't see it live - you have not truly lived!
That. Race. Was. Ridiculous.
Dropping your own world record (for an event which was >47s WR 2 months ago) down under 47 last month, and then down under 46 (in a 0.8s jump)!? He's now under 3 seconds off of the WR in 400m without hurdles (43.03).
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#39 Postado 3 Ago 2021, 15:55:56 (editado pela última vêz 3 Ago 2021, 15:57:08 por Jukka Sireni)
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It has been <47s since 1992. But nevertheless, ridiculous run.
Last time a Finn ran 400 metres below that was in 1991.
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#40 Postado 3 Ago 2021, 16:01:41 (editado pela última vêz 3 Ago 2021, 16:02:22 por Greg Tierney)
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Quote ( Jukka Sireni @ August 3rd 2021,15:55:56 ) It has been <47s since 1992. But nevertheless, ridiculous run.
Yeah just saw that fact myself -- was just going off what I thought I heard the commentator say last night, but maybe I was delirious.
Here's a graphic I found of the progression, if people are interested: https://i.redd.it/0byenpmzh3f71.png
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Covid has made people faster? Or alternatively, the kangaroo shoes?
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Quote ( Jukka Sireni @ August 4th 2021,04:36:33 ) Covid has made people faster? Or alternatively, the kangaroo shoes? Our press said it's also the kangaroo track :)
-------
Men 200m:
Another very wide-open and exciting race! It looked like Noah Lyles was first running away, but after 100m Andre de Grasse and Kenny Bednarek rose ahead of him, the Canadian sprinting the fastest to finish with a time of 19.62!!! Only six men in the history of everything have sprinted the distance faster. The youngsters Erriyon Knighton and Joe Fahnbulleh were left out of medals to raise some experience, although had the race been 40 meters longer, would the Liberian's stride possibly caught them all! But it's precisely 200 meters for a reason...
Jukka hits closest and within 0.04s! Most of us had predicted something higher, but one of the fastest times shifted things a bit.
Player Pred. Diff. Pts
Correct result 19,62
Jukka Sireni 19,58 0,04 25 Mikko Suhonen 19,72 0,1 18 Alan Halford 19,75 0,13 15 Mark Witney 19,48 0,14 10 Cameron Halsall 19,48 0,14 10 Quentin Rieg 19,76 0,14 10 Ania Piekarska 19,77 0,15 5 Keith Partridge 19,47 0,15 5 Rytis Astrauskas 19,8 0,18 2 Greg Tierney 19,82 0,2 1 Jason Mathias 19,83 0,21 Mairo Toom 19,89 0,27 Max Van Rooden 19,89 0,27
Standings after 7 / 14 events:
Mikko Suhonen 90 Mark Witney 87 Jukka Sireni 86 Alan Halford 81 Quentin Rieg 63 Cameron Halsall 56 Ania Piekarska 50,5 Keith Partridge 48,5 Mairo Toom 48 Rytis Astrauskas 36 Max Van Rooden 33 Greg Tierney 28 Jason Mathias 0
We have a new leader! But things only got closer between current top 4. And a jump from behind us to win battle wouldn't be impossible, considering the points swings. Halfway point is now.
Tomorrow there are two finals:
M Shot put at 04:05 CET M Decathlon whole day but finishing at 14:40 CET
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Three more events which had their qualis / heats already so not accepting more predictions on these events anymore and can reveal your predictions:
M Javelin: Jukka Sireni 88,88 Keith Partridge 88,95 Max Van Rooden 89,01 Rytis Astrauskas 90,00 Ania Piekarska 90,11 Greg Tierney 91,25 Mikko Suhonen 91,74 Quentin Rieg 92,03 Mark Witney 93,88 Jason Mathias 94,20 Alan Halford 95,25 Mairo Toom 96,01 Cameron Halsall 96,52
M Decathlon: Jason Mathias 8484 Mark Witney 8536 Rytis Astrauskas 8600 Max Van Rooden 8601 Mairo Toom 8647 Alan Halford 8750 Greg Tierney 8785 Mikko Suhonen 8869 Ania Piekarska 8887 Jukka Sireni 8888 Cameron Halsall 9012 Quentin Rieg 9012 Keith Partridge 9075
M Shot Put: Max Van Rooden 22,60 Mairo Toom 22,88 Jukka Sireni 22,88 Mikko Suhonen 22,91 Keith Partridge 22,97 Jason Mathias 22,99 Greg Tierney 23,00 Quentin Rieg 23,00 Rytis Astrauskas 23,00 Mark Witney 23,07 Ania Piekarska 23,08 Alan Halford 23,22 Cameron Halsall 23,45
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Oh god, another 0 points on Shot put...
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M Shot put:
The most high-level shot put Olympic final of all time sees all medalists throw 22.47 meters or more! Never before in history. The Newzealander Tom Walsh and US Joe Kovacs challenged well but neither was able to get to Ryan Crouser who was on a league of his own. He had thrown 22.93m but once his victory was sealed and he had one throw left - he truly left it all on the ring and improved to a staggering 23.30 meters which is only seven centimeters lower than his new world record.
The result was so big that only Cameron had predicted over it of us. However Alan was the closest!
Quote ( Max Van Rooden @ August 5th 2021,10:06:47 ) Oh god, another 0 points on Shot put...
Tell me about it, my 25p turned to 1p because Crouser wanted to improve on his last throw..... ;D
Player Pred. Diff. Pts
Correct result 23,30
Alan Halford 23,22 0,08 25 Cameron Halsall 23,45 0,15 18 Ania Piekarska 23,08 0,22 15 Mark Witney 23,07 0,23 12 Greg Tierney 23,00 0,3 8 Quentin Rieg 23,00 0,3 8 Rytis Astrauskas 23,00 0,3 8 Jason Mathias 22,99 0,31 4 Keith Partridge 22,97 0,33 2 Mikko Suhonen 22,91 0,39 1 Mairo Toom 22,88 0,42 Jukka Sireni 22,88 0,42 Max Van Rooden 22,60 0,7
Standings after 8 / 14 events:
Alan Halford 106 Mark Witney 99 Mikko Suhonen 91 Jukka Sireni 86 Cameron Halsall 74 Quentin Rieg 71 Ania Piekarska 65,5 Keith Partridge 50,5 Mairo Toom 48 Rytis Astrauskas 44 Greg Tierney 36 Max Van Rooden 33 Jason Mathias 4
Jason gets his first points! Alan's brilliant prediction sees him move back to lead as the two Finns stumble and Mark gets slightly less points than Alan. Cameron also rises.
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Quote ( Jukka Sireni @ August 6th 2021,02:26:13 ) RIP 50 km walk. RIP indeed! That was worthy of a send-off as the temps and conditions apparently didn't go Doha-intensity ha.
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M Decathlon:
Damian Warner continued where he left off a couple months ago and raced to Olympic Gold! He started his series in a very great way as he landed a few Olympic Decathlon bests in 100m, long jump and 110m hurdles. In the last event of 1500 meters he needed a time of under 4min33s to become only the fourth man in history to achieve a milestone 9000 points in decathlon. The final total points of his were 9018 points.
Cameron and Quentin are nearly spot on!! Quite surprisingly they both had the same prediction though so they tie for the biggest points. Notable is how Jukka takes his higher rank by the virtue of predicting just 1p more than Ania. Same with Max over Rytis.
Player Pred. Diff. Pts
Correct result 9018
Cameron Halsall 9012 6 21,5 Quentin Rieg 9012 6 21,5 Keith Partridge 9075 57 15 Jukka Sireni 8888 130 12 Ania Piekarska 8887 131 10 Mikko Suhonen 8869 149 8 Greg Tierney 8785 233 6 Alan Halford 8750 268 4 Mairo Toom 8647 371 2 Max Van Rooden 8601 417 1 Rytis Astrauskas 8600 418 Mark Witney 8536 482 Jason Mathias 8484 534
Standings after 9 / 14 events:
Alan Halford 110 Mikko Suhonen 99 Mark Witney 99 Jukka Sireni 98 Cameron Halsall 95,5 Quentin Rieg 92,5 Ania Piekarska 75,5 Keith Partridge 65,5 Mairo Toom 50 Rytis Astrauskas 44 Greg Tierney 42 Max Van Rooden 34 Jason Mathias 4
Alan keeps his lead but it shrinkens a small bit! However Cameron and Quentin are now truly in the win battle! Very close.
Today there is just one final before three tomorrow: W 1500 meters at 14:50 CET today!
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#49 Postado 6 Ago 2021, 09:58:01 (editado pela última vêz 6 Ago 2021, 09:59:05 por Jukka Sireni)
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What do 4x400m picks look like?
3:52 in 1500m and Finns are screwed.
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Quote ( Jukka Sireni @ August 6th 2021,09:58:01 ) What do 4x400m picks look like?
W 4x400m predictions:
Keith Partridge 3:15.25 Mikko Suhonen 3:16.04 Mark Witney 3:16.19 Jukka Sireni 3:18.88 Cameron Halsall 3:19.18 Greg Tierney 3:19.56 Rytis Astrauskas 3:20.00 Max Van Rooden 3:20.03 Ania Piekarska 3:20.28 Jason Mathias 3:20.28 Quentin Rieg 3:21.21 Alan Halford 3:22.38 Mairo Toom 3:24.54
W High jump predictions:
Quentin Rieg 200 Rytis Astrauskas 200 Mark Witney 201 Greg Tierney 201 Mairo Toom 203 Mikko Suhonen 204 Alan Halford 204 Max Van Rooden 204 Jukka Sireni 204 Ania Piekarska 204 Jason Mathias 204 Cameron Halsall 205 Keith Partridge 206
There won't be big points swings in high jump tomorrow apart possibly from Cameron and Quentin for the current win contenders. In men's javelin tomorrow all us top 6 are quite apart from each other though.
4x400 tomorrow is crucial for Alan's final position as all the other current win contenders are on the other end apart from Quentin?
I'm having to count on an extremely slow paced 1500m final today gimme gimme :) Due to exhaustion, maybe Hassan won't lead at all despite previous years when doing always so - and making the race slower. Then it's probably down to Kipyegon and Muir to keep up the pace?
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W 1500m:
Sifan Hassan used her earlier strategy from a couple years ago when she sprinted to front from start and they kept strong pace the whole race through - this year was no exception! But in the final lap both Faith Kipyegon and Laura Muir managed to overtake the Dutch runner who was already doing her fifth run start in less than a week (and one more apparently to come tomorrow). In the end the Kenyan crossed the line first with an Olympic Record time of 3:53.11.
Well done Max on another strong performance here! Rytis also makes his best prediction yet and Mairo is up there too, losing one position only by 0.01s.
Player Pred. Diff. Pts
Correct result 3:53.11
Max Van Rooden 3:52.58 0,53 25 Rytis Astrauskas 3:54.00 0,89 18 Mairo Toom 3:54.01 0,9 15 Alan Halford 3:52.18 0,93 12 Mark Witney 3:54.06 0,95 10 Keith Partridge 3:54.28 1,17 8 Greg Tierney 3:54.87 1,76 6 Ania Piekarska 3:51.33 1,78 4 Quentin Rieg 3:51.04 2,07 2 Jason Mathias 3:50.47 2,64 1 Cameron Halsall 3:50.34 2,77 Jukka Sireni 3:55.88 2,77 Mikko Suhonen 3:58.36 5,25
Standings after 10 / 14 events:
Alan Halford 122 Mark Witney 109 Mikko Suhonen 99 Jukka Sireni 98 Cameron Halsall 95,5 Quentin Rieg 94,5 Ania Piekarska 79,5 Keith Partridge 73,5 Mairo Toom 65 Rytis Astrauskas 62 Max Van Rooden 59 Greg Tierney 48 Jason Mathias 5
Max, Rytis, Mairo gain a lot of points but is it too late for a late comeback?
That couldn't have gone much better for Alan and Mark! :D All other win rivals apart score 2 or less points whereas the duo gains ground. 13pt gap to Mark and 23-27,5 pts gap down to Quentin is quite strong, but 4x400 tomorrow could be Alan's make or break moment.
Tomorrow is perhaps the day when most positions might be resolved as for the final day on Sunday the sole event left is marathon. Tomorrow: 12:35 CET: W High jump 13:00 CET: M Javelin 14:30 CET: W 4x400m
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Vetter out. This looks good for my 88.88.
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Gold for Neeraj Chopra. Cant believe this, 1st ever medal in track and field for India and it's a Gold.
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Busy day in athletics! Let's recap.
W High jump:
There was fears of tropical storm arriving to the scene but for the sake of a good high jump competition that wasn't present during the race! There was still 9 women left trying even 198 so that was Olympic level stuff. Australia's Nicola McDermott started the race best and had least bar droppings - but as she cleared 202 only on second try, that moved the ROC Mariya Lasitskene to the lead! After that Lasitskene cleared 204 cm too whereas the Aussie and Ukrainian Yaroslava Mahuchikh were unable to do so. Having sealed the win, Lasitskene opted not to continue, seemingly emotional over her first Olympic gold.
That was something - we had SIX players with a spot-on prediction! Thus we need to tie for the points that 1st to 6th would normally get ;) That however also meant that there was not just as big swings as there could have been, but this was the one event where the ties would likely appear.
Player Pred. Diff. Pts
Correct result 204
Mikko Suhonen 204 0 14,67 Alan Halford 204 0 14,67 Max Van Rooden 204 0 14,67 Jukka Sireni 204 0 14,67 Ania Piekarska 204 0 14,67 Jason Mathias 204 0 14,67 Mairo Toom 203 1 5 Cameron Halsall 205 1 5 Keith Partridge 206 2 2 Mark Witney 201 3 0,5 Greg Tierney 201 3 0,5 Quentin Rieg 200 4 Rytis Astrauskas 200 4
Standings after 11 / 14 events:
Alan Halford 136,67 Mikko Suhonen 113,67 Jukka Sireni 112,67 Mark Witney 109,5 Cameron Halsall 100,5 Quentin Rieg 94,5 Ania Piekarska 94,17 Keith Partridge 75,5 Max Van Rooden 73,67 Mairo Toom 70 Rytis Astrauskas 62 Greg Tierney 48,5 Jason Mathias 19,67
Mark and Quentin didn't like that result! Now it's starting to look like a comfortable lead for Alan, although the 4x400m relay can still make a big swing as his prediction is in the other end of the spectrum as other players. Can Jason catch Greg? Ania also re-arrives late on the scene to the medals race?
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M Javelin:
In a regular javelin competition the speeds that the throwers take to the line are high - but that all the talk during and after the race would be about the extremely soft surface was not expected! I would even call that a non-Olympic level surface as it meant that the throwers who create a shedload of force to the ground struggled a lot - just like the most overwhelming favourite of nearly all athletics events, Johannes Vetter. The surface really broke down and slid away below his feet! And thus kept him out of the win battles like mentioned above.
Still, can't take anything away from the Indian Neeraj Chopra who threw the furthest and indeed got India's first athletics medal like mentioned above! This time 87.58 was enough of a result to win the competition. It feels like the surprise surface indeed lowered the level of competition and many throws were shorter.
And because of that - everyone had predicted much much more :D Well done Jukka for picking the closest and Keith & Max very close too.
Player Pred. Diff. Pts
Correct result 87,58
Jukka Sireni 88,88 1,30 25 Keith Partridge 88,95 1,37 18 Max Van Rooden 89,01 1,43 15 Rytis Astrauskas 90,00 2,42 12 Ania Piekarska 90,11 2,53 10 Greg Tierney 91,25 3,67 8 Mikko Suhonen 91,74 4,16 6 Quentin Rieg 92,03 4,45 4 Mark Witney 93,88 6,30 2 Jason Mathias 94,20 6,62 1 Alan Halford 95,25 7,67 Mairo Toom 96,01 8,43 Cameron Halsall 96,52 8,94
Standings after 12 / 14 events:
Jukka Sireni 137,67 Alan Halford 136,67 Mikko Suhonen 119,67 Mark Witney 111,5 Ania Piekarska 104,17 Cameron Halsall 100,5 Quentin Rieg 98,5 Keith Partridge 93,5 Max Van Rooden 88,67 Rytis Astrauskas 74 Mairo Toom 70 Greg Tierney 56,5 Jason Mathias 20,67
Did I say comfortable lead? There it goes already in javelin and we have a new leader! The low level of competition meant surprises and it threw most away. Ania capitalizes bigly and isn't that far from bronze medal anymore. I'm taking a small bit of gap to Mark but nothing much yet. Max and Rytis have finally been making good points lately.
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W 4x400m relay:
McLauhglin - Felix - Muhammad - Mu: need I say more? Even a World Record was in the expectations! And the quarter didn't end way too far as the winning time was 3:16.85 and the WR in the 15s. Sydney McLaughlin started extremely fast from the blocks and took the lead instantly, then Allyson Felix held onto the lead although lost a bit of ground, then Dalilah Muhammad sprinted even further away from opposition and finally Athing Mu kept a steady pace to get the U & S & A to the finish line first. That was a brilliant show and the handoffs worked well.
Almost everyone was again over the winning result! Just Keith, me and Mark went under, although I must say had the US not changed their quarter to abovementioned for the final, it might have been a 3:20 winning time. Still - well done Mark for being closest!
Player Pred. Diff. Pts
Correct result 3:16.85
Mark Witney 3:16.19 0,66 25 Mikko Suhonen 3:16.04 0,81 18 Keith Partridge 3:15.25 1,6 15 Jukka Sireni 3:18.88 2,03 12 Cameron Halsall 3:19.18 2,33 10 Greg Tierney 3:19.56 2,71 8 Rytis Astrauskas 3:20.00 3,15 6 Max Van Rooden 3:20.03 3,18 4 Ania Piekarska 3:20.28 3,43 1,5 Jason Mathias 3:20.28 3,43 1,5 Quentin Rieg 3:21.21 4,36 Alan Halford 3:22.38 5,53 Mairo Toom 3:24.54 7,69
Standings after 13 / 14 events:
Jukka Sireni 149,67 Mikko Suhonen 137,67 Alan Halford 136,67 Mark Witney 136,5 Cameron Halsall 110,5 Keith Partridge 108,5 Ania Piekarska 105,67 Quentin Rieg 98,5 Max Van Rooden 92,67 Rytis Astrauskas 80 Mairo Toom 70 Greg Tierney 64,5 Jason Mathias 22,17
Getting slightly closer for the win! As Alan was in the other end of the predictions spectrum, this winning result really hurt him this time. Jukka gained a bit of points but Mikko and Mark gained on him as well.
Now with only one event left - the win battle is between the top 4! But good battles below that too. I will be revealing the marathon predictions around the time that race starts in a couple hours from now.
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Let's go running 42,195 kilometers!
Ania Piekarska 2:02:40 Rytis Astrauskas 2:03:00 Quentin Rieg 2:03:02 Keith Partridge 2:03:21 Alan Halford 2:03:25 Greg Tierney 2:04:10 Max Van Rooden 2:04:11 Mark Witney 2:04:32 Jason Mathias 2:04:44 Mairo Toom 2:06:11 Jukka Sireni 2:09:08 Mikko Suhonen 2:09:58 Cameron Halsall 2:11:15
This means that I can't overtake Jukka anymore :) Now it's a 3-way fight for win. Although conditions look to be extreme so could be slow time.
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Looks like a very interesting final event, I'll be happy with 2:04 - 2:06, once they hit 2:07 Jukka wins.
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It'd better be a slow time
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