setthetitleforthefastestmanorwomanonearthbelongstowhoeverownsthe 100 m sprinttime.
Why?
Becauseitisthebenchmarkforalloutrunningspeedandoffandrunning a superpowergets a goodstart?
UsainboltintheMiddleEast.
Jamaicansprinter.
Usainboltisthefastestmanonearthwithanofficialworldrecordtimeof 9.58 secondsinthe 100 m dashAthisfastesthe's runningmorethan 27 mph.
Elitesprinterslookliketheyleaveitallonthetrack, butcouldtheyekeoutjust a littlebitmore.
Somehow.
Todaywe'regoingtolookatwhyrunning 100 m dashinninesecondsflatisalmostimpossibletofindoutwhatittakes.
I toedthelinewithtwoofAmerica's topsprintersranonanabsurdtreadmillandtalkedphysiologicallimitswith a biomechanistic.
Thedeterminantsofhowfastyoucancomplete 100 m are, howquicklyyougetuptospeedandthenhowfastyoucanrunonceyougetthere, basicallymakesurethat I got a lessoningettinguptospeedfromtwoofthefastestrunnersonearth, MikeRogersandbryce.
Robinson, andthenforthesetup, obviouslyyouwantyourfingersbehindthelineRogers, anOlympianhasclocked a 9.85 2nd 100 m time.
Robinson, a risingtrackstarisalsooneofthefewsprinterstohaverunthe 100 m dashinunder 10 seconds, theyshowedmehowtosetuptheblocksfor a goodstart, itwasonlysomuchhelp, okay, whatdotheydoright?
Oneisgonnabethistoedragcomingoffonmyleftfoot, right, because I wanttobeonthatblockforaslongaspossible, andthatkindofforcesmetodothat.
Thatalsohas a secondaryeffectofkeepingthelowerright, andthethirdthing I'm goingtofocusonismovemyarmsafterthelesson, I askedhimtorace, butitwasearlyintheseasonandtheseguysweren't abouttoblowout a hamstringgoingfulltiltfor 100 m against a guylikeme.
Howwith a lotofreallycoolandreallyexpensiveequipment, havesomehightechcustomtoysofforceinstrumentedtreadmillandultrahighspeedcameraswithmotiondetectioncapabilitiesthatareveryprecise.
HisresearchshowsthatthekeytoelitesprintingishowmuchforceyoucanputintothegroundandhowfastUsainboltoranotherelitemalesprinterattopspeedwillputdownfivetimestheirbodyweighttypicallyinpointohninesecondsorninehundredsof a second.
If a personcanputoutthosekindsofforces, theyhave a shotatearning a placeonthelabsrecordboard.
Thesearetherecordsso 11.72 for a guythat's That's cooking.
What's, what's a respectable, what's, what, what's like?
I wouldsayyou'renotbeingpoliteor I wouldsayanything, youknow, 8, 8.5 wouldbeprettyrespectable.
We'regonna, we'regonnashootforrespectablesucks.
Speakingofrespectability, wedidn't havepeopleputon a ridiculouslytightoutfit.
Let's godoit.
Then I gotmarkedupwithinfrareddotsandstrappedinto a safetyharnesstoruninthelabs.
Forcesensingtreadmill.
Whytheharness?
Justlistentothisthing.
Itsoundslike a jettakingoff.
Itcango 90 mph.
Waynehadmewarmupfirstwith a jog, thenhehadmerunningfour m persecond.
It's aboutaneightminutemilefive m persecond, about a 5.5 minutemile.
Andthen, sothistreadmillismovingat 6.7 m/s.
Thattranslatestoexactly 15 mph, Whichtranslatesexactlytwo, A fourminutemilepace.
I gottofeellikeRogerBanisterforabouttwosecondswheneveryou'reready, Robbie.
Finally, I toppedoutateight m/s, whichisjustshyof 18 mph.
Good.
That's rightatthethreshold.
Wehadthetreadmillsetto 8.1 m persecond.
I wasdoingmybesttokeepupwithit, but I wasdriftingback a littlebitdrifted, I thinkwesaid 20 centimeters, whichmeans I wasactuallyrunningitaroundeightflat.
Okay, sohowdoesthatcompareto a worldclasssprinter?
Sonotbad, notbad.
It's a, it's a respectablespeed.
Anduh, anelitesprinter, a malewillhit, youknow, somewherearound 11.5 orsofastesteverrecordedspeedis 12 4 fromUsainbolt, 12.4 m persecond.
Thatkindofspeediswhatpropelledbolttohisworldrecordtimeof 9.58 seconds, the 100 m.
But 50 yearsago, thegreatbarrierforsprintingwas a 12th 100 m dashin 1968.
I sawthishappenfirsthand, asRobinsonandRogersblastedawayfromthestartlineAndthenthere's a transitionphasewherewhattheydosteptwostepchanges a littlebitintermsofhowmuchforcetheycanapply.
Theycanapplyprogressivelymoreastheygostepbystepfurtherintotherace, butthey'retypicallybystep 12 orso, there 85, oftheirmaxspeed.
Oncetheygetrollingtheforceonthegroundandagainwhatthey'rebetterdoingthaneveryoneelse's applyingforceinthetimeavailable, Theforceonthegroundbecomes a motion-basedmechanismwheretheyusetheirlimbstothrow a punchattheground.
Let's lookathowmuchmoreof a punch a procangive.
Theground.
Ontheleft, ismerunningat 7.82 m/s ontheright, isRobinsondoing 10.85 m/s.
I'm hittingthegroundashardas I cantokeepupwiththetreadmillwith a forceroughlythreetimesmybodyweight.
Robinsonweighsaboutasmuchas I do, buthe's throwingalmostfivetimeshisbodyweightontheground, andhe's doingitwayfasterthan I can.
Andthatweightiskey.
Lookwhathappenswhenyoutakeawaygravity.
Thisisuse a boltrunningin a microgravityairplaneandevenhecan't generateanypushbackonearth.
Isthere a benchmarkyou'reshootingfororyoujustkindoftryingtogetthebestyoucanman?
I reallywanttorun 98 thisyear.
Thisstuffcominghere, ifGodwillingit, it's fasterthanthat, I'llbe, I'llbehappy, but I reallywanttorunreally 98, if I if I getthat, whichum, themaingoalistorunninenine's consistently.
I runnine, nine's consistentlythenthat 98 willpopoutthereatsomepoint.
Itwill.
Butwhatif a sprinterwantedtogo a lotfaster, sayninesecondsflatwayne's researchshowsthatthehumanbodywouldhavetoexertforcesgreaterthanhaveeverbeenrecordedatspeedsthatprobablyaren't possible.
Sotypicallyattopspeed, they'llput, they'llput a forceintothegroundthatpeaksatfivetimestheirbodyweightandthey'llhave a footgroundcontacttimeorperiodofforceapplicationThat's typically .09 secondsor 900thsof a secondontheveryshortendpointoh 85 secondstogettowhatwouldberequiredfornineflat, theywouldhavetoapproachsixtimesbodyweightand a footgroundcontacttimeofjustoversevenhundredsof a second.
Sowe'renotgoingtoseeanyoneblastacrossthelineinninesecondsinthe 100 m dash, butthatdoesn't mean a sprintercouldn't coverthatdistancethatfast.
Infact, someofthemalreadyhave.
Soifyouremovetheaccelerationrequirementfrom a stationarystartfromtheraceandyouallow a flyingstartcomingin, humansarecomfortablyundertheninesecondbarrieralready, worldrecordfor a fourby 800 m relayheldbytheJamaicansabout 36.7 oreightseconds.
Soessentiallyeachpersonaftertheonethatrantheopeningleghadtoaveragenineflatfortheir 100 m segmentsforthemtorunthatfast.
Butthestartispartofwhatmakesthe 100 m dashsothrillingonthatlastrun, youarefirstoutoftheblocksby a mileandthenyou'reyou'reaheadofmeandthen I wasbringinguptherear.
I closemyeyesbecause I usedtokeepthemopenandpeoplepeopleflinchanddoallthat, alltheweirdstuffand I'm I feellike I'm a prettyawareperson.
So I kindofnoticedthatstuffand I'llgo, I'llbehesitanttogobecauseofit.
So, whatisactuallypossibleforthe 100 m dashanddoesanybodystand a chanceatbreakingbolt's record?
I wouldsayifyouputtogether a perfecthumanbeingwho's, youknow, exceptionaland a perfectrace, youknow, I thinkcertainlysomethinginthe 9 40 range, lownineforties, maybe a littlebitfasterthanthatundercurrently, legalconditionsshouldbepossible.