- My Forums
- Tiger Rant
- LSU Recruiting
- SEC Rant
- Saints Talk
- Pelicans Talk
- More Sports Board
- Fantasy Sports
- Golf Board
- Soccer Board
- O-T Lounge
- Tech Board
- Home/Garden Board
- Outdoor Board
- Health/Fitness Board
- Movie/TV Board
- Book Board
- Music Board
- Political Talk
- Money Talk
- Fark Board
- Gaming Board
- Travel Board
- Food/Drink Board
- Ticket Exchange
- TD Help Board
Customize My Forums- View All Forums
- Show Left Links
- Topic Sort Options
- Trending Topics
- Recent Topics
- Active Topics
Started By
Message
re: What would Usain Bolt's 40 yard dash time be?
Posted on 8/5/12 at 10:11 pm to bobbyray21
Posted on 8/5/12 at 10:11 pm to bobbyray21
Here are the splits when Bolt ran a 9.58
RT: 0.14
0-10: 1.89
10-20: 0.99
20-30: 0.90 (3.78 @ 30m)
30-40: 0.86 (4.64 @ 40m)
40-50: 0.83
40 yards == 36.576 meters.
Bolt was at 3.78 at 30 meters and he ran the next 10 meters in 0.86. As you can see, he is still accelerating at that point, so multiplying 0.86 * 0.576 would be a slight underestimate of his 40 time. But as you can see, his rate of acceleration has drastically slowed down at that point. There is a way to figure out the exact time he took to travel that .576 meters, but I don't know how to do it, and I do know that since his next split was .83, simply dropping the 0.86 down to a .85 makes for a very close approximation. So that's what we're gonna do.
3.78 + (0.85 * 0.576) == 4.27 seconds.
BUT BUT BUT, in the olympics the clock starts the gun, and at the combine the clock starts when the runner starts.
This is where the reaction time comes into play.
4.27 - 0.14 == 4.13 seconds. Damn...that's fast.
(1) BUT BUT BUT, sprinters get a starting block, which helps lessen the effect of the reaction time because they can come off the block more quickly.
AND
(2) BUT BUT BUT, sprinters are running on a track, not on turf.
AND
(3) BUT BUT BUT, you looked at the data for Bolt's Best. Race. Ever. He doesn't run that fast every time.
So start with the time of 4.13 and adjust upwards based on the three BUT BUT BUT factors. The third factor is discretionary. You can always just run the numbers from whatever race you wish. All of them will be slower than the above numbers since it was by far his best race ever.
To deal with BUT BUT BUT factors #1 and #2....well I don't know what you do. How much time is the track worth versus the turf? How much time are starting blocks worth? I don't know the answers to those questions. Perhaps somebody else does.
Either way, in view of all of the above, if Bolt shows up at the combine with only 3 opportunities to post a time in the 40 yd dash, I would bet against him posting a sub 4.2 time. Could he conceivably do it? Sure...see above. But, again, that is all best case scenario and doesn't account for some potentially slowing factors.
My Ultimate Conclusion #1:
I think Chris Jonson vs. Usain Bolt in a 40 yd dash would be a tight race.
My Ultimate Conclusion #2:
A sub 4.10 40 yd dash has been run twice in history. Once by the Easter Bunny. The other time by Santa Claus.
RT: 0.14
0-10: 1.89
10-20: 0.99
20-30: 0.90 (3.78 @ 30m)
30-40: 0.86 (4.64 @ 40m)
40-50: 0.83
40 yards == 36.576 meters.
Bolt was at 3.78 at 30 meters and he ran the next 10 meters in 0.86. As you can see, he is still accelerating at that point, so multiplying 0.86 * 0.576 would be a slight underestimate of his 40 time. But as you can see, his rate of acceleration has drastically slowed down at that point. There is a way to figure out the exact time he took to travel that .576 meters, but I don't know how to do it, and I do know that since his next split was .83, simply dropping the 0.86 down to a .85 makes for a very close approximation. So that's what we're gonna do.
3.78 + (0.85 * 0.576) == 4.27 seconds.
BUT BUT BUT, in the olympics the clock starts the gun, and at the combine the clock starts when the runner starts.
This is where the reaction time comes into play.
4.27 - 0.14 == 4.13 seconds. Damn...that's fast.
(1) BUT BUT BUT, sprinters get a starting block, which helps lessen the effect of the reaction time because they can come off the block more quickly.
AND
(2) BUT BUT BUT, sprinters are running on a track, not on turf.
AND
(3) BUT BUT BUT, you looked at the data for Bolt's Best. Race. Ever. He doesn't run that fast every time.
So start with the time of 4.13 and adjust upwards based on the three BUT BUT BUT factors. The third factor is discretionary. You can always just run the numbers from whatever race you wish. All of them will be slower than the above numbers since it was by far his best race ever.
To deal with BUT BUT BUT factors #1 and #2....well I don't know what you do. How much time is the track worth versus the turf? How much time are starting blocks worth? I don't know the answers to those questions. Perhaps somebody else does.
Either way, in view of all of the above, if Bolt shows up at the combine with only 3 opportunities to post a time in the 40 yd dash, I would bet against him posting a sub 4.2 time. Could he conceivably do it? Sure...see above. But, again, that is all best case scenario and doesn't account for some potentially slowing factors.
My Ultimate Conclusion #1:
I think Chris Jonson vs. Usain Bolt in a 40 yd dash would be a tight race.
My Ultimate Conclusion #2:
A sub 4.10 40 yd dash has been run twice in history. Once by the Easter Bunny. The other time by Santa Claus.
Posted on 8/5/12 at 10:18 pm to bobbyray21
here is what I worked off of.
Posted on 8/5/12 at 10:21 pm to bobbyray21
Shut the god damn thread down bobbyray ended that shite
Posted on 8/6/12 at 7:14 am to bobbyray21
quote:
Either way, in view of all of the above, if Bolt shows up at the combine with only 3 opportunities to post a time in the 40 yd dash, I would bet against him posting a sub 4.2 time. Could he conceivably do it? Sure...see above. But, again, that is all best case scenario and doesn't account for some potentially slowing factors.
I absolutely agree with you on this. We are talking about ideal surface, spikes and conditions in London/ Beijing. The combine is a controlled environment but we generally see higher times at the combine than times coming out of the schools (if you know what I mean).
Only factor that I see that would work in Bolts favor is that that the clock works off his reaction time instead of the gun, but there are no starting blocks at the combine. The basic advantage/ disadvantage cancel each other out. Bolt would not run sub 4.2 at the NFL combine as we see it now IMO. Also the 40 yard dash is a very short race so yea it would be damn tight with a Chris Johnson or Trindon Holiday.
This post was edited on 8/6/12 at 7:16 am
Popular
Back to top
Follow TigerDroppings for LSU Football News