|
---|
Tuesday, January 9, 2007
What is the fastest theoretical time that a human can run a marathon? According to Dutch mathematician John Einmahl of Germany's Tilberg University, Paul Tergat could improve his world record time of 2:04:55 by 49 seconds. Women marathoners could take as much as 8:50 off Paula Radcliffe's 2:15:25 world record. Sprinters, apparently, could do even better from a percentage perspective.
(Paul Tergat sets the world marathon record in Berlin, Germany in 2003 -
don't tell him he could have gone 49 seconds faster!)
don't tell him he could have gone 49 seconds faster!)
It's all part of the mathematical study of "extreme values" that helps determine upper limits. A quote from the story:
"For a lot of athletes it is probably depressing when they are confronted with our extreme values," Einmahl told the German news agency dpa. "But this is a very serious study - the extreme theory as a part of mathematics and statistics is an accepted science."It's all math, so there is certainly the chance of a breakout performance. I wonder what the 100-mile limit would be? Perhaps this will be one of Professor Einmahl's graduates thesis.
SD
[Thanks to The Final Sprint for pointing me to this story]
Labels: marathon, performance tips, press stories
0 Comments:
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)