The prostheses do not run the race on their own: there is an athlete who does the work, and the prosthetics do not make a significant difference to the time.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
Out of the tens of thousands of prosthetic legs they've made, there's never been any 400-meter athletes run under 50 seconds. So, if this was such a technologically advanced prosthetic leg, then how come not everyone's qualifying, or coming close to the qualification time, then?
The Olympics are a world apart from racing for a record. You put out of your mind pretty much what anyone else doing in the race.
We may train or peek for a certain race, but running is a lifetime sport.
When you run the marathon, you run against the distance, not against the other runners and not against the time.
Many run primarily for the exercise, but others run to condition themselves for well-publicized races of various distances.
I've found that my athletes run their best races after about 10 weeks of intense training.
I enter myself in races. I did a triathlon, and I have done a marathon a couple of times.
I am a bit different from the other sprinters because, I would say, I can run many different ways while the other guys they just came on and they can only run one way.
There is always the excitement of running races.
I may not drink an electrolyte beverage during the race. If I am running in an hour, I won't need one. But if you're running an hour-and-a-half to two hours or more, maybe you need a little bit of the electrolytes.
No opposing quotes found.