I see a lot of the same questions being asked since this video started to gain more traction lately, and thought I'd compile them with answers here. Q: Where is Tentoglou's 8.60? A: I made this video before his 8.60 jump. I will make an updated video at some point when more athletes surpass 8.50. Read description for updates. Q: Where is Pedroso's 8.96? A: The organizers ruled the wind reading to be invalid and thus it is not recognized as the world record. Whether you agree with that or not is up to you but that is the official stance of World Athletics, the governing body. I'm simply basing this video on their list (see description) and it wouldn't make sense for me to deviate from that by picking and choosing among unrecognized results. Q: Where is Lewis' 8.91 or Echevarria's 8.92/8.83? A: All those jumps were wind aided. This video only takes into consideration jumps with a tail wind of 2.0m/s or less, which is considered a "wind legal" jump. If you got someone else you think has jumped 8.50+ but is not on the list, this is probably why. Q: Why did you include those athletes you didn't find any video for? A: For list completion. It wouldn't make sense in my opinion to exclude them from the list because of that. I also wanted to give you a visual representation of those athletes by finding their best jump possible.
Yes I agree! He broke the world record by half a meter…. Its like he landed in the next century! It was unbelivable. I remember we all were shocked 15 thousand kilometers away from Mexico City. But numerous other results on the same Olimpic games were just astounishing
Sorry to disagree, all Mexico records were aided by altitude and came nowhere near being replicated for a very long time. Additionally, Beamon did not come close to a jump of this quality again, as a talent he was not up with Powell, whilst Lewis was in another league again.
@@Celophanewrap Is that what my comment suggested? If that is what you extracted from my it then perhaps you need to assess your powers of interpretation!
Carl Lewis is the greatest long jumper in history and there is no question of it. Lewis had 5 legal jumps over 8.75m and 8 legal jumps over 8.70 m, while no one else had more than one. Lewis won four straight Olympic gold medals to Powell's zero (both won two WC golds). Powell had 2 legal jumps over 8.66m, while Lewis had 11 of them. Beamon had only one legal jump over 8.5m, which was done at altitude and a barely legal +2.0 wind.
Iván Pedroso from Cuba, nine times world champion, 5 times indoors and 4 times outdoors, as well as Olympic champion in 2000; jumped 8.96 meters in Sestriere, Italy in 1995 surpassing Mike Powell's world record by one centimeter; this jump was surrounded by controversy, since at first the wind registered by the anemometer considered the jump valid to be homologated as a world record, but after an investigation 🤔 by the International Athletics Federation, it was decided to annul the record, since at the time of the jump there was a judge in front of the anemometer obstructing the real measurement of the wind. His teammates from the national team mediate jumps of more than 9 meters in training, without a doubt: GOAT 🐐
Nonsense, check the history of competition jumps over 8.50, there is Lewis and then there is everyone else. He may not hold the record but he has infinitely more 8.50+ jumps than Powell or anyone else. Pedrosa was not in the same league as Lewis, I think you're simply blinded by being Hispanic!
La mejor secuencia de salto la tiene Ivan Pedroso.para los entendidos el ha sido el mejor,la escuela cubana de salto largo y triple es de la más exitosa a nivel mundiak,mundial, mismo domina totalmente el triple salto.
Carl Lewis è sospettato di essere il più grande drogato di tutta la storia dell' atletica. Una buona parte degli atleti del suo club sono stati beccati ai controlli, solo lui non è mai stato incriminato. Molto strano. D'altronde il caso Armstrong insegna cosa possono fare gli ameri....cani nel campo sportivo
@@chopi__chopi because his foot was slightly over the line, with the sole being right at the edge and the tip over it and another athlete, purposely stood in front of the wind machine during all his six jumps to help make the wind machine register a legal time. Why is it important? Out of the 60 jumps during that competition only 3 were with legal wind. The jumper who was before Pedroso had a wind reading of 4.4m/s. Way over the 2.0m/s limit.
Yago Lamela, if 8,56 with a lot of major depression trouble in his live till he died, imagine if he had a healthy nervous sistem that gave him more continuity and consistency training and of course competing . . Immense talent! Rest in peace Yago.
just very amazing those guys can jump over 8 meters, if you go inside the stadium and check out the bunker, those distances for our average guys are really hard to believe 👍🏻
@@Paul-ne9sf Oh cool, so yeah ...the Hang techique, IMO ... gives the impression that the jumper is in the air longer. I love the way it looks, but it does seem like most elite jumpers use the Hitch.
@@willstuart4504 well not really Mike Powell did the Hitch along with Ivan Pedesro and Carl Lewis! Those are your elite. It's not what you do in the air it's the energy from the board your penultimate step before striking the board.
Anyone who’s ever seen a live long jump will know, the guys really do fly through the air. It’s incredible athleticism to make the body fly and stretch through almost 9 meters
BS, that was a steal. The guy was meters away from the machine, no way would that have affected the measurement. For me, money was involved, Pedroso was not marketable.
@@crabb9966 the thing about that jumped is there was foot print so Lewis team wanted to challenge it but thing was already removed for the next person to jump next.
LJ is so unforgiving - technically you need to be perfect from the run up to hitting the board to your landing - any given jump a guy/girl who gets that perfect combination can have a massive jump
Iván Pedroso es con diferencia el mejor..el más consistente...en la cita de Sestriere, Italia, le quitaron el récord mundial..alegando viento a favor,y no fue así...de todas formas considero que ha sido el 👑
Tentoglou will be the first man to jump over 9m. If he can jump 8,60 at the age of 23, with his current training and ridiculous facilities in Greece, imagine what he can do with proper training, equipment and the juice Powell and Lewis were allowed to take.
you are the one who is ridiculous, have you ever been in a greek athletic camp? I bet no so shut your mouth, greece is one of the smallest countries that hosted olympic games how would that happen without proper facilities?
@@PRTlists so where is Pedrosa 8.96? legal wind legal jump. organizers didnt want to give him a prize car for breaking a WR so they pretended that the wind gauge was obstructed but it actually wasnt when the jump was measured, corruption
@@cattycats4 Hey, I don't make the rules. The organizers ruled the wind reading to be invalid and thus it is not recognized as the world record. People will always have different opinions unless we have the truth. I'm simply going off of the list presented by the governing body, World Athletics, and it wouldn't make sense for me to deviate from that by picking and choosing among unrecognized results.
It is not in the list but german decathlonist had the most beautiful long jump ever on my opinion. Whatch his 8,45m during a heptathlon event!!!! Here ruclips.net/video/2HMWCeqvdj4/видео.html
@@ivanjoldic826 you guys are clowns. Mike Powell Jumped 8.49, 8.51, 8.62, 8.55, 8.95, 8.99, 8.64, 8.70, 8.58, 8.52. He's a double world champion. And he only lost to Carl Lewis by 2cms in the 1992 Olympics. Bob Beamon only competed for four years. He was a student athlete only, and retired from athletics when he graduated college - when he was 24 years old
@@agt155 That`s like saying Lewis would have jumped over 9 meters if he only competed in the long jump and saved some energy. Instead, he ran 100m, 200m and 400m and was part of the team in the relay races too. Qualifying, semi-final and final. A huge amount of energy spent and then the long jump.
.......As the 100 m (M) race (6 sprinters in less than 10 s) - WR by Lewis 9,86 before the end of his (sprinting) career (3 consecutive world titles on 100m). At he end he won in Atlanta (OG) in long jump-, and that was his 10-th golden Olympic medal! -I had seen the first WCh in Athletics in Helsinki 1983, with best women race on 400m and WR. If Marita Koch was there (she competing on 100, 200 m), the result might be better than 47,99 s (Kratochvilova).
@@TheJohnCooperShow I agree but he would be potentially near 9m with his stride length if he put years into the technique although at top speed only a tenth faster than Lewis at best (8.6 100m split vs 8.7 for Lewis, 0.81 vs 0.82 10m split) and Lewis had beautiful technique and did jump around 9m 10 at his best in the early 80s it was deemed a foul incorrectly but he did jump further than anyone, indianapolis Lewis was the greatest long jumper even if you count Pedrosos 8.96 which I do
Faltan varios saltos muy importantes y sobre todo el 8 .96 de Iván Pedroso que no lo quisieron homologar por qué había neblina ese día es lo más ridiculo que uno puede oír sobre los saltadores de largo
Pero eso no es todo....pongámosle, que ese salto de 8,96; no cuente....el mejor salto de Pedroso(homologado), es de 8,93; y sin mencionar, que es el saltador que mas veces superó los 8,80; en toda la historia....la verdad, no entiendo al editor del video.
Why is Johnson considered a national shame, yet Lewis not? American history of doping, celebrating cheaters, from Lewis to Florence Griffith-Joyner to Gay and Gatlin to Armstrong.
That Bob Beamon jump - shit doesn’t make sense. Angels In The Outfield stuff 😂😂 halfway through his leap it almost looks like he gets a boost. It’s unbelievable. It’s just so big. Always amazing me when the footage pops up in my feed
Long jump is a weird competition since so many guys only get one really big jump in their entire career mostly also much bigger than their pb in training. I assume it has to do with how they hit the board in competition, I have heard people say that if you hit the board a certain way you almost get propelled off of it and receive a boost. Can someone chime in on this phenomenon? It’s just absurd that someone would get 8.70m and then never ever even jump 8.20m Makes no sense
I remember watching a battle between Carl Lewis and Mike Powell as they traded world records at the '91 world champs in Tokyo, jumping close to or over 29' each jump. Ever wonder why we don't see people jump 29' let alone barely 28' anymore? Is there really any question?
@@XPKpianist I generally agree, though sometimes feet measurements provide more relatable milestones. Such as 29 feet in the long jump (though I suppose 9 meters is also a relatable target). 8 feet in the high jump (only one person has ever cleared that height). 2.45m doesn't hold the same intrigue. There have only been three pole vaulters to clear 20 feet. 6.1m just isn't that exciting. Some thought that 60 feet was considered unobtainable in the triple jump until Jonathan Edwards became the only one in history to exceed that mark, but 18.29m just doesn't mean that much in terms of a milestone number.
I see a lot of the same questions being asked since this video started to gain more traction lately, and thought I'd compile them with answers here.
Q: Where is Tentoglou's 8.60?
A: I made this video before his 8.60 jump. I will make an updated video at some point when more athletes surpass 8.50. Read description for updates.
Q: Where is Pedroso's 8.96?
A: The organizers ruled the wind reading to be invalid and thus it is not recognized as the world record. Whether you agree with that or not is up to you but that is the official stance of World Athletics, the governing body. I'm simply basing this video on their list (see description) and it wouldn't make sense for me to deviate from that by picking and choosing among unrecognized results.
Q: Where is Lewis' 8.91 or Echevarria's 8.92/8.83?
A: All those jumps were wind aided. This video only takes into consideration jumps with a tail wind of 2.0m/s or less, which is considered a "wind legal" jump. If you got someone else you think has jumped 8.50+ but is not on the list, this is probably why.
Q: Why did you include those athletes you didn't find any video for?
A: For list completion. It wouldn't make sense in my opinion to exclude them from the list because of that. I also wanted to give you a visual representation of those athletes by finding their best jump possible.
Agree 💯 hi live from Greece island of Crete 💪🇬🇷👍
Μiltos Tentoglou the greek one had a nice 8.60 meters jump early 2021 and won gold medal at olympic games in japan ......8.41 was his jump
Poutsa mas
@@Kostas1989 πάνε δες βίντεο με αδερφες όπως εσύ μπρο άσε τα αθλήματα για μας τους άντρες που τα θέλουμε
@@Kostas1989 οκ απλυτε αν κ αμφιβαλω αν εχεις
8.95 is best
What???
Lewis vs Powell Tokyo Worlds 1991 . One of the greatest field event duals of all time!
pure dope 😂😂😂
@@gafaneworder8961Powell didn't dope
Jumping 8.91 and 8.87 and not winning :)
Only a World Reacord could beat that, and that was what happened. @@Kalkstajn
@@gafaneworder8961 dumb
Yesterday jumped 9.12 m (No video found)
Instead I found one effort at 1.34 m
underrated comment
Carl Lewis. Winning the Long Jump in 4 straight Olympics. Insane. What a jumper! 5 of the 8 longest jumps ever, 8 of the 15.
Bob beamons is not just the most astounding long jump of all time (given the time in history) but it’s also the most astounding record of all time
Yes I agree! He broke the world record by half a meter…. Its like he landed in the next century! It was unbelivable. I remember we all were shocked 15 thousand kilometers away from Mexico City. But numerous other results on the same Olimpic games were just astounishing
Sorry to disagree, all Mexico records were aided by altitude and came nowhere near being replicated for a very long time. Additionally, Beamon did not come close to a jump of this quality again, as a talent he was not up with Powell, whilst Lewis was in another league again.
@@truthsayerq7264 so all sporting events should be held at sea level?
@@Celophanewrap
Is that what my comment suggested? If that is what you extracted from my it then perhaps you need to assess your powers of interpretation!
@@truthsayerq7264 So why nobody came close to me that hangovered morning?
Nice all-time collection of videos. Unbelievable in some ways how hard it is to find 8.50-8.70m jumps, but you've nicely collected what's available
Thank you!
Super bro
Carl Lewis is the greatest long jumper in history and there is no question of it. Lewis had 5 legal jumps over 8.75m and 8 legal jumps over 8.70 m, while no one else had more than one. Lewis won four straight Olympic gold medals to Powell's zero (both won two WC golds). Powell had 2 legal jumps over 8.66m, while Lewis had 11 of them. Beamon had only one legal jump over 8.5m, which was done at altitude and a barely legal +2.0 wind.
Beamon, Powell, one World record each. Lewis zero.
@@kdwayneclewis 100 meter world record
Iván Pedroso from Cuba, nine times world champion, 5 times indoors and 4 times outdoors, as well as Olympic champion in 2000; jumped 8.96 meters in Sestriere, Italy in 1995 surpassing Mike Powell's world record by one centimeter; this jump was surrounded by controversy, since at first the wind registered by the anemometer considered the jump valid to be homologated as a world record, but after an investigation 🤔 by the International Athletics Federation, it was decided to annul the record, since at the time of the jump there was a judge in front of the anemometer obstructing the real measurement of the wind. His teammates from the national team mediate jumps of more than 9 meters in training, without a doubt: GOAT 🐐
Nonsense, check the history of competition jumps over 8.50, there is Lewis and then there is everyone else. He may not hold the record but he has infinitely more 8.50+ jumps than Powell or anyone else. Pedrosa was not in the same league as Lewis, I think you're simply blinded by being Hispanic!
La mejor secuencia de salto la tiene Ivan Pedroso.para los entendidos el ha sido el mejor,la escuela cubana de salto largo y triple es de la más exitosa a nivel mundiak,mundial, mismo domina totalmente el triple salto.
1. Carl Lewis
2. Ivan Pedroso
Yes, i remember that
Carl Lewis è sospettato di essere il più grande drogato di tutta la storia dell' atletica. Una buona parte degli atleti del suo club sono stati beccati ai controlli, solo lui non è mai stato incriminato. Molto strano. D'altronde il caso Armstrong insegna cosa possono fare gli ameri....cani nel campo sportivo
Nice video!
I'm exited to see what Echevarria and Gayle can get in the next 5 years!
Tentoglou
Tentogluuuu
Zero consistency from those two..
Thank you for putting this together for long jump lovers.
Bob Beamon's high at his record jump was also more than amazing.
The controversial record of Pedroso's 8.96 could be a bonus clip.
Why controversial
@@chopi__chopi because his foot was slightly over the line, with the sole being right at the edge and the tip over it and another athlete, purposely stood in front of the wind machine during all his six jumps to help make the wind machine register a legal time. Why is it important? Out of the 60 jumps during that competition only 3 were with legal wind. The jumper who was before Pedroso had a wind reading of 4.4m/s. Way over the 2.0m/s limit.
@@SilencedButNotForgotten thanks , appreciate your explanation
@@SilencedButNotForgotten Lewis jumped over 9 meters but was called a foul.
@@Abdi-libaax Yes, and the jerks running the competition scrubbed the jump before Lewis could preserve the mark for a protest.
Yago Lamela, if 8,56 with a lot of major depression trouble in his live till he died, imagine if he had a healthy nervous sistem that gave him more continuity and consistency training and of course competing . . Immense talent! Rest in peace Yago.
R.i.p.
D.E.P.
Si mi paisano era de un gran talento pero lesiones y estados depresivos le impidieron saltar aún más lejos.
I don't know how you found all that footage, but fantastic job!
Cool video man!
Thanks!
Great collection...
Best video ever. Unfortunately I couldn't find it, so there's this one 😆
just very amazing those guys can jump over 8 meters, if you go inside the stadium and check out the bunker, those distances for our average guys are really hard to believe 👍🏻
Good compilation, I appreciate your efforts.
Nice Video! Well done!
8.65m - Μiltos Tentoglou (Greek) on 8th June 2024
To the viewers: Greek athlete Tentoglu did 8.60m during the European championships this year.
Yesterday he did it again won 1 place one more time
8.65!!!!twice....today in Rome Italy....best are yet to come...to be continued.... 😅
@@georgekanellopoulos3673 He Is such a beast. 8.53 average for the competition.
Bob Beamon - the most perfect jump.
I always found that jumpers that don't use the bicycle "running in air" technique always look like they're jumping further.
The running in the air is called The Hitch Kick and the other technique is called The Hang!
@@Paul-ne9sf Oh cool, so yeah ...the Hang techique, IMO ... gives the impression that the jumper is in the air longer. I love the way it looks, but it does seem like most elite jumpers use the Hitch.
@@willstuart4504 well not really Mike Powell did the Hitch along with Ivan Pedesro and Carl Lewis! Those are your elite. It's not what you do in the air it's the energy from the board your penultimate step before striking the board.
4:41 Camera man nearly died😂
Great Compilation 👍 !!!...
Thanks!
8.65m - Μiltos Tentoglou - TWICE (!!!!) on 8th June 2024
Anyone who’s ever seen a live long jump will know, the guys really do fly through the air. It’s incredible athleticism to make the body fly and stretch through almost 9 meters
Sick video
Thanks!
Imagine jumping over 29' and taking second. This is the best LJ competition in history
Pedroso jumped 8.96 with 1.2m/s wind but due to a referee too close to wind speed meter the result was not officialized as new world record
BS, that was a steal. The guy was meters away from the machine, no way would that have affected the measurement.
For me, money was involved, Pedroso was not marketable.
@@mariacorrales6181 Agree...
Video quality 👌👌👌👌👌👌👌👌
Proud to see 2 jamaicans in the best jump of all time🇯🇲💯😊
@Desi Gameplayer gayle is 1 of the jamaicans
All those guys are from african roots
James Beckford was my long jumping roommate in college at Blinn!
@@greekmacedonia7168 Every single person on earth has African roots including you .Do you deny it?
Add one more from Greece Tentoglou 8,60m
Wait until Tokyo next month.
@@lexsoft3969 gold for him bro
See At time 10:20 . The jump clearly seems way ahead of 9m. Then how can it still be 8.87m ??? Someone please clarify it to me?
Carl Lewis got 8.91 "Second longest jump" (Shown in the clip you played, it was his previous jump in the 1991 world championships, Tokyo)
illegal wind, therefore no record
Plus he jumped 9 meters but was called foul.
@@Abdi-libaax I have heard about this too, I must investigate it because it seems so out of this world, unluckily it's hard to get any information
@@crabb9966 the thing about that jumped is there was foot print so Lewis team wanted to challenge it but thing was already removed for the next person to jump next.
One of the best vi..(no comment found)
Lewis 8'91 in Tokyo! no 8'87
LJ is so unforgiving - technically you need to be perfect from the run up to hitting the board to your landing - any given jump a guy/girl who gets that perfect combination can have a massive jump
Yeah
Hardest events to be good at in track
Juan Pablo Echeveria would have been the best long jumper of all time if he was well managed.
Great video!
Loved it
Lewis and Pedroso, GOATS
Iván Pedroso es con diferencia el mejor..el más consistente...en la cita de Sestriere, Italia, le quitaron el récord mundial..alegando viento a favor,y no fue así...de todas formas considero que ha sido el 👑
Tentoglou!!!!!
How far do they reckon Mike powels 5th round jump was?
Where is Tendoglou 8.65 Rome
Tentoglou will be the first man to jump over 9m. If he can jump 8,60 at the age of 23, with his current training and ridiculous facilities in Greece, imagine what he can do with proper training, equipment and the juice Powell and Lewis were allowed to take.
you are the one who is ridiculous, have you ever been in a greek athletic camp? I bet no so shut your mouth, greece is one of the smallest countries that hosted olympic games how would that happen without proper facilities?
24 year old cuban "Juan Miguel Echevarria" is better.
@@la23s.a.22 the one who Tentoglou dismantled at the Olympics? I think not
@@r.k.4537 his pb is 8.83meters and would've been more if the pit was extended.
@@r.k.4537 "dismanted" is beyond an over exaggeration. Won because his second best was 0.05 meters more
What is the song at the beginning?
10:22 Where is Carl Lewis' 8.68 and 8.83 ?
neither 8.68, nor 8.83 are longer than 8.87 lol
Not legal as the wind speed was over 2
Nenad Stekic Yugoslavia 8,54 Mexico OI 1968
I jumped 10.12m yesterday. (Unfortunately no footage.) But I did jump across a footpath without shoes last Christmas which I got on film
That's quite a compilation of videos that you couldn't find.
Bob Beamon still the greatest long jumper in my opinion. He had much more inertia after landing so he could jump further if he stretched out more.
What happened to Carl Lewis s 8.91 m in Tokyo 1991? Great video indeed
It was a wind aided jump. This video only takes into consideration jumps with a tail wind of 2.0m/s or less, which is considered a "wind legal" jump.
@@PRTlists so where is Pedrosa 8.96? legal wind legal jump. organizers didnt want to give him a prize car for breaking a WR so they pretended that the wind gauge was obstructed but it actually wasnt when the jump was measured, corruption
@@cattycats4 Hey, I don't make the rules. The organizers ruled the wind reading to be invalid and thus it is not recognized as the world record. People will always have different opinions unless we have the truth. I'm simply going off of the list presented by the governing body, World Athletics, and it wouldn't make sense for me to deviate from that by picking and choosing among unrecognized results.
@@cattycats4 in Rome even Powell jumped 8:99m, but the wind reading was 4++.....I think in 1993
if I had to rate the beauty of the jumps: 1) Beamon, 2) Ivan Pedrosa 3) Yago Lamela
It is not in the list but german decathlonist had the most beautiful long jump ever on my opinion. Whatch his 8,45m during a heptathlon event!!!! Here ruclips.net/video/2HMWCeqvdj4/видео.html
What's crazy is that the no.5 guy didn't even have track shoes on. It looks like he's long jumping in Chuck Taylor's
No comment found. Best I found is this one.
by far the best of all time was Carl Lewis. He has managed 3/4 of all longest jumps. Mike Powell and Bob Beamon's jumps were absolute flash in the pan
Agreed. He jumped over 8,30m dozens of times. Beamon and Powell got lucky with a one off.
@@ivanjoldic826 you guys are clowns.
Mike Powell Jumped 8.49, 8.51, 8.62, 8.55, 8.95, 8.99, 8.64, 8.70, 8.58, 8.52. He's a double world champion. And he only lost to Carl Lewis by 2cms in the 1992 Olympics.
Bob Beamon only competed for four years. He was a student athlete only, and retired from athletics when he graduated college - when he was 24 years old
Yeah that’s really not a fair call. I encourage you to read about Mike and Bob to understand how great they were too, and I’m a Carl Lewis fan.
@@ivanjoldic826 Powell's previous jump would've taken the WR if not for a 1cm foul.
@@agt155 That`s like saying Lewis would have jumped over 9 meters if he only competed in the long jump and saved some energy. Instead, he ran 100m, 200m and 400m and was part of the team in the relay races too. Qualifying, semi-final and final. A huge amount of energy spent and then the long jump.
Beamon's record lasted 23 years. Powell's has lasted 31 years +.
Long jump isn't on a high level anymore like in the 80s
I was fortunate enough to see the 1991 duel between Lewis and Powell as it happened. Possibly the greatest long jump competition ever.
.......As the 100 m (M) race (6 sprinters in less than 10 s) - WR by Lewis 9,86 before the end of his (sprinting) career (3 consecutive world titles on 100m). At he end he won in Atlanta (OG) in long jump-, and that was his 10-th golden Olympic medal!
-I had seen the first WCh in Athletics in Helsinki 1983, with best women race on 400m and WR. If Marita Koch was there (she competing on 100, 200 m), the result might be better than 47,99 s (Kratochvilova).
Why this all jumps seems ahead of 9m but results show they jumped 8.68 8.54, 8.83 etc. WHY
I wonder how much bolt would achieve in this because of his sheer acceleration
Probably not as good as you think because it takes him 40m to get into his full stride.
@@TheJohnCooperShow so did Carl Lewis
@@cattycats4 and thats why bolt may not do any better than lewis.
@@TheJohnCooperShow I agree but he would be potentially near 9m with his stride length if he put years into the technique although at top speed only a tenth faster than Lewis at best (8.6 100m split vs 8.7 for Lewis, 0.81 vs 0.82 10m split) and Lewis had beautiful technique and did jump around 9m 10 at his best in the early 80s it was deemed a foul incorrectly but he did jump further than anyone, indianapolis Lewis was the greatest long jumper even if you count Pedrosos 8.96 which I do
Update it for Tentoglou GR 🥰
Will do at some point, when more guys surpass 8.50 too.
It's unbelievable how after more than 30 years nobody has even come close to Carl Lewis 8.80+ jumps, and of course to Powell's record
juan miguel echeverría 8.83
@@Angel_0987 nope
Where is Herreira from 🇨🇺.It was 1998 year in Moscow, World Youth Games. 8,60 his result
It was still a massive jump , he was only over the line about 9 inches max
tentoglou, soon 8.99m
9+
@@Sp1r0s777 όχι 10 :)
You are dreaming.
Miltos tentoglou Olympic champion 🇬🇷🇬🇷💪
By luck... cuba deserved 1st
So why they didnt???? Good luck....
Where is Cuban Juan Echevarría ? He registered 8.83 meters 5 years ago .
6:05. His 8.83 jump was wind-aided.
@@PRTlists What would his time be with a normal wind ,say 1kmph
Holy cow that is so far...
Excelente video. Por favor ahora haga uno de salto alto.
There's a big doping question mark behind Powell's 8.95.
Wait for Tentoglou ....
8.41 αλλά χρυσοοοο
Tentoglou of Greece 8.60 in Athens :)
I know, I will make an updated video at some point. For now, it's in the description.
Juan miguel echavari jump 8.83
That jump was wind-aided
carl lewis did jump 8,91 but the wind was to high,
(No video found)
But I found is this 2:34.
Faltan varios saltos muy importantes y sobre todo el 8 .96 de Iván Pedroso que no lo quisieron homologar por qué había neblina ese día es lo más ridiculo que uno puede oír sobre los saltadores de largo
Pero eso no es todo....pongámosle, que ese salto de 8,96; no cuente....el mejor salto de Pedroso(homologado), es de 8,93; y sin mencionar, que es el saltador que mas veces superó los 8,80; en toda la historia....la verdad, no entiendo al editor del video.
"no video found" ....
No video found
Lewis 8.91 in 1991? He beat Beamon's record before Powell if I remember correctly
Illegal wind.
Juan Miguel Echevarria = 8m83
Yes, wind-aided
Carl Lewis is the G.O.A.T. .
the 1991 world champs jumps from Carl were out of this world ....what a Goat
Yeah... Four of his jumps at WC 1991 were >= 8.80m. Marvellous achievement.
He was the G.O.A.T. alright ...admitting after years that he was "cheating" with dopping. Nice "hero". I wonder
...and yet never held the world record lol :-D
Why is Johnson considered a national shame, yet Lewis not?
American history of doping, celebrating cheaters, from Lewis to Florence Griffith-Joyner to Gay and Gatlin to Armstrong.
That Bob Beamon jump - shit doesn’t make sense. Angels In The Outfield stuff 😂😂 halfway through his leap it almost looks like he gets a boost. It’s unbelievable. It’s just so big. Always amazing me when the footage pops up in my feed
Saladio the Best! PANAMA PANAMA🇵🇦🇵🇦🇵🇦🇵🇦
Can Miltiadis Tentoglu improve his jump at Tokyo Olympic next month ?
I hope so, I want at least 8.70m.
8.41 αλλά πήρε χρυσό!!!
Gold
Long jump is a weird competition since so many guys only get one really big jump in their entire career mostly also much bigger than their pb in training.
I assume it has to do with how they hit the board in competition, I have heard people say that if you hit the board a certain way you almost get propelled off of it and receive a boost.
Can someone chime in on this phenomenon?
It’s just absurd that someone would get 8.70m and then never ever even jump 8.20m
Makes no sense
I remember watching a battle between Carl Lewis and Mike Powell as they traded world records at the '91 world champs in Tokyo, jumping close to or over 29' each jump. Ever wonder why we don't see people jump 29' let alone barely 28' anymore? Is there really any question?
They didnt trade world records because carl lewis’ jump had too much wind
@@anderstauschristensen9184 metaphorically speaking. But you missed the main point.
Stop using the dumb inches. Metric is the only way.
@@XPKpianist I generally agree, though sometimes feet measurements provide more relatable milestones. Such as 29 feet in the long jump (though I suppose 9 meters is also a relatable target). 8 feet in the high jump (only one person has ever cleared that height). 2.45m doesn't hold the same intrigue. There have only been three pole vaulters to clear 20 feet. 6.1m just isn't that exciting. Some thought that 60 feet was considered unobtainable in the triple jump until Jonathan Edwards became the only one in history to exceed that mark, but 18.29m just doesn't mean that much in terms of a milestone number.
@@bman342a Americans 🙄
I suppose you could be either Liberian or from Myanmar but the American character seems to fit the bill
Whys jeffs jump looks like its at a highschool meet
Remember the name.
Miltos Tentoglou 24 years old with pb 8.60 m.
One day he'll be the first man over 9.00 m
Loll.... He is lucky cause Miguel Echevaria has taken retirement from athletics at 24 ... otherwise he wouldn't get a chance
@@thunder300-v6v Time will show my friend
@@thunder300-v6v Miguel Echevaria ? Where is he now my friend ? Tentoglou is n the top opf the world
quand on voit que le n°2 date de 1968...on a évolué mais on est pas devenu meilleur...
Miltos Tentoglou?
He was not an 8.50+ jumper when I made this video. He's the only one missing for the video to still be up to date.
8.91 carl at tokyo
Seulement miltos Tentoglou 8,52 !!! Avant hier !!!
honorable mention: Tuariki Delamere
Karl lewis à sauté 8m 91.
To much wind = Not official
He runs so fast.
Respect for the european champion Andrew Howe (8.47)
Faltó el salto del Mexicano José Luis Rivera de 8,54 mts