HOLY SHNIKIES 🔥🔥🔥 There are pro Sprinters who go their entire careers without cracking 11. secs, that's very impressive. I'm not proud to admit this is the first time really hearing about this young lady but it won't be my last. Zoe Hobbs... 👏👏👏
but it wasnt the perfect race. she didnt get out that quickly..maybe 0.02s there, and she hit the wall at about 80m, maybe another 0.01-0.02 there.. and the wind wasnt +2.0 either, so another 0.01-0.02 there. She's still not as lean as she could be so another 0.05 there..she could go sub 10.9 in perfect trim and conditions. And give her another 2-5 years of maturing and strength and some injury luck and she could go sub 10.8. Very talented athlete.
@@timn4481 It's a known fact that in the sprints an athlete who runs fast even with wind assistance can get back there again. Even though you had help your body still accelerated as quickly as it did, it hit the top speed that it did. You muscle remember that and with the right knowledge and training you can come close to that wind assisted time.
@@timn4481 She is much faster than those Australians blew them away they will never crack the 11 seconds they are not as fit as the mighty Kiwi unfortunately Timothy.
Throw as much money as needed into Zoe. She's the fastest woman ever seen from Australia/New Zealand. She could make the 100m Olympic final....cash her up.
she'll need to be capable of a 10.90 in still conditions to make olympics final...dont get too carried away. she is very good but an O final is still the 'next level'. and a medal in an O final is another 2 levels beyond that. she needs to get very lean, and that'll give her 0.05s..need to see the abs and leg cuts to make sure she's not carrying extra 1-3kg. FWIW this isnt body shaming!!..
@@timn4481 No you're wrong. Pretty sure with that time she would've got a place in the CommGames against Jamaicans & Def in the final of the OlyGames. She's on the up-and-up
Great to see NZ produce a world class sprinter. Sprinters here in the USA who are competitive but not in the top echelon often move up a distance. With NZ heritage in middle distance running....what about the 800m?
I'll be very interested to see if she holds that excellent form right through until August, her coach needs to plan very carefully a programme that has her running well when it really matters.
She won’t hold that form, if she tries she’ll get injured. The best would be to shut her down and reset, but even that probably won’t work. Serious Oceania athletes need to move Northwest for their careers. It’s just sad seeing all these great athletes not being at their best when international competitions start.
@@frankchan5547 You’re saying this like it’s easy. You pull up a calendar and see if you conceive any way to have her “peak” twice. The biggest problem is that she’s a Kiwi. Sure she could peak twice, but those peaks would have been November and now March. An early Spring and late summer peak is easy, but a late summer and then a mid winter peak…
@@Hengel_Andrews nothing is easy. Holding a peak for a prolonged period is arguably harder, see US Olympic trials being close to Olympics, but lots of athletes have just competed in northern indoor season and still need to peak for worlds later which is the major target
Hobbs in a class of her own, but I think the youngster Lewis looks a real talent. Even now, at her young age, if she only knew how to start, she'd be on Hobbs heels.
Lewis has announced she'll go to Europe in November 2024 to train with Femke Bol and the squad trained by Laurent Meuwly. That's the effort needed to succeed
@@ITSaPendragon Not really, I look at the times, as of yesterday at Monaco she got her ass kicked by a third rate bunch of girls. She has not managed to improve, she will not make the last eight. Yes she’s the best we have, the best we’ve had. But unfortunately not good enough which just shows that the NZOC made the right decision in not allowing her to go to the previous games. Tory Lewis will even beat her as she’s improved rapidly this year, Zoe has not. In fact her last time of around 11.15-11.17? Is no where near the last eight. She’ll struggle to even make the semi unfortunately.
At only 25? Very silly comment . She did not just got a big promotion in the corporate world at 25. The average sprinter peak at about 25. Usain Bolt peaked at about 22 to 23
Lynford Christie peaked at 36. So years to go. How can you take a positive vibe for the future and misunderstand it? Hope you don't feel very silly now.
She joins flo joy as the only women I think to break 11 seconds flo joy 10.3 the record I think man she keeps running like this she might come close to flo jo record 🤷🏽♂️
Stop trolling flo jo record is 10.49. Zoe is a good solid runner but dont get ahead of yourself she isn't on the level yet of the top american and jamaican sprinters. She still has long way to go.
What a run: she's a 25 year old gem - the real deal. How low can she go? What a great crowd reaction - after the clock disappointingly didn't stop at her NZ 10.89 (wind assisted) time. No-one knew even what she'd run as she crossed the line
@@ffvgaming3735 where do you get that 27-32 number from? Name a female who didn’t win anything or make a championship final before 25, but won something later?
what a simplistic view of the world - so YOU happen to know that everyone above her is juiced, wherever they are from in the world, however strict their testing regimes. You're insulting those who are better than her atm, presumably just because they are.
This is amazing … in the bad old days of East German doping, you would have your suspicions, of a 25 year old suddenly getting a lot better. But not today, with all of the checking that goes on.
A 25 year old who is really only taking sprinting seriously in the last few years after finishing university and setting up her own business (sports nutrition). She was always going to get better.
@@asterixdogmatix1073 yes, ^this. its one thing to run all through high school and college and on the national circuit running 11.1 or 11.2 for years and then suddenly running 10.4,10.5,10.6 (Flo Jo/Jeter) in the mid to late 20s, than someone who just picked it up late.
actually if you look at her progression over 13 years as listed on her IAAF profile her improvements have been slow and steady, often with a minimal performance loss a year later before stepping up again. I was very impressed to see her consistent small gains and evidence of knuckling down and putting in - she seems to have a great inner resolve and mental strength needed to keep moving up. (btw Kambundji from Switzerland is another I'd made that observation about - for any here who like boning up on stats)
we sure get tested enough here in Australia (and NZ) so I'd be very surprised. She also shows a lovely smooth list of improvement over 13 years on her IAAF profile page.
So proud of you Zoe, kiwis can fly after all! 🎉🎉
Kiwis?
HOLY SHNIKIES 🔥🔥🔥
There are pro Sprinters who go their entire careers without cracking 11. secs, that's very impressive.
I'm not proud to admit this is the first time really hearing about this young lady but it won't be my last.
Zoe Hobbs... 👏👏👏
and no Australian woman, pro or amateur, has gone near 11. This run beat the previous best on Australian soil by the Greek Ekaterini Thanou
@@stevecrocker6904 Wow... yeah she's running like the wind rn. Awesome to see a sub 11.... 👏👏👏
@@stevecrocker6904 Gone near 10 u mean?
Perfect race, accelerated then held her speed and form. Wow. Fastest Kiwi woman ever
but it wasnt the perfect race. she didnt get out that quickly..maybe 0.02s there, and she hit the wall at about 80m, maybe another 0.01-0.02 there.. and the wind wasnt
+2.0 either, so another 0.01-0.02 there. She's still not as lean as she could be so another 0.05 there..she could go sub 10.9 in perfect trim and conditions. And give her another 2-5 years of maturing and strength and some injury luck and she could go sub 10.8. Very talented athlete.
and fastest by a huge margin. The only world class female sprinter NZ had had
10.97 in Nairobi overnight too. Wind assisted, but third sub 11 run. Congrats Zoe.
You beauty sister …:: that was incredible Proud to be a Kiwi 🇳🇿🇳🇿🇳🇿
Great Run Zoe you went under 11 seconds so proud of you. NZ fan & follower Michael ❤
I saw this coming. After that windy 10.89 I knew she'd break it officially
her 10.89 was +3.4. So thats still a 11.09+ in still conditions. Seasoned fans wouldnt assume a sub 11 was coming from that. only the optimists.
@@timn4481 It's a known fact that in the sprints an athlete who runs fast even with wind assistance can get back there again. Even though you had help your body still accelerated as quickly as it did, it hit the top speed that it did. You muscle remember that and with the right knowledge and training you can come close to that wind assisted time.
@@timn4481 She is much faster than those Australians blew them away they will never crack the 11 seconds they are not as fit as the mighty Kiwi unfortunately Timothy.
@@JubJub817muppet.
@@fabmanly1070 it's true they are useless you pleb.
She runs soooooo smooth! No wasted motion at all. Just awesome to watch.
Ka mau te wehi! 🔥🔥🔥
Congratulations Zoe - wonderful
Have poland Swoboda
bravo! a real woman champion
Go Zoe!
Wooooooooosssshhhhhhh 💪💪💪💪
Atta girl Zoe, kiwi’s aren’t meant to fly, but this girl does.
Hobbs first daylight second unreal performance from Zoe
Looks like she could still run considerably faster. Fantastic effort
Totally agree. I'm going to try to keep up with her races; looking for faster performances for sure.
Throw as much money as needed into Zoe. She's the fastest woman ever seen from Australia/New Zealand. She could make the 100m Olympic final....cash her up.
she'll need to be capable of a 10.90 in still conditions to make olympics final...dont get too carried away. she is very good but an O final is still the 'next level'. and a medal in an O final is another 2 levels beyond that. she needs to get very lean, and that'll give her 0.05s..need to see the abs and leg cuts to make sure she's not carrying extra 1-3kg. FWIW this isnt body shaming!!..
@@timn4481 No you're wrong. Pretty sure with that time she would've got a place in the CommGames against Jamaicans & Def in the final of the OlyGames. She's on the up-and-up
Got 12 months or a little bit longer to mature and bring that down to around 10.85
She would of finished equal 5th at Tokyo 100m.but the 3 on the podium all Jamaican runners 10.61 the winner so really Zoe needs to find 3metres
@@paulwilliams-or8hq Or 10.65, she’ll never do it.
Great to see NZ produce a world class sprinter. Sprinters here in the USA who are competitive but not in the top echelon often
move up a distance. With NZ heritage in middle distance running....what about the 800m?
Wow she was flying
I'll be very interested to see if she holds that excellent form right through until August, her coach needs to plan very carefully a programme that has her running well when it really matters.
She won’t hold that form, if she tries she’ll get injured. The best would be to shut her down and reset, but even that probably won’t work. Serious Oceania athletes need to move Northwest for their careers. It’s just sad seeing all these great athletes not being at their best when international competitions start.
@@Hengel_Andrews Totally agree.
I'm sure her coach knows this. She needed the qualification time and has plenty of time to peak again
@@frankchan5547 You’re saying this like it’s easy. You pull up a calendar and see if you conceive any way to have her “peak” twice. The biggest problem is that she’s a Kiwi. Sure she could peak twice, but those peaks would have been November and now March. An early Spring and late summer peak is easy, but a late summer and then a mid winter peak…
@@Hengel_Andrews nothing is easy. Holding a peak for a prolonged period is arguably harder, see US Olympic trials being close to Olympics, but lots of athletes have just competed in northern indoor season and still need to peak for worlds later which is the major target
That race announcer is a crack up😅
Hobbs in a class of her own, but I think the youngster Lewis looks a real talent. Even now, at her young age, if she only knew how to start, she'd be on Hobbs heels.
Yes Lewis has the potential to go waaaaaay down on this time. Hobbs unfortunately probably won’t ever better this time.
Lewis has announced she'll go to Europe in November 2024 to train with Femke Bol and the squad trained by Laurent Meuwly. That's the effort needed to succeed
That was quick!!!
🇳🇿 🇳🇿 🇳🇿 🇳🇿
this girl is going to place in top 5 in Paris 2024
Don’t be silly, she won’t make the finals…….she’s currently getting her ass kicked.
@@fabmanly1070 that ass tho 🤪
@@fabmanly1070 all you do is hate, fuck off
No chance those big Jamaicans and yanks 3 meters ahead
@@ITSaPendragon Not really, I look at the times, as of yesterday at Monaco she got her ass kicked by a third rate bunch of girls. She has not managed to improve, she will not make the last eight. Yes she’s the best we have, the best we’ve had. But unfortunately not good enough which just shows that the NZOC made the right decision in not allowing her to go to the previous games. Tory Lewis will even beat her as she’s improved rapidly this year, Zoe has not. In fact her last time of around 11.15-11.17? Is no where near the last eight. She’ll struggle to even make the semi unfortunately.
Well done hoobs
Nice run Zoe cuz
She came last against the Americans, British & the Jamaicans……. Still a long way to go
NZ Athletics needs to give you & your coach much more money to train & live. We need you at Paris the next Olympics ❤❤
She won’t come close to making the finals.
Wow. Where to now? At only 25, can Zoe go faster still? Congrats. Enjoy the moment.
At only 25? Very silly comment . She did not just got a big promotion in the corporate world at 25. The average sprinter peak at about 25. Usain Bolt peaked at about 22 to 23
Lynford Christie peaked at 36. So years to go. How can you take a positive vibe for the future and misunderstand it? Hope you don't feel very silly now.
@@selvinlinton 10.96 now sausage fest.
great
She joins flo joy as the only women I think to break 11 seconds flo joy 10.3 the record I think man she keeps running like this she might come close to flo jo record 🤷🏽♂️
Stop trolling flo jo record is 10.49. Zoe is a good solid runner but dont get ahead of yourself she isn't on the level yet of the top american and jamaican sprinters. She still has long way to go.
😆😆😆😆
@@jking1892 Drugged up jojo doesn’t count. Even though Hobbs won’t ever make an Olympic final.
Thanou?
Maybe she had the meet record?
Thor?
she had the record of the fastest time run by a woman on Australian soil - 10.99 in the Sydney Olympics 2nd round
@@stevecrocker6904 ah, good to see that doper erased from that title.
On DRUGS LOL
What a run: she's a 25 year old gem - the real deal. How low can she go?
What a great crowd reaction - after the clock disappointingly didn't stop at her NZ 10.89 (wind assisted) time. No-one knew even what she'd run as she crossed the line
25 is on the later side of things for most female sprinters.
@@Hengel_Andrews meanwhile Shellyann Fraser pryce, the GOAT is 36. "young age" in track and field is overrated.
@@Hengel_Andrews female speinter prime is usually 27-32 so she has some years yet.
@@horsepower33 Shelly Ann Fraser-Pryce won the 2008 Olympic 100m final when she was 21. You named her like she became good in 2022?
@@ffvgaming3735 where do you get that 27-32 number from? Name a female who didn’t win anything or make a championship final before 25, but won something later?
The fastest woman in the world not on steroids that run puts her 17th in the world how lower would she be if everyone was clean
what a simplistic view of the world - so YOU happen to know that everyone above her is juiced, wherever they are from in the world, however strict their testing regimes. You're insulting those who are better than her atm, presumably just because they are.
@@stevecrocker6904 if your not on drugs and got nothing to hide then why would you be insulted
You sound very jealous of the Jamaican and American runners...lol
I get it, they are the best in the world.
Whikked
Mean.
👍👍
Now that is one fine-looking woman
This is amazing … in the bad old days of East German doping, you would have your suspicions, of a 25 year old suddenly getting a lot better. But not today, with all of the checking that goes on.
She ran 11.11 last year i think so its not too big of a jump tbh
A 25 year old who is really only taking sprinting seriously in the last few years after finishing university and setting up her own business (sports nutrition).
She was always going to get better.
@@asterixdogmatix1073 yes, ^this. its one thing to run all through high school and college and on the national circuit running 11.1 or 11.2 for years and then suddenly running 10.4,10.5,10.6 (Flo Jo/Jeter) in the mid to late 20s, than someone who just picked it up late.
actually if you look at her progression over 13 years as listed on her IAAF profile her improvements have been slow and steady, often with a minimal performance loss a year later before stepping up again. I was very impressed to see her consistent small gains and evidence of knuckling down and putting in - she seems to have a great inner resolve and mental strength needed to keep moving up. (btw Kambundji from Switzerland is another I'd made that observation about - for any here who like boning up on stats)
@@ffvgaming3735 : she ran 11.08 last year - Oregon U.S.
When u run a 100m in 10sec your super human
Seriously? I did that time when i was 15 years old. Made it for state competition and got flogged by faster 15 years old.
Actually my pb was 10.97.
And now you sit around on your ass watching yt videos you don't like and bagging them. Well done - you've reached your full potential.
big deal - you're not a young woman. And a 15 year old who runs 10.97 legal doesn't get flogged by faster boys. Your dad read the watch wrongly
Let’s hope this was achieved naturally and not enhanced! Very impressive indeed
we sure get tested enough here in Australia (and NZ) so I'd be very surprised. She also shows a lovely smooth list of improvement over 13 years on her IAAF profile page.
She has been steadily improving ever since she finished her University studies and has been able to commit more time to sprinting.
Kia Ora Zoe Tino Rawa Pai