Joe Ortiz, well...,East German men at Rome: Thomas Schönlebe gold medal 400 meters, Jürgen Schult gold medal Discus throw, Torsten Voss gold medal Decathlon, Hartwig Gauder gold medal and Ronald Weigel silver medal 50km walk, and of course Hagen Melzer silver medal 3000m steeplechase. Not bad, though.
Sundeep, give yourself a pat on the back because you are so clever! Naturally, I'm being sarcastic. FloJo was very competitive in the 200 and was part of the winning 4×100 gold medal team at these championships. If you think a supplement and/or pills account for her inimitable, mind-blowing form, you are mistaken. Also, where was Evelyn Ashford? If substances are so miraculous, why did Marlies Gohr get eliminated at Worlds and Olympics? For the record, FloJo, Ashford and Gohr never failed a test.
@@iliastsouktakos604 Not individually, just supported by private companies and hided by the Govs. Carl Lewis in these same moments was doped too, as all american athletes.
Ottey is great and legendary! But it is her destiny that she never ever was an Olympic Champion. She was destined to be forever number 2 or Number 3. So sad!
@@APBCTechnique In 100m, may be! But never ever was an Olympic Gold medalist and Champion. Some idiotic American commentators offensively called her "the Bronze Queen" because she won many bronzes in many Olympics!
@@bbatjargal1549 she was a world champion 3 times indoors at 60m and 200m twice. Plus a world champion outdoors in the 200m twice. 5 global titles. A track world champion outdoors is considered the same as an Olympic champion. Also 3 noteworthy gold in the commonwealth championships. Look below - Ottey is one of the greatest *Records and achievements* Ottey ranks at number four on the all-time list of the 200 metres, and number seven on the 100 metres list. In 1990, Ottey was awarded the World Athlete of the Year and the Track & Field News Athlete of the Year awards Ottey is the first female athlete to run 60 metres under seven seconds (6.96 in 1992) Ottey is the only woman to have run the 200 metres under 22 seconds indoors (21.87 in 1993). Ottey has the fastest 100 and 200 metres one day combination, with 10.93 and 21.66 (32.59 total) at the 1990 Weltklasse Zurich grand prix. Ottey has run 100 metres under eleven seconds - 67 times ( plus 9 wind-assisted ) a record among female sprinters. Ottey has run 200 metres under twenty-two seconds - 18 times (plus once wind-assisted) another record among female sprinters. Ottey has 57 consecutive wins in 100 metres - the most consecutive wins over 100 metres for a female, and 34 consecutive wins at 200 metres. Ottey holds the official World Masters Athletics world records in the 100 m and 200 m for the age groups W35 ( 100- 10.74 in 1996, 200- 21.93 in 1995 ) W40 ( 100- 10.99 in 2000, 200- 22.74 in 2004 ) W45 ( 100- 11.34 in 2006, 200- 23.82 in 2006 ) W50 ( 100- 11.67 in 2010, 200- 24.33 in 2010 ).[17] Ottey is the first from the Western Hemisphere (outside the USA) to win two individual medals at the same Olympic Games. At the 1995 World Championships, Ottey became the oldest ever female gold medallist when she won the 200 m at age 35 years 92 days. At the 1997 World Championships in Athens, she became the oldest female medallist ever at 37 years 90 days, when she won the bronze medal. In the 2000 Olympics, at age 40, Ottey became the oldest female track and field medalist when she anchored the Jamaican women's 4×100 metres to a silver medal. With the disqualification of Marion Jones, she was awarded the bronze medal in the 100 metres, making her the oldest individual medallist. Ottey along with Carl Lewis, Usain Bolt and Allyson Felix, is one of four athletes to win twenty or more medals at the Olympic Games and the World Championships (combined). Ottey holds the record for running the fastest women's Indoor 200 metres, in 21.87 seconds. This record has stood since 1993 and remains (as of 2016) the only sub 22sec clocking by a woman indoors. In six World Championships competing for Jamaica, Ottey has won fourteen medals: three gold, four silver and seven bronze medals, while at the Olympics she has earned three silver and six bronze medals. Ottey was the first female Caribbean athlete to win an Olympic medal. Ottey has won the most career Olympic medals (9 medals: 3 silver and 6 bronze) in women's track and field, a record now shared with American sprinter Allyson Felix (6 gold and 3 silver). Ottey has the quickest 200m performance ever into a headwind (-1.0m/sec or more ) achieved when clocking 21.66 (-1.0) in Zurich, 1990. Ottey has won the Jamaican Sportsperson of the Year (sportswoman) a record 13 times, first winning in 1979 and last winning in 1995, no man or woman has won the award more.
You sound like a failed athlete and you sound like you failed at life itself that's what your life boils down to let me look up the 1986 world championships 100 m for women so I can comment with one word drugs you are a special weirdo
Heike Dreschler is my favourite along with Marita Koch
That was a damn man
@@sequiaonda78 Yes, they're the best.
Merlene Otty is beautiful
Joe Ortiz, well...,East German men at Rome: Thomas Schönlebe gold medal 400 meters, Jürgen Schult gold medal Discus throw, Torsten Voss gold medal Decathlon, Hartwig Gauder gold medal and Ronald Weigel silver medal 50km walk, and of course Hagen Melzer silver medal 3000m steeplechase. Not bad, though.
All probably drugged and doped upto the eye balls
State sponsored drug program!
Vad glad hon blev Silke - jag kommer ihåg att jag tyckte på den tiden att DDR sprinterna var lite återhållsamna - men jag gillar henne ❤
Didn't Dreschler play in the West Germany world cup football team?
Dreschler looked doped to the eyeballs. She was doped as a teenager itself.
Poor Ottey
XD Silke Gladisch (Silke Möller) is at the moment our Sport an Politics Teacher xD
Wow, Really! Where in Germany? To have one of the greatest female sprinters in history as your teacher, you are a very lucky person! Wow! I envy you!
Can you ask her what steroids she used in the 80’s ?
@@Playboyy1985 Oral Turinabol and perhaps testosterone on top was the cocktail
Lucky you. Lovely girl / woman.
Too bad for Heike. No world cigar on 100 and 200 m.Had to console herself with becoming the greatest long jumper of all times.
Not bad either
Neither was her best event anyway. Long Jumping just became her true calling and the rest is history.
@@mr.sinjin-smyth Didn't she share the 200m WR with Koch?
@@nuwandalton Yep. But then came Florence Griffith Joyner who was just several steps better.
@@mr.sinjin-smyth Several steps better in terms of drug efficiency, you mean.
Помним, конечно, и Силке.
Silke always seemed second string to Gohr and Koch, with them missing in ‘87 it’s like GDR decided to up her dosages for one season only 😂
Otti🔥👍⚡⚡⚡
She was my teacher^^
De östtyska sprint kvinnorna var bäst !
And Flo Jo wasn't even in the scene a year before the Olympics.
Exactly right she was beat up in the 200 m! she had to get epo to improve such performances!
@@Hever73 or THG.
Sundeep, give yourself a pat on the back because you are so clever!
Naturally, I'm being sarcastic. FloJo was very competitive in the 200 and was part of the winning 4×100 gold medal team at these championships.
If you think a supplement and/or pills account for her inimitable, mind-blowing form, you are mistaken.
Also, where was Evelyn Ashford? If substances are so miraculous, why did Marlies Gohr get eliminated at Worlds and Olympics?
For the record, FloJo, Ashford and Gohr never failed a test.
Gohr did fail a test as a teenager in the 70s.
In my humble opinion, otey won that race
グラディッシュ(メラー)は当時でも絶対ドーピングだと確信出来た一人だった。
Hairy armpit?
Oral Turinabol at its best. Where were the East German Men? Why didn't they dominate the Sprints and Jumps?
They played football.
East German men's program was run by a completely different set of coaches than the women's program.
Don't forget, the west also doped, individually.....never forget that in a just doping analysis of the 80's
@@kurtfrancis4621 Bottom line, it was the Turinabol, that made the difference. It's documented.
@@iliastsouktakos604 Not individually, just supported by private companies and hided by the Govs. Carl Lewis in these same moments was doped too, as all american athletes.
Ottey should be given Gold
Ottey is great and legendary! But it is her destiny that she never ever was an Olympic Champion. She was destined to be forever number 2 or Number 3. So sad!
Wasn't she positive for doping substances in her late career?? It's not only the East Germans
@@bbatjargal1549 she was a world champion
@@APBCTechnique In 100m, may be! But never ever was an Olympic Gold medalist and Champion. Some idiotic American commentators offensively called her "the Bronze Queen" because she won many bronzes in many Olympics!
@@bbatjargal1549 she was a world champion 3 times indoors at 60m and 200m twice. Plus a world champion outdoors in the 200m twice. 5 global titles. A track world champion outdoors is considered the same as an Olympic champion. Also 3 noteworthy gold in the commonwealth championships.
Look below - Ottey is one of the greatest
*Records and achievements*
Ottey ranks at number four on the all-time list of the 200 metres, and number seven on the 100 metres list.
In 1990, Ottey was awarded the World Athlete of the Year and the Track & Field News Athlete of the Year awards
Ottey is the first female athlete to run 60 metres under seven seconds (6.96 in 1992)
Ottey is the only woman to have run the 200 metres under 22 seconds indoors (21.87 in 1993).
Ottey has the fastest 100 and 200 metres one day combination, with 10.93 and 21.66 (32.59 total) at the 1990 Weltklasse Zurich grand prix.
Ottey has run 100 metres under eleven seconds - 67 times ( plus 9 wind-assisted ) a record among female sprinters.
Ottey has run 200 metres under twenty-two seconds - 18 times (plus once wind-assisted) another record among female sprinters.
Ottey has 57 consecutive wins in 100 metres - the most consecutive wins over 100 metres for a female, and 34 consecutive wins at 200 metres.
Ottey holds the official World Masters Athletics world records in the 100 m and 200 m for the age groups W35 ( 100- 10.74 in 1996, 200- 21.93 in 1995 ) W40 ( 100- 10.99 in 2000, 200- 22.74 in 2004 ) W45 ( 100- 11.34 in 2006, 200- 23.82 in 2006 ) W50 ( 100- 11.67 in 2010, 200- 24.33 in 2010 ).[17]
Ottey is the first from the Western Hemisphere (outside the USA) to win two individual medals at the same Olympic Games.
At the 1995 World Championships, Ottey became the oldest ever female gold medallist when she won the 200 m at age 35 years 92 days. At the 1997 World Championships in Athens, she became the oldest female medallist ever at 37 years 90 days, when she won the bronze medal. In the 2000 Olympics, at age 40, Ottey became the oldest female track and field medalist when she anchored the Jamaican women's 4×100 metres to a silver medal. With the disqualification of Marion Jones, she was awarded the bronze medal in the 100 metres, making her the oldest individual medallist.
Ottey along with Carl Lewis, Usain Bolt and Allyson Felix, is one of four athletes to win twenty or more medals at the Olympic Games and the World Championships (combined).
Ottey holds the record for running the fastest women's Indoor 200 metres, in 21.87 seconds. This record has stood since 1993 and remains (as of 2016) the only sub 22sec clocking by a woman indoors.
In six World Championships competing for Jamaica, Ottey has won fourteen medals: three gold, four silver and seven bronze medals, while at the Olympics she has earned three silver and six bronze medals.
Ottey was the first female Caribbean athlete to win an Olympic medal.
Ottey has won the most career Olympic medals (9 medals: 3 silver and 6 bronze) in women's track and field, a record now shared with American sprinter Allyson Felix (6 gold and 3 silver).
Ottey has the quickest 200m performance ever into a headwind (-1.0m/sec or more ) achieved when clocking 21.66 (-1.0) in Zurich, 1990.
Ottey has won the Jamaican Sportsperson of the Year (sportswoman) a record 13 times, first winning in 1979 and last winning in 1995, no man or woman has won the award more.
Потом был большой допинговый сканжал легкой атлеьикеГДР,после чего таких яркиз результатов уже не было.
Her name is DRECHSLER not Dreschler.
Brits & Americans typically don't know how to pronounce German names, unfortunately.
@@kurtfrancis4621 True. At least, they could try?
Hello everyone! The westerners doped as well! Do some research
drugs
Y flo flo en 1988 drug
@@orlandoduran9850 when did flojo ever fail the drug test she wasn't even in this race by the way tell me the drug flojo was on by name
@@sequiaonda78 burden of proof is on the accuser tell me the drug flojo used by name even though the great flojo wasn't even in this race LOL ..
You sound like a failed athlete and you sound like you failed at life itself that's what your life boils down to let me look up the 1986 world championships 100 m for women so I can comment with one word drugs you are a special weirdo
Loved this girl, even with her hairy armpits :)
The hairy women are so sexy
Lane 6 was a man