Kenyan Runner Gets TRIPPED UP In 5k Final Then This Happens

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  • Опубликовано: 11 сен 2024
  • Kenyan Runner Gets TRIPPED UP In 5k Final Then This Happens
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Комментарии • 67

  • @StephenMumbwani
    @StephenMumbwani 29 дней назад +40

    what you see in Ngugi is a true nature of Kenyans, the resiliance thats what sets Kenyans apart you dont bring down a Kenyan and expect him to stay there insteed they will rise stronger than before. thats Kenya for you a fighter

  • @Stuff_I_Watch
    @Stuff_I_Watch 28 дней назад +12

    I am always in awe by the runners at the back of the field, they know they have zero chance of a medal, but they still finish. True Olympians regardless of where they finished.

  • @romofas
    @romofas Месяц назад +15

    Thanks for bringing back fond memories of "old school" world class running.😄
    Regarding this particular race, Ngugi is on record as saying he didn't quite see the fella who passed him at the finish line. He had assumed he'd won the race. If you notice, he did inject a bit of reaction pace after realizing he was being overtaken; but it was too little, too late. But yeah, the way he recovered from that nasty fall was quite remarkable.
    If anyone watches his gold medal win in Seoul Olympics 1988, they will see Ngugi opened a similar 50m gap with about 10 laps to go. Then he proceeded to ran the rest of the race way ahead of everyone. Mark you, it was a loaded lineup which included the legendary Domingos Castro of Portugal, American Sydney Maree and Dietter Bauman. But this time Ngugi ensured none of them overtook him at the finish line this time round. He kept glancing back just to make sure.
    It was a wonderful display of front running rarely seen these days. Thanks for the video and for bringing back good memories.

  • @j3f00at
    @j3f00at 26 дней назад +8

    Kenyan you guys are good runner. Go Kenyan Go .👏👏👍❤️

  • @shikiliaimaniyakobypastors3371
    @shikiliaimaniyakobypastors3371 Месяц назад +8

    John Ngugi was really on another level!

  • @steveclark2205
    @steveclark2205 28 дней назад +6

    0.08😂 in this 5000m race, Truly unlucky for the guy who fell and then only lost by such a narrow margin 😮

  • @user-zy7ng2ev2h
    @user-zy7ng2ev2h 19 дней назад +1

    Thank you for remminding us what life is about. Beautiful race.

  • @lestorhaslam
    @lestorhaslam 27 дней назад +4

    What about Kip Keino and his compatriots back in the 60’s? The Kenyans and other African nations were coming through way back then.

  • @Gardener7
    @Gardener7 Месяц назад +6

    His last lap was 61 seconds but the Aussie did around 54 seconds for the last lap.

  • @heiligebimbam3073
    @heiligebimbam3073 16 дней назад

    Coming in second after falling, I raise my hat to Ngugi. What an incredible achievement.

  • @talk2thoran
    @talk2thoran Месяц назад +4

    @0:29 "Australia" They must have moved Auckland from New Zealand sometime... 0:05 "Unbelievable!"

  • @MikeJones-ck4yt
    @MikeJones-ck4yt 17 дней назад +1

    Actually Kenyans don't train or run in EXTREMELY hot conditions as you stated. If you have been to Kenya you would know!!!

  • @steveclark2205
    @steveclark2205 28 дней назад +2

    He did not pass the leader with ease at all, he himself was shattered at the finish line...

  • @peterkavan8368
    @peterkavan8368 Месяц назад +3

    If he didn't shoot for the lead so fast I wonder if he'd win? Great to learn from others mistakes.

  • @talk2thoran
    @talk2thoran Месяц назад +2

    @7:22 "They got tripped up the same way, from the athlete behind them. So if Ngugi's in the lead and no one's in front of him, no one can trip him up." An additional qualification is required to suggest that he is far in the lead. Whilst traffic is more likely to cause tripping, the sequence of statements doesn't make sense.

  • @acesmalls1503
    @acesmalls1503 12 дней назад

    This commentator cannot prove that falling helps a person. Many have fallen without recovering to win.

  • @geoffreyimana3849
    @geoffreyimana3849 Месяц назад +3

    Ondiki was running barefooted. Wueh tumetoka mbali❤❤

  • @Stuff_I_Watch
    @Stuff_I_Watch 28 дней назад

    Without taking away the silver, Ngugi went out in front when the Kenyan guy in 2nd fell & slowed the rest of the field, so he definitely benefited at everyone else’s expense. Massive props to Lloyd, what a perfectly timed sprint!!

  • @pureholy
    @pureholy 26 дней назад

    Sir Mo Farah was tripped and fell in the 10,000m at the Rio Olympics and he got up and won. I remember Brendan Foster winning in Rome in 74, he went to the front very early and stayed there. He won by something like 7 seconds, no one could catch him.

  • @considerthis7712
    @considerthis7712 Месяц назад +4

    Truly a horrible narration, talking as if he was watching it live when he had obviously seen the race many times before. As for 30-38 degrees in Auckland was only a pure guess.

    • @rasempress9724
      @rasempress9724 Месяц назад

      Bless u…was thinking the same about his voice n tone….mercy

  • @aaronhunte8768
    @aaronhunte8768 27 дней назад +3

    Wonder if this Kenyan was purposely trip up

  • @wristcandy5451
    @wristcandy5451 20 дней назад

    Kenyan knew they were at war and so got ahead away from the enemy

  • @nikkid4890
    @nikkid4890 21 день назад

    The biggest issue when the sympathetic system is activated and adrenaline is produced, as soon as the danger is over the parasympathetic system kicks in to flood out the adrenaline.
    This is the effect of feeling weak and even faint after an accident, and will surely be felt by the athletes too over this distance.

  • @wanjirusep
    @wanjirusep 21 день назад

    Actually Kenyan runners are not used to running in extremely hot temperatures. Maybe 20 to 26 degrees.

  • @janekitenye399
    @janekitenye399 27 дней назад

    There should be a special medal for the camera men this guys run faster than the rynners .

    • @Gj45998
      @Gj45998 26 дней назад

      That joke is overused🤭🤭 try being creative

  • @betsyakoko6810
    @betsyakoko6810 10 дней назад

    Point of correction they pay attention accidents happens when you drive on the road and get an accident does it mean that you are not attentive

  • @tanty2475
    @tanty2475 Месяц назад +3

    It was in New Zealand, not Australia.

    • @ronniepace8778
      @ronniepace8778 Месяц назад

      Who was the runner ?

    • @justkerry173
      @justkerry173 26 дней назад

      ​@ronniepace8778 John Ngugi and the winner was Andrew Lloyd.

    • @ronniepace8778
      @ronniepace8778 26 дней назад

      @@justkerry173 thanks

  • @johnrains8409
    @johnrains8409 22 дня назад

    I rather listen to someone who runs than someone who reviews runs.

  • @richardbenitez1282
    @richardbenitez1282 Месяц назад +2

    Broadcaster did good job explaining race.

  • @brucebirdsanctuary1654
    @brucebirdsanctuary1654 Месяц назад +1

    At 01:16 it looks like Kerry rodger in black puts his foot out of bounds. Does anyone agree?

  • @muspylenz
    @muspylenz 22 дня назад +1

    are you tripping?🤣🤣

  • @Lemlem7682
    @Lemlem7682 26 дней назад

    Ethiopia particpated Olympic Games in 1956

  • @allandavis8201
    @allandavis8201 Месяц назад +1

    As you said you were not even born when this race was run, so to get annoyed at the bunching and tactics is not really a valid argument, the way the race was run was indicative of the way the athletes ran at that point in time, not in 2024, and probably in the future, tactics and strategy will have changed again. Criticising the athletes is not what matters in this case, it’s the way the Kenya guy reacted, and it was typical for fallers to get up and continue or try to continue, not like the runners now who just lay there and cry about how unfair it was, it was just how it was in those days, and it wasn’t uncommon to see elbows flying to get a more favourable track position.
    Given that the Aussie runner only just won the gold medal without having face planted the track a silver medal 🥈 was quite an achievement, the Aussie only beat him by fractions of a second, in my opinion that was one of the most gutsy runs ever.
    If you want to go a bit further back in time to the era of people like Brendan Foster, Seb Coe Steve Ovett etc you would see what I am getting at, they were true athletes who did not benefit from Sports psychology and dieticians, they didn’t have sports medicine or performance coaches back then, at least not as much as now and certainly not as informed about all the sports science of today, they ran and competed in all weathers and conditions and were, for the most part true amateur competitors, working jobs to feed and cloth themselves and probably their families and training before work and after, only going to training camps before major sports events (like the commonwealth games) and a lot of the time they had to pay for their own travel and accommodation, only the really big competitions were supported by the sports council (don’t know what it is called today), and those athletes were truly dedicated to their sport, today the elite athletes are sponsored and can win far more than medals in competitions like the diamond league, they don’t have to work, they have all the support they need and, obviously, compete in a completely different way to the athletes of my era and experience, not that I was anywhere near as good as the best runners of my time, I was just a fun runner, but I was an avid athletics fan and would be up watching television whatever the time my heroes were competing.
    Sorry to be so forthright in my opinion and thoughts on your narration, but I do appreciate your hard work and research, but in this case I think you did not have enough experience of the era to understand how things were in the 60s, 70s and 80s. I think if you watched some more videos from that era and the athletes I named you would see how it really was.
    I still enjoyed seeing this race again, thank you. 😀👍🇬🇧🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿🇺🇦

    • @romofas
      @romofas Месяц назад +2

      I couldn't agree with you more, thanks. Great to see a spirited and informed fan from "them old days" in this comments section! ☺️
      Regarding this particular race, Ngugi is on record as saying he didn't quite see the fella who passed him at the finish line. He had assumed he'd won the race. If you notice, he did inject a bit of reaction pace after realizing he was being overtaken; but it was too little, too late. But yeah, the way he recovered from that nasty fall was quite remarkable.
      If you watch his gold medal win in Olympics Seoul 1988, you can see he opened a similar 50m gap with about 10 laps to go. Then he ran the rest of the race way ahead of everyone. Mark you, it was a loaded lineup that included the legendary Domingos Castro of Portugal, American Sydney Maree and Dietter Bauman. But this time Ngugi made sure none of them overtook him at the finish line. He kept glancing back.
      It was a wonderful display of front running rarely seen these days. Thanks for the video and for bringing back good memories.

    • @allandavis8201
      @allandavis8201 Месяц назад +1

      @@romofas and thank you for your kind words. 😀👍🇬🇧🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿🇺🇦

    • @romofas
      @romofas Месяц назад

      @@allandavis8201 my pleasure...🎖️👍😃

    • @Monkycrasure-gk4fz
      @Monkycrasure-gk4fz 27 дней назад

      He watched now and it annoyed him. Thats the way it was doesn't matter, they tripped ppl back to back thats what annoyed him. Also just cause someone isnt alive when something happens doesn't mean you can't have an opinion about it. That's like saying well you weren't alive during WWII so saying Hitler was a bag of shit isnt a valid argument. That's just how things were then not 2024. See how that makes no sense whatsoever? You don't get to decide what annoys someone else. Whether they were alive at the time of said thing or not.

  • @gothwalker5282
    @gothwalker5282 Месяц назад

    need more of that pocket watching

  • @talk2thoran
    @talk2thoran Месяц назад

    @10:06 "Because a lot of these guys here in like 5th, 6th, and 7th don't have a kick. They look like they're out of it; completely out of the race." The winner who was in 5th at the time wasn't out of it. The winner, Andrew Lloyd, ran the last lap in around 0:54. That is a pretty fast final lap, so I think we can safely say that 5th has a kick.

  • @KIM-xl6zs
    @KIM-xl6zs 18 дней назад

    Ngugi is from my village

  • @sagaronline265
    @sagaronline265 29 дней назад

    fascinating race & result

  • @acesmalls1503
    @acesmalls1503 12 дней назад

    Where is Ngugi today?

  • @naveenroberts6564
    @naveenroberts6564 23 дня назад

    Too much of voice description. Irritating.

  • @randombutler
    @randombutler 26 дней назад

    Legit-wiped ofc though I think he used the lope to keep the other guys feeling comfortable to save something for himself and his mate

  • @nowaynotthatway3487
    @nowaynotthatway3487 Месяц назад +1

    Oh you’re such a liar! You said you don’t know who will win and you make yourself able to perceive things you do not perceive. You watched this video completely before you presented it.

  • @eversway7540
    @eversway7540 29 дней назад

    "Catch me if you can":.

  • @talk2thoran
    @talk2thoran Месяц назад

    @9:51 1600m is 0.9941939072 miles, so not "exactly"

  • @kennethdaniels4205
    @kennethdaniels4205 20 дней назад

    was not tripped from behind he fell.

  • @victorbooysen8138
    @victorbooysen8138 21 день назад

    Purposefully tripped I presume

  • @rosemarylusty8045
    @rosemarylusty8045 28 дней назад

    What?!!! You title it the 1990 Games in Auckland, THEN go on to say "in Australia". The ads in the stadium are New Zealand so that's where it was!Yeah right. Los Angeles is in Argentina too. Rare to have temperature 30 degree C or above in N.Z. So Kerry Rodger who lead at the start "had no kick" -but he came fourth and the winner with the useless running style came first! What a dork commentator.

  • @patekuwam1662
    @patekuwam1662 29 дней назад

    Please give him time to explain

  •  14 дней назад

    To me not good commentary....sorry to say

  • @user-hr3fb5qw6d
    @user-hr3fb5qw6d 24 дня назад

    Crappy nonsense commentating, - and what's the purpose of this annoying, bland, monotonous, senseless, insipid, distracting back-ground music?

  • @therealsongstress
    @therealsongstress Месяц назад

    That was still good nagi if though you and your teammate were tripped up

  • @randombutler
    @randombutler 26 дней назад

    Treu

  • @talk2thoran
    @talk2thoran Месяц назад

    @3:49 5K runners don't use spikes.

  • @nilouferlebbe8180
    @nilouferlebbe8180 23 дня назад

    Terrible commentary