@@khumokwezimashapa2245 Sub 45 indoors is wild. Loved his confidence to just sit behind and wait for the final straight. In both the individual and relay.
If you have ever raced 400m you know you should start calm and focused before shifting to relaxation, in case of myself I would be so pissed of disturbance as going out angry and hard, therefore crashing after 280m. That official should be banned for life.
As a senior official and referee, you are correct. This is ridiculous. It's not as easy as it might look but I do this job. You rarely touch the athletes, possibly at lower levels you have to do some preventative officiating. As you advance up to the World Championships (I've been an Olympic official) you know the athletes have been trained what to do. You stay out of the way and simply judge what happens.
Totally irresponsible to have called this Foul Play without experience officiating. As a former official I agree with everything that @torunit4620 said. I can add background for those who haven't in my opinion what happened here down to the ROOT of the problem. 1) Belgium is responsible for not being in lane 1 and this never would have happened. 2) They got yanked way out there and wasted time confusing their incoming runner because he fought the official yanking back on him instead of swapping positions quickly. Mistake #2 for Belgium even if the Judge was wrong.. That's why you don't touch them. 3) The ROOT of the problem though traces back to MS & HS. We are underpaying Track Refs and finding and keeping Refs in every sport is hard. If you get into officiating for the money rather than the love of the sport, you will be sadly disappointed. They are quitting/retiring in record numbers and Track is at the top of the list. They are often asked to move up to higher level meets unprepared when there is a shortage. The first time I ran a pole vault was at a D1 College Meet because they couldn't find people. I would not be surprised at all if this guy hadn't done much beyond a volunteer at a MS meet in Poland, or a HS Ref who isn't accustom to having someone tell him what to do in his ear. Why he had someone in his ear giving him directions is beyond me, the 4x400 moves to fast even in HS. It would be more productive to do a video on the problem with losing Refs in youth sports instead of calling things like this Foul Play because it all trickles up.
@@dhirajpallin2572 You try to place them in the order they reach the end of the back stretch (100m to go). If there is a contentious spot you would allow them to switch if a pass happens on the turn. Once they hit the straight, let the runners run to their teammate. Technically we could DQ a team that interferes with another team making their pass by being out of place. In this case, I can't find video of the race, but it looks like Belgium is coming off the turn in first. Placing them in lane 1, USA in 2 and Kenya 3 should have been the last responsibility of the official and he should back off. Knocking an athlete off balance at that critical moment is the last thing he should be doing.
@@dhirajpallin2572 That athlete belonged in, was entitled to, lane 1 not lane 4 and knocked off balance by the official. Wherever the athlete was, it was not that official's duty to move him. At that level, the athlete should know better. If he did something wrong, throw a flag and send it up the pipeline to the referee and maybe even a jury of appeals to decide. We get jaded because elite American athletes get stupid at international meets about rules and procedures they should have learned at the junior or high school level. And really, in this race, the American was out of place. If anyone was subject to a DQ, it was the American team.
Justice was served with Belgium winning the gold. Regarding the incident, the only thing I can think of that would justify the official's poor decision making is that he got the two white shirts confused, but even then, man-handling an athlete in that way is completely out of line. Hopefully a lesson learnt for world athletics.
Not only does it affect Belgium but it affects Slovakia too. Their athlete definitely didn't need to be well out there and the first leg Belgian runner had to leap out the way to avoid the oncoming Slovakian
From the way the official was holding and pulling the runners, he could have easily tripped both of them. The runners' loss of focus and concentration alone could have ruined the race for either team. How such inept officiating can be hired for a world championship is beyond me.
Facts! I was racing this weekend at a local meet and one of the officials was literally chirping us guys before our race because we were all ready to run 5 min early but she wouldn’t let us do any runs and kept talking smack to us. One of the other guys started shit talking her after which was great but he never should’ve had too
1:09 - freeze frame at 1:09 to see some truly Ancient officials wearing blue blazers. It’s nice to give senior citizens something to do, but making them responsible for on the track split second decisions is a Disaster waiting to happen.
Are they local officials for that specific track, or British Athletics officials or IAAF officials, that do all World Championships and Olympics. I've never thought about it.
@@luckyspurs from my limited experience as an athletics official, it is likely a mix of officials coming from across the world. I would guess that more would come from GB&NI, then Europe then rest of world with English as the lingua franca for the team. Paris 2024 will definitely be more representative of the world. This incident was very odd.
He possibly thought lane 1 was on the outside and was told to move him to lane 1. Definitely can’t make that kind of mistake if your job is to position them into the correct lanes 💀💀
@@467076 I think he just didn't realise Belgium were leading and is so used to the athletes being in the right lane before he gets there, he thought his job was just to separate them rather than to line them up in order. So just assumed Belgian were meant to be in lane 3. Still horrendous to start dragging the guy wider though.
@@467076 That doesn't at all make sense. He's an official in a world championship. They aren't just randos they pull from the street. These people know what they're doing. They for sure know where the lanes are. This being intentional sabotage makes a lot more sense.
@@luckyspurs The Belgian runner was in lane 3 before he started pulling though. he pulled him all the way into lane 4, and the other guy into lane 5. There were only 4 runners in the heat. Nobody should be in lane 5.
He might have mixed up the 2 white jerseys as we see him try and flip the 2 guys on the outside, but even then why did he need to try and pull the athlete that hard
@@tijgertjekonijnwordopgegeten Right 👍🏼 and that's a big problem that contradicts the main comment. Even if you mix up the two white jerseys he should have been pushing one of them to Lane one and didn't so that argument doesn't work 🤷🏾♂️
@@matthewplampton955 Again, the problem with your theory is regardless a white jersey was in front and instead of pushing the white jersey to the inside where he should have been he was pulling them to the outside Lane. It sounds like you guys are trying to make excuses 😂 Even if you mixed up the two white jerseys one of the white jerseys was in the lead yet the official had both of them on the outside so you guys don't make any sense 😆
That was not an accident. That is clearly sabotage of the Belgian team. Does the race winner auto qualify? Because money says there would be less of a TV audience if the Yanks didn't qualify.
At around 2:35 in the video: "After the race there was someone who overheard the man [the official who pulled the runners out of their lanes] saying, "That's what they told me in my earpiece." If this is true, then it appears that someone instructed the official to do this. And if so, who was speaking into his earpiece?
@joowsty And what nationality would that be? Because I am going to assume it is a Brit who have no standing in the Mens 4x4 and are the country hosting
@leefswgoh7558- Yes, that's why I included "If this is true". We also, conversely, don't have proof that the official didn't say "they told me in my earpiece". I'm pointing out why this allegation is important, and why it should be investigated.
I am so embarrassed😡😡😡. Here in the United Kingdom, we take our athletic seriously. You can be rest assured that this will be thoroughly investigated. Like you, I am glad there were no consequences to the eventual outcome of the race or even athlete injuries, for that matter.
Seems clear what happened, at least absent an official statement. The controller meant for the Slovakian to be in lane 4 and either (s)he or the track official got confused with both being in white shirts. The ending to the story is that Belgium won the final with some further interesting action in the last baton exchange of the final, with the Americans in first place trying to get into lane 2 and the Belgian athlete in second trying to avoid being pushed right out into lane 3. All very unsavoury in a sport that is already suffering from an overdependence on doping that is not being policed to the level that fans have a right to expect. That's a far bigger issue than an official getting things badly wrong but is rarely, if ever, discussed in a serious way outside of specific scandals.
The craziest thing I saw live at a high level track meet in a men's 4x400m final goes like this...Runners lined up in the 8 lanes. The gun goes off! The false start gun malfunctioned and runners all took off. The 4 inside lanes were stopped by other officials who were on the ball. BUT the 4 outside lanes continued 300m before they caught on. You simply can't restart the race with 4 exhausted runners just having run flat out for 300m! The coaches for these teams were steaming mad. In the end the race was rerun 1 hr later. At any meet, the 4x400m relay is the last event. So this delayed the end of the meet by 1 full hour. Whacky stuff happens in track as in all sports. You just hope the best team wins in the end.
This happened in a high school cross country race. The second gun went off for a false start. Only half the athletes stopped, so the officials just let the race continue, and the half that stopped had to catch up
@@nathangoode1089. What the fukc is anyone doing calling a false start in a 3+ mile long XC race for? Some officials need to be reminded of their place. That reminds me of the officials at the Penn Relays in the spring. There’s always a 4x100 relay with old men in their 60’s. There’s always a starter who has to call a False Start a disqualify a team of old dudes from the only big race they have a chance to compete in all year long. A$$HOLE.
The way I SCREAMED at my TV (even though I'm US-American and always love to see them him). The fact I have not seen one statement about his atrocious behavior still makes me mad. That's the worst judging I have seen since starting to watch the sport in 2009 and as a mid-rank athlete myself the second worst including meets I've been at myself. The worst was a dad actually judging his daughter's race and trying to disqualify the winning relay so she'd get gold.
simple fix, change the rules: fastest qualifying team changes in lane 1, second fastest qualifying team changes in lane 2, third fastest qualifying team changes in lane 3, etc. No official needed on the track. one less official to pay. (or pay off). This change would eliminate all the kaos and should be done at all levels from pros to high school.
I don't ever pay attention to track, outside when I used to watch the Olympics, but I've seen in football officials screw up like this. One, college or NFL, there was clearly a few inches between the football and the first down marker and the official gave it as a first down anyway (and done right in front of the defense's sideline) and quickly hurried to get the next play started. Another was in kids football (maybe high school) where the official picked up the chains and moved it to the football, picked up the football and moved it to the chains and then declared a first down. (He was later fired.)
@@hakancarlsson2881 no that's why he may have done it, he didn't move both, he moved the Belgian and the other guy just kept backing up because he knew he was meant to be on the outside
You are 100% right, of course. This was ridicolous and despicable. Ban that official from any race track for life!! That man should be placed in a retirement home, playing bingo all day...
What about another moment - and I can’t remember if it was men’s or women’s - where the runner in lane 2 waiting for the baton was poking the runner in lane 1 in the back, repeatedly?
This pulling of an athlete by an official is blatant interference and Shouldn’t have taken place ...but my gut tells me that somebody wanted to ensure that the USA won ...but they didn’t ,and were well beaten ...otherwise Belgium would have had good reason for filing complaints .......but it’s still not good enough ..I hope the Belgian athletic federation log a complaint with the iaaf and the organizers ...something has to be made of it ..the official had absolutely no business on the track ...very very strange ..
I honestly can’t think what he was doing. What an idiot. At least the athletes kept a cool head and finished the race strong but what on earth was that
No, Iguacel also has the spanish nationality. I’m an ex-teammate of Iguacel in belgium but I’m sure @gonzalolopezdemiguel8764 is a teammate from christian’s spanish club
The question Ximme asked was in dutch but the translation to english was faulty by the way. He asked if your trainer is Lieve (van mechelen)😊. Hope that clears it up
If your an official on that stage, you should be good enough at your job to realize what they tell you on the earpiece is wrong and do your job right regardless of what is told. The man should be barred as an offical for future events, regardless if his excuse is correct or not
Watched this live and just couldn't believe what I was seeing... An official physically dragging an athlete like that into a position he didn't belong in, at this level, it's just inexcusable. Completely understood that Sacoor was absolutely livid directly afterwards. Revenge was sweet in the final with Belgium taking the gold.
I have come to hate "Sports" because of what we see here. Athletics is the only thing I religiously follow because I do not have to deal with the Zebras. Now this 🦓 has his ass in the middle of the track?
What in the actual heck was that?!?!?!😮😮 that honestly should make anyone watching upset. Unless someone can give a clear freaken answer as to why the was necessary!!!!
So here is what Jonathan Sacoor, the runner giving the baton during that moment, told during an interview after the race. He said that the jury questioned that the positioning was correct, to which Sacoor replied that his team-mate was correctly placed based of Sacoors position after 200m. No feedback was given after that, and based on the fact that no comments or feedback followed from the officials, it is safe to say they probably realised their error.
Since we can't see the placing as the runners entered the last corner. The out going runners are to line up in the order their team enters the corner. If someone passes after that they are at fault for what happens. I've been either running relays or coaching relays since 1963. I''ve never seen an official manhandle an athlete like that, but don't be too quick to judge.
If his "earpiece" told him that Belgium was in 3rd, then he was correct in pulling him to lane 3. But, he also pulled the athlete into lane 5, which as well put the 4th place team into lane 6. This would constitute THREE errors in one instance. The question then becomes, was the meet official guilty of three or only two of those errors. Now, we would be giving him the benefit of the doubt by saying he committed two errors. Best we can do. More likely, he committed three errors, and none of this implies that he did any of them deliberately, but that is a solid possibility. Which team was he pulling for, and how close did they finish to make the final six?
If the official had simply misordered the athletes but not interfered, I would understand. What is inexcusable is pulling the Beligan athlete even further from lane 3 up to lane 4.
Yes! Unacceptable. An official screwing up? Hardly unbelievable. I'm surprised the athletes didn't self correct the positioning. The order was evident for the entire straight??
In fact it is quite a difficult task, as you are supposed to put the athletes in the lane that corresponds to the position their team was half a lap ago. That's probably why he got the instructions from someone who could see that point of the track. And the athletes are not really allowed to take their position themselves. (see rule 24.3 of the Technical Rules)
So for those wondering how this happened, the official in on the track got told (via his ear) that the order of the athletes was wrong and he had to change it. This was a wrong call from higher up. He was just doing what he was told.
The American was NOT gonna move from poll position. USA was clearly in second place so he knew that he should be in the second lane but made no attempt to move. Frankly it smacks of bad sportsmanship (at a minimum) and placed the offical in an awkward postion who screwed up..
I had no idea what I was seeing, I watch a lot of athletics but this was so out of the ordinary that I think that man had no clue what he was doign and also had zero experience in an event like this, that's literally the only explanation. As a Belgian I panicked for a little while, asking why this was happening to us. In the end it didn't matter and it resulted in one of the sports highlights of the year for me !
I didn´t see that, but in the final Belgium team acted awful pushing all the runners in the back of the american runners. I´m not a great fan of USA in any sport, but for me Belgium should be disqualified for this unsportsman beahviour. The american runners has to fight with the belgian runners to remove the nad in their back, and this we could see it clearly. This was a "soccer style" tactics and in my opinion this sould be removed from athletics.
It didn't cost a second, but it was still unacceptable. Interesting also how the Belgians in the final were pushing a lot themselves at every exchange.
There were more strange moments in Glasgow: - before women's high jump final, athletes put their starting marks on the field, as usually. Then, some race oficial removed them. - Lieke Klaver receiving just a yellow card after a false start.
Klaver gave an explanation in Dutch media. She was convinced that it would be a yellow at most because she felt her leg shaking during the start. You have to keep pressure on the block or the false start gun goes off. She was convinced that she didn't start early and it was just the loss of pressure on the block
The first bizarre thing in that race was the Kenyan getting thrown around as he tried to undertake he was blocked a bit unfairly by the Belgian and then straight after almost knocked over by the American on the outside , the Kenyans had the pace to win that semifinal Then the crazy official making the lead runner run across 4 lanes to hand the baton over... And in the final again the Kenyan was actually knocked flying probably the same guy trying to overtake (poorly) on the last straight before the handoff and sent another athlete crashing down too, madness in both races Kenya lost easily 2 seconds and both were area record runs... Then theres the 2 separate relay races where the baton was straight up elbowed clean out of a runners hands by another athlete! the second time handing GB the bronze at the expense of Jamaica! absurd! The dutch 4x400m couldve been DQ'd too when one of the runners carelessly jogged into the inside lane after a handoff oblivious to the irish runner behind who actually ran a faster split than Bol even though she was clearly impeded and almost taken out
Usually they position the outgoing runners based on their incoming teammate's position at about 200m out (maybe 150m) in an outdoor race but with the constantly updated scoreboards the outgoing runners usually sort it out pretty good themselves based on who comes off the curve 1st, 2nd, etc. Not sure where they would do the positioning based on the incoming runners on these 200m indoor tracks, does anyone know for sure?
Always been the same as outdoor. My question is do the athletes have to obey zone officials at this level? (Once placed, "Stay where you are!") Because usually the runners sort it out.
Did you see the final exchange in the final. Alexander Doom kept touching Chris Bailey's lower back and Chris Bailey kept trying to swat his hand away. None of the commentators mentioned it, so I assume this was just normal trying to throw a competitor of his game, but it wasn't something that I normally see.
I noticed this as well. It happened on two of the exchanges in that relay actually. At first I was wondering if he was trying to stop him from encroaching on his lane but Doom himself was in the athletes lane behind him. I found it really odd that the commentators said nothing of it even when it was so obvious in the replay.
It was normal in the sense that in relay the people waiting for their handoff are often using their arms to keep spacing. You see it all the time. The American should be in lane 1. He was backing up so far that he was basically in lane 2. So Doom kept his hand there to keep him from backing up further and crowding him. If anything the American was at fault for trying to crowd him, and was completely overreacting to a normal practice with his frantic arm flailing in response.
Only thing I could think of is that he saw the white shirt of the Slovakian in last and somehow confused them? Doesn’t make a lot of sense considering he also had the actual Slovakian standing right in front of him.
Dude probably heard Belgium would bring Doom if they made the final. But seriously, I think they just told him Belgium should be the sidemost team (on the other side though) and this guy mistakenly thought he should move Iguacel behind Slovakia for that to happen. Or he just misidentified the runners' order on the back stretch.
That "official" was either bribed or favors one of the other teams privately. Old men. So typical. A bunch of old men interfering and making results. How much was paid? How much is paid right now to keep the "official" walk free without facing any consequences? Sort of: "Ah, c'mon, poor grandpa, could have happened to anyone really". Nope.
@@wayne5741 Boesmans?! Nope I never did! Still going to the gym, 24/7 basic fit, always right after work! Still trying to grow my calves ;) Cheers mate
Good thing Belgium still got the Gold in the finals
Poetic justice. Plus Doom’s last leg was GOaTed
@@thedailystride5407Ye. Bro split a 44.88. Awesome
Doom was the only one to run a sub 45.
DOOM Is Coming For You.
Does that dude not have THE most perfect name for an anchor leg runner.
@@khumokwezimashapa2245 Sub 45 indoors is wild.
Loved his confidence to just sit behind and wait for the final straight. In both the individual and relay.
That is straight up distance added to your race.
That's the kind of thing that can't never not happen
@@ckobo84ditto
If you have ever raced 400m you know you should start calm and focused before shifting to relaxation, in case of myself I would be so pissed of disturbance as going out angry and hard, therefore crashing after 280m. That official should be banned for life.
This is the transparency Athletics needs to provide - don’t hide it
Anyone that watched this would have seen it. The transparency was on camera and live for the fans to see in person
As a senior official and referee, you are correct. This is ridiculous. It's not as easy as it might look but I do this job. You rarely touch the athletes, possibly at lower levels you have to do some preventative officiating. As you advance up to the World Championships (I've been an Olympic official) you know the athletes have been trained what to do. You stay out of the way and simply judge what happens.
Totally irresponsible to have called this Foul Play without experience officiating. As a former official I agree with everything that @torunit4620 said. I can add background for those who haven't in my opinion what happened here down to the ROOT of the problem. 1) Belgium is responsible for not being in lane 1 and this never would have happened. 2) They got yanked way out there and wasted time confusing their incoming runner because he fought the official yanking back on him instead of swapping positions quickly. Mistake #2 for Belgium even if the Judge was wrong.. That's why you don't touch them. 3) The ROOT of the problem though traces back to MS & HS. We are underpaying Track Refs and finding and keeping Refs in every sport is hard. If you get into officiating for the money rather than the love of the sport, you will be sadly disappointed. They are quitting/retiring in record numbers and Track is at the top of the list. They are often asked to move up to higher level meets unprepared when there is a shortage. The first time I ran a pole vault was at a D1 College Meet because they couldn't find people. I would not be surprised at all if this guy hadn't done much beyond a volunteer at a MS meet in Poland, or a HS Ref who isn't accustom to having someone tell him what to do in his ear. Why he had someone in his ear giving him directions is beyond me, the 4x400 moves to fast even in HS. It would be more productive to do a video on the problem with losing Refs in youth sports instead of calling things like this Foul Play because it all trickles up.
The athlete's foot was in the 3rd lane from the inside, was it called for to try and move him a little?
@@dhirajpallin2572 You try to place them in the order they reach the end of the back stretch (100m to go). If there is a contentious spot you would allow them to switch if a pass happens on the turn. Once they hit the straight, let the runners run to their teammate. Technically we could DQ a team that interferes with another team making their pass by being out of place. In this case, I can't find video of the race, but it looks like Belgium is coming off the turn in first. Placing them in lane 1, USA in 2 and Kenya 3 should have been the last responsibility of the official and he should back off. Knocking an athlete off balance at that critical moment is the last thing he should be doing.
@@dhirajpallin2572 That athlete belonged in, was entitled to, lane 1 not lane 4 and knocked off balance by the official. Wherever the athlete was, it was not that official's duty to move him. At that level, the athlete should know better. If he did something wrong, throw a flag and send it up the pipeline to the referee and maybe even a jury of appeals to decide. We get jaded because elite American athletes get stupid at international meets about rules and procedures they should have learned at the junior or high school level. And really, in this race, the American was out of place. If anyone was subject to a DQ, it was the American team.
Thanks for the info!@@torunit4620
Justice was served with Belgium winning the gold.
Regarding the incident, the only thing I can think of that would justify the official's poor decision making is that he got the two white shirts confused, but even then, man-handling an athlete in that way is completely out of line. Hopefully a lesson learnt for world athletics.
What the hell was he doing 😦
Cheating official on drugs
Some old codger who probably has dementia, could have been the person giving him those instructions over the earpiece as well.
They were having a “senior moment”.
Rigging
Not only does it affect Belgium but it affects Slovakia too. Their athlete definitely didn't need to be well out there and the first leg Belgian runner had to leap out the way to avoid the oncoming Slovakian
They should put in a formal complaint
From the way the official was holding and pulling the runners, he could have easily tripped both of them. The runners' loss of focus and concentration alone could have ruined the race for either team. How such inept officiating can be hired for a world championship is beyond me.
This is so crazy. I don't wanna sound disrespectful, but these old heads are causing problems in our sport.
Facts! I was racing this weekend at a local meet and one of the officials was literally chirping us guys before our race because we were all ready to run 5 min early but she wouldn’t let us do any runs and kept talking smack to us. One of the other guys started shit talking her after which was great but he never should’ve had too
>doesn't wanna sound disrespectful to old heads
>has Gojo profile picture
@@freddym6643fax
100% Absolutely agree
If you think that official is old, freeze frame at 1:08 - 1:09 to see the two Ancient officials wearing their dark blue blazers.
1:09 - freeze frame at 1:09 to see some truly Ancient officials wearing blue blazers. It’s nice to give senior citizens something to do, but making them responsible for on the track split second decisions is a Disaster waiting to happen.
Thats just what we look like at 35 in Glasgow
Yes let’s give it to young officials who would have changed pronouns three times during the race.
Someone in that crew lost out on their trip to Paris.
Are they local officials for that specific track, or British Athletics officials or IAAF officials, that do all World Championships and Olympics.
I've never thought about it.
@@luckyspurs from my limited experience as an athletics official, it is likely a mix of officials coming from across the world. I would guess that more would come from GB&NI, then Europe then rest of world with English as the lingua franca for the team.
Paris 2024 will definitely be more representative of the world.
This incident was very odd.
His mates were probably like: "Bet you won't do it" 🤣
He was a guest star on Impractical Jokers
He possibly thought lane 1 was on the outside and was told to move him to lane 1. Definitely can’t make that kind of mistake if your job is to position them into the correct lanes 💀💀
This is what makes more sense, that he was just clueless about the sport.
Yeah haha i thought the same he grabbed him almost to the other side like nonsense, he was already perfectly positioned
@@467076 I think he just didn't realise Belgium were leading and is so used to the athletes being in the right lane before he gets there, he thought his job was just to separate them rather than to line them up in order.
So just assumed Belgian were meant to be in lane 3.
Still horrendous to start dragging the guy wider though.
@@467076 That doesn't at all make sense. He's an official in a world championship. They aren't just randos they pull from the street. These people know what they're doing. They for sure know where the lanes are. This being intentional sabotage makes a lot more sense.
@@luckyspurs The Belgian runner was in lane 3 before he started pulling though. he pulled him all the way into lane 4, and the other guy into lane 5. There were only 4 runners in the heat. Nobody should be in lane 5.
Never seen anything like this at all!
He might have mixed up the 2 white jerseys as we see him try and flip the 2 guys on the outside, but even then why did he need to try and pull the athlete that hard
Thats what i though.he got the two white vests mixed up
The problem is that one of those two should have been in lane one and he didn't try to pull the other one in the other direction.
@@tijgertjekonijnwordopgegeten Right 👍🏼 and that's a big problem that contradicts the main comment. Even if you mix up the two white jerseys he should have been pushing one of them to Lane one and didn't so that argument doesn't work 🤷🏾♂️
My thought too. He got them confused with Slovakia.
@@matthewplampton955 Again, the problem with your theory is regardless a white jersey was in front and instead of pushing the white jersey to the inside where he should have been he was pulling them to the outside Lane. It sounds like you guys are trying to make excuses 😂 Even if you mixed up the two white jerseys one of the white jerseys was in the lead yet the official had both of them on the outside so you guys don't make any sense 😆
So what if you’re told in your earpiece? Anyone worthy of being in his role should have known how wrong it was.
That was not an accident. That is clearly sabotage of the Belgian team. Does the race winner auto qualify? Because money says there would be less of a TV audience if the Yanks didn't qualify.
At around 2:35 in the video: "After the race there was someone who overheard the man [the official who pulled the runners out of their lanes] saying, "That's what they told me in my earpiece."
If this is true, then it appears that someone instructed the official to do this. And if so, who was speaking into his earpiece?
thanks for clarifying
"there was someone who overheard him say" is unfortunately very far from actual proof.
i bet i know the nationality of the person who instructed him tho..
@joowsty And what nationality would that be? Because I am going to assume it is a Brit who have no standing in the Mens 4x4 and are the country hosting
@leefswgoh7558- Yes, that's why I included "If this is true". We also, conversely, don't have proof that the official didn't say "they told me in my earpiece". I'm pointing out why this allegation is important, and why it should be investigated.
Would you say team USA is at fault too?
I hope this guy won’t be invited in future meetings.
I am so embarrassed😡😡😡. Here in the United Kingdom, we take our athletic seriously. You can be rest assured that this will be thoroughly investigated. Like you, I am glad there were no consequences to the eventual outcome of the race or even athlete injuries, for that matter.
How can we make running a more mainstream sport
@@jmgonzales7701When this is the most interesting thing that's happened in the sport for a while, it's an uphill battle to make it mainstream
@@Harry-mf6rq i think its impossible
Wow, the 1,500m final was amazing. Beamish winning, Hocker 2nd, Nordas looking exhausted down in 5th.
How wonderfully random.
nordas also ran a pb
Seems clear what happened, at least absent an official statement. The controller meant for the Slovakian to be in lane 4 and either (s)he or the track official got confused with both being in white shirts. The ending to the story is that Belgium won the final with some further interesting action in the last baton exchange of the final, with the Americans in first place trying to get into lane 2 and the Belgian athlete in second trying to avoid being pushed right out into lane 3. All very unsavoury in a sport that is already suffering from an overdependence on doping that is not being policed to the level that fans have a right to expect. That's a far bigger issue than an official getting things badly wrong but is rarely, if ever, discussed in a serious way outside of specific scandals.
Back when I ran 4x400's in high school, we shifted ourselves on the track. You'd think the big boys could also.
Who paid that guy off?! THAT 'person' should have no place anywhere near a track ever again. 🤨🙄
The craziest thing I saw live at a high level track meet in a men's 4x400m final goes like this...Runners lined up in the 8 lanes. The gun goes off! The false start gun malfunctioned and runners all took off. The 4 inside lanes were stopped by other officials who were on the ball. BUT the 4 outside lanes continued 300m before they caught on. You simply can't restart the race with 4 exhausted runners just having run flat out for 300m! The coaches for these teams were steaming mad. In the end the race was rerun 1 hr later. At any meet, the 4x400m relay is the last event. So this delayed the end of the meet by 1 full hour. Whacky stuff happens in track as in all sports. You just hope the best team wins in the end.
This happened in a high school cross country race. The second gun went off for a false start. Only half the athletes stopped, so the officials just let the race continue, and the half that stopped had to catch up
@@nathangoode1089. What the fukc is anyone doing calling a false start in a 3+ mile long XC race for? Some officials need to be reminded of their place. That reminds me of the officials at the Penn Relays in the spring. There’s always a 4x100 relay with old men in their 60’s. There’s always a starter who has to call a False Start a disqualify a team of old dudes from the only big race they have a chance to compete in all year long. A$$HOLE.
The way I SCREAMED at my TV (even though I'm US-American and always love to see them him). The fact I have not seen one statement about his atrocious behavior still makes me mad.
That's the worst judging I have seen since starting to watch the sport in 2009 and as a mid-rank athlete myself the second worst including meets I've been at myself. The worst was a dad actually judging his daughter's race and trying to disqualify the winning relay so she'd get gold.
One needs to be careful selecting bureaucrats in all areas - overreach is real risk with ‘inappropriate’ personalities.
Will you be covering Tentoglou's comments about the proposed long jump changes?
simple fix, change the rules:
fastest qualifying team changes in lane 1,
second fastest qualifying team changes in lane 2,
third fastest qualifying team changes in lane 3,
etc.
No official needed on the track. one less official to pay. (or pay off).
This change would eliminate all the kaos and should be done at all levels from pros to high school.
I don't ever pay attention to track, outside when I used to watch the Olympics, but I've seen in football officials screw up like this. One, college or NFL, there was clearly a few inches between the football and the first down marker and the official gave it as a first down anyway (and done right in front of the defense's sideline) and quickly hurried to get the next play started. Another was in kids football (maybe high school) where the official picked up the chains and moved it to the football, picked up the football and moved it to the chains and then declared a first down. (He was later fired.)
Wow, that's an unbelievably bad move by the official. Fortunately, it didn't end up preventing Belgium from advancing.
Did he mix up the white jerseys? He thought the Belgian was the Slovak?
That's what I was thinking, but still, manhandling him like that is not necessary anyway
@@CreativeCache101 Totally agree.
Both guys he moved had white jerseys so that can't explain it either.
@@hakancarlsson2881 no that's why he may have done it, he didn't move both, he moved the Belgian and the other guy just kept backing up because he knew he was meant to be on the outside
Unreal! I'm starting to wonder if the NSA/CIA actually hacked the comms, which produced such an idiotic stunt! Wow!
You are 100% right, of course. This was ridicolous and despicable. Ban that official from any race track for life!! That man should be placed in a retirement home, playing bingo all day...
This was so aggravating to watch. What were the officials doing
What about another moment - and I can’t remember if it was men’s or women’s - where the runner in lane 2 waiting for the baton was poking the runner in lane 1 in the back, repeatedly?
Wow that is disgraceful 😮 something should be done about that .
This pulling of an athlete by an official is blatant interference and Shouldn’t have taken place ...but my gut tells me that somebody wanted to ensure that the USA won ...but they didn’t ,and were well beaten ...otherwise Belgium would have had good reason for filing complaints .......but it’s still not good enough ..I hope the Belgian athletic federation log a complaint with the iaaf and the organizers ...something has to be made of it ..the official had absolutely no business on the track ...very very strange ..
Totally unacceptable
That’s crazy. I’ve seen lots of races with lots of officials at lots of levels of experience. That’s either cheating, or compete ineptitude.
I honestly can’t think what he was doing. What an idiot. At least the athletes kept a cool head and finished the race strong but what on earth was that
Iguacel is actully my teamade and he said that the judge/referee apologize to him ;)
Train je bij Lieve?
@@Ximme with Christian Iguacel
@@gonzalolopezdemiguel1127 goed verhaal wel
No, Iguacel also has the spanish nationality. I’m an ex-teammate of Iguacel in belgium but I’m sure @gonzalolopezdemiguel8764 is a teammate from christian’s spanish club
The question Ximme asked was in dutch but the translation to english was faulty by the way. He asked if your trainer is Lieve (van mechelen)😊. Hope that clears it up
as someone who has never participated in a track event this is utterly unconscionable
If your an official on that stage, you should be good enough at your job to realize what they tell you on the earpiece is wrong and do your job right regardless of what is told. The man should be barred as an offical for future events, regardless if his excuse is correct or not
Even cheating couldend hold our tiny country from winning the final !
Watched this live and just couldn't believe what I was seeing... An official physically dragging an athlete like that into a position he didn't belong in, at this level, it's just inexcusable. Completely understood that Sacoor was absolutely livid directly afterwards.
Revenge was sweet in the final with Belgium taking the gold.
I have come to hate "Sports" because of what we see here.
Athletics is the only thing I religiously follow because I do not have to deal with the Zebras.
Now this 🦓 has his ass in the middle of the track?
What in the actual heck was that?!?!?!😮😮 that honestly should make anyone watching upset. Unless someone can give a clear freaken answer as to why the was necessary!!!!
So here is what Jonathan Sacoor, the runner giving the baton during that moment, told during an interview after the race. He said that the jury questioned that the positioning was correct, to which Sacoor replied that his team-mate was correctly placed based of Sacoors position after 200m. No feedback was given after that, and based on the fact that no comments or feedback followed from the officials, it is safe to say they probably realised their error.
Since we can't see the placing as the runners entered the last corner. The out going runners are to line up in the order their team enters the corner. If someone passes after that they are at fault for what happens. I've been either running relays or coaching relays since 1963. I''ve never seen an official manhandle an athlete like that, but don't be too quick to judge.
Glasgow champions got many similar moments. They don’t do it good.
Nah Fr, im glad they still won the gold medal because them being pulled out that far was crazzy!!!
There was just obviously a misunderstanding.
senior moment - his brain malfunctioned under stress. Like when seniors hit the accelerator pedal instead of the brake
I have never seen anything like this before in athletics. Who thought this was a good idea? WTF!!!
If they are not in the correct lane, then is that not a disqualification, and if not it probably should be.
Dudeeee this happened to me in high school at Penn Relays. Like match the colors, its not hard
If his "earpiece" told him that Belgium was in 3rd, then he was correct in pulling him to lane 3. But, he also pulled the athlete into lane 5, which as well put the 4th place team into lane 6. This would constitute THREE errors in one instance. The question then becomes, was the meet official guilty of three or only two of those errors. Now, we would be giving him the benefit of the doubt by saying he committed two errors. Best we can do. More likely, he committed three errors, and none of this implies that he did any of them deliberately, but that is a solid possibility. Which team was he pulling for, and how close did they finish to make the final six?
if this happened to me, I would've thrown hands
And been instantly disqualified. maybe forever.
If the official had simply misordered the athletes but not interfered, I would understand. What is inexcusable is pulling the Beligan athlete even further from lane 3 up to lane 4.
Yes! Unacceptable. An official screwing up? Hardly unbelievable. I'm surprised the athletes didn't self correct the positioning. The order was evident for the entire straight??
“Bob, Team Belgium is too pale for lane one. Give them a four lane DEI penalty.”
We should all freak out about mistakes. That will improve our lives.
In fact it is quite a difficult task, as you are supposed to put the athletes in the lane that corresponds to the position their team was half a lap ago. That's probably why he got the instructions from someone who could see that point of the track.
And the athletes are not really allowed to take their position themselves. (see rule 24.3 of the Technical Rules)
So for those wondering how this happened, the official in on the track got told (via his ear) that the order of the athletes was wrong and he had to change it. This was a wrong call from higher up. He was just doing what he was told.
they got the gold in the end, well deserved.
I'm impressed the runner didn't punch the official how was obviously acting a corrupt way.
The American was NOT gonna move from poll position. USA was clearly in second place so he knew that he should be in the second lane but made no attempt to move. Frankly it smacks of bad sportsmanship (at a minimum) and placed the offical in an awkward postion who screwed up..
If you think the US, don’t get all kinds of advantages deemed accidental and unintentional!
This old guy trying to figure out who goes where. This should be automated somehow.
Man might have grabbed his hearing aid and not his ear piece, but if it wasn't, who was on the other end. For them and ban him.
I had no idea what I was seeing, I watch a lot of athletics but this was so out of the ordinary that I think that man had no clue what he was doign and also had zero experience in an event like this, that's literally the only explanation. As a Belgian I panicked for a little while, asking why this was happening to us. In the end it didn't matter and it resulted in one of the sports highlights of the year for me !
His career is over.
But the payout for this stunt probably means he never has to work again.
Grateful you bring this up. We need our succes toe have our government invest properly in A level sports here
I didn´t see that, but in the final Belgium team acted awful pushing all the runners in the back of the american runners.
I´m not a great fan of USA in any sport, but for me Belgium should be disqualified for this unsportsman beahviour.
The american runners has to fight with the belgian runners to remove the nad in their back, and this we could see it clearly.
This was a "soccer style" tactics and in my opinion this sould be removed from athletics.
It didn't cost a second, but it was still unacceptable. Interesting also how the Belgians in the final were pushing a lot themselves at every exchange.
Well, after watching this, I couldn't have been more thrilled for Belgium getting the golddd!
4x400 transitions can already be chaotic enough you don't need an official making it worse!
Awful lol. It's indoor track.
There were more strange moments in Glasgow:
- before women's high jump final, athletes put their starting marks on the field, as usually. Then, some race oficial removed them.
- Lieke Klaver receiving just a yellow card after a false start.
Klaver gave an explanation in Dutch media. She was convinced that it would be a yellow at most because she felt her leg shaking during the start. You have to keep pressure on the block or the false start gun goes off. She was convinced that she didn't start early and it was just the loss of pressure on the block
He didn't see the difference between the Belgium and Slovakia shirt
WOW that's really terrible! WOW. So glad they made into the finals.
why weren't they (Belgium) in lane 1 to begin with?
they were, the judge told the americans to take lane 1 and then dragged Iguacel out
The first bizarre thing in that race was the Kenyan getting thrown around as he tried to undertake he was blocked a bit unfairly by the Belgian and then straight after almost knocked over by the American on the outside , the Kenyans had the pace to win that semifinal
Then the crazy official making the lead runner run across 4 lanes to hand the baton over...
And in the final again the Kenyan was actually knocked flying probably the same guy trying to overtake (poorly) on the last straight before the handoff and sent another athlete crashing down too, madness
in both races Kenya lost easily 2 seconds and both were area record runs...
Then theres the 2 separate relay races where the baton was straight up elbowed clean out of a runners hands by another athlete! the second time handing GB the bronze at the expense of Jamaica! absurd!
The dutch 4x400m couldve been DQ'd too when one of the runners carelessly jogged into the inside lane after a handoff oblivious to the irish runner behind who actually ran a faster split than Bol even though she was clearly impeded and almost taken out
I didn't notice this during the actual race. This official should be banned from track and field forever.
Usually they position the outgoing runners based on their incoming teammate's position at about 200m out (maybe 150m) in an outdoor race but with the constantly updated scoreboards the outgoing runners usually sort it out pretty good themselves based on who comes off the curve 1st, 2nd, etc. Not sure where they would do the positioning based on the incoming runners on these 200m indoor tracks, does anyone know for sure?
Always been the same as outdoor. My question is do the athletes have to obey zone officials at this level? (Once placed, "Stay where you are!") Because usually the runners sort it out.
Did you see the final exchange in the final. Alexander Doom kept touching Chris Bailey's lower back and Chris Bailey kept trying to swat his hand away. None of the commentators mentioned it, so I assume this was just normal trying to throw a competitor of his game, but it wasn't something that I normally see.
I noticed this as well. It happened on two of the exchanges in that relay actually. At first I was wondering if he was trying to stop him from encroaching on his lane but Doom himself was in the athletes lane behind him. I found it really odd that the commentators said nothing of it even when it was so obvious in the replay.
It was normal in the sense that in relay the people waiting for their handoff are often using their arms to keep spacing. You see it all the time. The American should be in lane 1. He was backing up so far that he was basically in lane 2. So Doom kept his hand there to keep him from backing up further and crowding him. If anything the American was at fault for trying to crowd him, and was completely overreacting to a normal practice with his frantic arm flailing in response.
There were at least 3 questionable decisions and events that were not replayed or discussed.
Must be an ex-cop, interjecting himself into situations where he is not needed at all.
Only thing I could think of is that he saw the white shirt of the Slovakian in last and somehow confused them? Doesn’t make a lot of sense considering he also had the actual Slovakian standing right in front of him.
Dude probably heard Belgium would bring Doom if they made the final.
But seriously, I think they just told him Belgium should be the sidemost team (on the other side though) and this guy mistakenly thought he should move Iguacel behind Slovakia for that to happen. Or he just misidentified the runners' order on the back stretch.
That "official" was either bribed or favors one of the other teams privately. Old men. So typical. A bunch of old men interfering and making results. How much was paid? How much is paid right now to keep the "official" walk free without facing any consequences? Sort of: "Ah, c'mon, poor grandpa, could have happened to anyone really". Nope.
Belgian had a really good world indoor championships, 2 individual world champions and one team comp, very nice! Groetjes aan de boys 👋🫶
@@wayne5741 Boesmans?! Nope I never did! Still going to the gym, 24/7 basic fit, always right after work! Still trying to grow my calves ;) Cheers mate
Glad Alexander Doom nailed the final.
Won both the individual and the relay on the final straight. And you sort of expected it both times.
4x400 was crazy bro
I thought the officials was trying to give the runner a hug. That track official won't be at the Olympics.
I can't believe that happed
I know Iguacel personally. I've raced him myself.