What Made Asafa Powell so Fast?

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  • Опубликовано: 5 фев 2025
  • In this video we take a look back at the career of Asafa Powell and examine his training, technique and progression to understand why exactly he was so fast.
    Music:
    Gaco - Mark
    HORUSIII x HICAP - We Do It No
    Woodpile - Hello

Комментарии • 160

  • @SuperKamiGuruu
    @SuperKamiGuruu Год назад +203

    The 9.72 in Lausanne is my favorite show of technique in all of sprinting history

    • @st3wi3D
      @st3wi3D Год назад +5

      No. For me it was the 9.78 in Rieti Italy back in 2007. It was the race Powell ran two hours after breaking the world record (9.74) for the second time.

    • @Leonidas-eu9bb
      @Leonidas-eu9bb Год назад +3

      Yes it's the unofical perfect 100m race! So smooth and powerfull.

    • @qarhsi
      @qarhsi 6 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@st3wi3Dyou probably mean to say fourth time

  • @bjf5027
    @bjf5027 Год назад +108

    when people say they want to "look like an athlete" they're thinking of Asafa. That guy had the most perfect physique.

    • @johnsonfromml8662
      @johnsonfromml8662 8 месяцев назад +7

      Every part of his muscle blend so well together

    • @triplex5877
      @triplex5877 7 месяцев назад +2

      I’ve always thoght out of every disappoint sprinters have the most aesthetic look

  • @wss33
    @wss33 Год назад +106

    The side view from Lausanne 2008 is the best sprinting footage in history.

    • @Leonidas-eu9bb
      @Leonidas-eu9bb Год назад +6

      yes very nice footage. It's very interesting that he only improved his first 50-60 but did not improve max velocity.
      That was probably asfas biggest problem. He could not achieve the magic top speed of 12m/s.
      Only Bolt, Gay and Blake did that.
      I believe if Powell had focused on that max V he could have been a real threat for Bolt. Maybe he hasn't the body structure for it. I think he was to big to run 12m/s.
      It's next to impossible to run that fast without the proper physique. You need long slim limbs and a distal mass distribution (no calvs no forearms, little quads, but huge butt/hips). I think Tyson Gay had the absolute best physique for a sprinter.

    • @TH-cx2yx
      @TH-cx2yx Год назад +1

      @@Leonidas-eu9bb people are gonna hate me for this, but i think Powell was overstriding. he has by far the highest kneelift i have seen in any sprinter. and he was almost 6'3 with a long stride. it makes no sense why his final 60 was poor compared to other top sprinters, unless he was overstriding

    • @qarhsi
      @qarhsi 6 месяцев назад +2

      ​@TH-cx2yx he used to take 43 to 45 strides when ppl shorter than him used to take 42-43. Don't think overstriding was the issue except in some races

  • @astrospeedcuber
    @astrospeedcuber Год назад +32

    He almost always looks like he is flying, gliding across the track smoothly and relaxed while still being so fast

  • @trackfield5299
    @trackfield5299 Год назад +17

    The King Without a Crown

  • @markusgp
    @markusgp Год назад +8

    Favourite sprinter Carl Lewis, Maurice Green and Powell. Favourite era defining sprinters

  • @vaughancavan
    @vaughancavan Год назад +27

    We 100% need more breakdowns of different sprinters like this

  • @meccuno
    @meccuno Год назад +263

    Asafas problem was mental

    • @certifiedchaos4643
      @certifiedchaos4643 Год назад +35

      Yeap and he always had minor injuries during champs. Like groin pull Ab strain lower back strains.

    • @sub2me543
      @sub2me543 Год назад +3

      @@certifiedchaos4643 but that sounds physical

    • @416yaadie
      @416yaadie Год назад +8

      Asafa mentals wasn't the issue. His problem base on his technique and body type was repeating runs in a short space of time. His body didn't recover fast enough. he might seem relax running certain times but he was expending alot energy where he couldn't repeat! Look back a few years back when he went to Ostrava. He ran the 100m which he won easily but the race re-ran within 5 mins and even though he won he wasn't as easy as the previous race

    • @certifiedchaos4643
      @certifiedchaos4643 Год назад +1

      @@416yaadie valid point he didn’t know how handle rounds

    • @annmariebusu9924
      @annmariebusu9924 Год назад +2

      ​@416yaadie it was both mental and rounds. I don't remember which Olympics it was he had 3 rounds and we were all chatting he wouldn't be able to perform in the final. Too bad he didn't get his shine at the majors. He is still one of myfavs

  • @NathanEall
    @NathanEall 11 месяцев назад +8

    4:40 Running 9.94 and getting 5th shows just how quality that ‘04 field was. Similar to the London 2012 final

  • @richardservice2452
    @richardservice2452 Год назад +3

    Thank you very much sprint media for your detail information

  • @lucasanderson9213
    @lucasanderson9213 Год назад +6

    favourite sprinter bolt , blake , powell ...

  • @shaman_ns
    @shaman_ns 5 месяцев назад +1

    My all time favourite 100m sprinter. His technique is just beautiful!

  • @jdsk8914
    @jdsk8914 5 месяцев назад +1

    Massive respect for Asafa, and I'll aways be a huge fan. Those 9:74 and 9:72 runs he did in the late 2000s were the stuff of legend.

  • @slimboyd
    @slimboyd Год назад +1

    I absolutely loved this video and channel. Keep up the great work as this had to take a lot of research and time.

  • @mr-sam-jax
    @mr-sam-jax Год назад +7

    thank you so much ❤️🙏🏽🌹
    powell is my second favorite 100m sprint runner after Tyson Gay ❤️

    • @andykruy4540
      @andykruy4540 Год назад

      Tyson gay had the best mid and end phase. if he had powells start he would have been unstoppable

    • @mr-sam-jax
      @mr-sam-jax Год назад

      @@andykruy4540 definitely could be the world record !

  • @sniperx9
    @sniperx9 Год назад +7

    It's a shame we have nobody running sub 10 with such consistency these days

  • @ABLQuality
    @ABLQuality Год назад +6

    Great video, it's crazy how consistent and long his Career was

  • @jujucasar2003
    @jujucasar2003 Год назад +15

    I had a friend who ran a 10.2 in HS and he is no where to be seen in competitive sprinting. This shows that just cuz u beat a fast runner at a younger age doenst mean u r gonna be up to par with him as an adult.

    • @michaeldunn8972
      @michaeldunn8972 7 месяцев назад

      Same

    • @Aaron-rd3cd
      @Aaron-rd3cd 5 месяцев назад

      Seems like everyone had a friend running elite times in highschool 🤔

  • @amandaquest105
    @amandaquest105 Год назад +6

    Shows you the difference a great coach with a "scientific" approach to sprinting can make, especially with respect to people who do not have raw, otherworldly natural talent like Bolt, VCB, Van Niekerk, etc.

    • @dennisrobinson8008
      @dennisrobinson8008 Год назад +1

      YES. He started out non exceptional at 11.85 first year. Then mid tens the next year. Christian Coleman also had 11.8 his first year. Then 10.9 next year. And 10.29 third year.

  • @sittingonthebeach
    @sittingonthebeach Год назад

    incredible analysis, thank you

  • @axezazel
    @axezazel Год назад +33

    Asafa had it all but the mental.. 😭

    • @dennisrobinson8008
      @dennisrobinson8008 Год назад +1

      Mindset is important

    • @izzalhaqq5171
      @izzalhaqq5171 8 месяцев назад +2

      @yeshuaswords2776 That is NOT Asafa Powell 😭😭😭

    • @Blakz11a
      @Blakz11a 5 месяцев назад +2

      How do you achieve his accolades without a strong mental fortitude, please your regurgitating commentator jargon, asafa did not suffer from mental weakness.

    • @vincentkennedymcmahon8240
      @vincentkennedymcmahon8240 5 месяцев назад

      It's sokay😢..but he's the goat sub10 on history

  • @ivanmahalel
    @ivanmahalel Год назад

    Great video, thank you, sir!

  • @DG-iu8ck
    @DG-iu8ck Год назад +13

    Just to bad his mind let him down imagine if he had the same mind set as bolt and Blake i don't think he could beat bolt but i think he could have been in the 9.6s a few times

  • @ng-r8765
    @ng-r8765 5 месяцев назад +1

    The 9:72 in Lausanne would have got him a gold medal in Paris! 😱

  • @johntom8291
    @johntom8291 6 месяцев назад +2

    Usain bolt said that he was always chasing Asafa Powell till he improved his start look at Usain bolt action at the start of the races he has improved a lot 💥💥💥💥

  • @1Karla.
    @1Karla. 8 месяцев назад +1

    It’s heartbreaking to see some of Asafa’s pre-race videos. There are times he looks terrified as if he’s gonna poop his pants. People say he cracks in the big races, but we don’t know if he overcame the worst of anxiety to become a great athlete. I’d love to hear Asafa’s side of the story. Maybe one day 🤞🏽

  • @giz02
    @giz02 Год назад +5

    "Toe Drag" is an area of my interest for certain. I know I was a toe dragger, I didn't pay much attention to it other than wearing through shoes, but I never worked on the 'why'. When I think about it, the opposing (dragging) toe is working as a stabilizer to counter balance the extreme thrust of the initial driving push out of the blocks. I think that one has more potential if they use the drag as opposed to trying to balance out the initial thrust disparity else-wise.
    Additionally, I know this feature is a part of your series to focus on fundamental aspects of sprinting, but perhaps you could create a feature on the importance of reaction times. I feel as though Powell had one of the most consistently optimal out of the majority of sprinters of all time. (He's in the freakishly incredible 0.100 - 0.110 more than most

    • @dennisrobinson8008
      @dennisrobinson8008 Год назад

      Toe drag or toe close to track surface works because until you get some forward velocity pulling your foot all the way through the glutes and putting it all the way back down is a waste of time. Elites do toe drag ( low heel recovery) for the first 4 to 8 strides.

  • @vaticinus
    @vaticinus Год назад +6

    7:47 Final Form!

  • @jamaulwhyte
    @jamaulwhyte 7 месяцев назад

    Powell has always been my favourite sprinter because of his technique. I wonder what his times would be if a 200m straight sprint existed.
    Hearing is avergaes and the frequency he was running sub 10 might be more impressive than his technique and actually blows my mind and staying injury free for the most part

  • @HMcdon
    @HMcdon Год назад +5

    Safa, in my opinion, has the best sprinting technique. However, unfortunately, he was unable to perform on big stages due to his "head." I wish someone had referred him to a good Psyco.

  • @JoeTodd6
    @JoeTodd6 Год назад +3

    4:18 Powell made up crazy ground from lane 2 on the home straight

  • @dennisrobinson8008
    @dennisrobinson8008 Год назад +1

    It was interesting he started as non exceptional with the 11.8 but the next year end mid tens. Then the next year low tens.

  • @levi3433
    @levi3433 Год назад

    Wow. Thank you

  • @ThaSpeedsterZ
    @ThaSpeedsterZ Год назад +1

    I LOVE the way you say "BLAKE" lol

  • @maunerlacayo4944
    @maunerlacayo4944 Год назад +4

    Do You have any information of Powell's max top speed ever recorded?

  • @ypinkphoto
    @ypinkphoto 7 месяцев назад +1

    If you mention ban.. u should also mention that he sued n then got a settlement from the supplement company for including ingredients in the products that were not on the label

    • @claudiakellier-reid6925
      @claudiakellier-reid6925 6 месяцев назад

      Thanks for the info as I didn't know that. He'll always be my man. Don't care what anyone else say, I will always love him.

  • @redrum4100
    @redrum4100 Год назад +16

    It's a shame Powell couldn't handle the pressure of a big championship. Would have several more medals, including Gatlin's Olympic gold

    •  Год назад

      Why do you think that Powell could have handled the pressure of championship better?

    • @redrum4100
      @redrum4100 Год назад

      @ He couldn't, which was my point.

    • @Hengel_Andrews
      @Hengel_Andrews 9 месяцев назад

      Steve Mullings…. 9.78 runner had the same time frame.

  • @Torresxv
    @Torresxv Год назад +1

    Quality vid

  • @hahafalseflag5090
    @hahafalseflag5090 Год назад +2

    you should see his lil kids legs.. They will have the strength when they grow up..

  • @michaelnorman4
    @michaelnorman4 Год назад +1

    Guys what do you think he would have ran in the 2012 olympic final if he did not stumble ?

  • @cdenjames4542
    @cdenjames4542 Год назад

    Good quality can u do one noah for the 200m I run the 200m myself

  • @Lepacificateur-ud2wb
    @Lepacificateur-ud2wb Год назад

    POWELL : 🌟LE TOP🌟

  • @vincentkennedymcmahon8240
    @vincentkennedymcmahon8240 5 месяцев назад

    Still the king sub10💪..

  • @RokDidakovicRoky
    @RokDidakovicRoky Год назад +13

    So what made asafa powell so fast? 😅

  • @mohammedabdelhamid2265
    @mohammedabdelhamid2265 8 месяцев назад

    i started track at 17, in the beginning my 60m was 7.9s and my 100m was 12s. I have been training for 9 months and then my 60m became 7.5s and 100m as 11.9s. But for educational reasons i stopped training for 5 almost 6 months now. Am i finished? or can i still make a comeback and break the 11s.

  • @pannonianfit1582
    @pannonianfit1582 7 месяцев назад

    I wonder now in 2024 if the old team gather up and have a fun amateur race who would be the fastest between bolt, powell, gatlin and gay, i didnt include blake because he still competes at pro level

  • @coryhenry2087
    @coryhenry2087 Год назад

    Do you guys think Powell should have done the grind operation would this make him a better career procedure

  • @danniserial3856
    @danniserial3856 Год назад

    Some says Powell should have done the operation on the grind which would enhance his career I'm not so sure about that.

    • @DaEmperah
      @DaEmperah Год назад

      Prob would have caused mobility issues

  • @albertmubatsaart5470
    @albertmubatsaart5470 6 месяцев назад +1

    Asafa walked so Usain could run❤️❤️❤️

  • @dennisrobinson8008
    @dennisrobinson8008 Год назад +1

    What was his competition body weight? I have 200 to 210lbs...

  • @conandoyle1740
    @conandoyle1740 Месяц назад

    Asafa Powell got extremely unlucky that Bolt was around in his era. This dude looked like painted. Legendary athlete.

  • @dscide7996
    @dscide7996 Год назад +9

    Imagine Powell as a Wide Receiver in Football

    • @humanboy395
      @humanboy395 Год назад +2

      Y'all. Keep saying this about EVERY athlete if ANY athlete that doesn't play football plays it they'd be bad

    • @mssha1980
      @mssha1980 Год назад +2

      He has the height and build

    • @wss33
      @wss33 Год назад

      No, I don't think I will.

    • @humanboy395
      @humanboy395 Год назад

      @@mssha1980 don't matter

    • @Mister_Terrific806
      @Mister_Terrific806 7 месяцев назад

      Better at DB

  • @mssha1980
    @mssha1980 Год назад +9

    Powell is one of the 🐐but you can’t give Powell a title for performances between 05-07 when he won 0 medals during that period. He didn’t dominate anything.
    Gatlin won in 04 & 05.
    Tyson won in 07.

    • @gmaxsfoodfitness3035
      @gmaxsfoodfitness3035 Год назад

      I originally agreed with your comment but found out that Powell was named Athlete of the Year for 2006 by IAAF for breaking and matching his world record, winning the Commonwealth Games 100m gold medal and being Diamond League champion (or whatever it may have been called at the time). The Commonwealth Games were considered a major championship at the time by the IAAF and thus was called Powell's first major win in the Athlete of the Year article on the World Athletics website (just search Asafa Powell and you'll find the article dated early 2007). Asafa also beat Tyson Gay I think 5 times before the end of the 2006 season. If you want to be technical about his times and go down to the thousandth of a second Powell broke the 100m record 4 times during that period which has never been matched even by Bolt. The man ran 9.7's like it was a regular day and was second to no one until 2007.
      ***BTW Gatlin's 2005 performances basically got wiped from the record books and he even had a world record that year that was erased.

  • @djjsan3433
    @djjsan3433 Год назад

    Justin Gatlin had the perfect form and the perfect start

    • @colleendaly654
      @colleendaly654 Год назад +1

      Some athletes stood out more and that’s Powell

  • @NicotineRosberg
    @NicotineRosberg 6 месяцев назад

    The man is so great ppl named a syndrome after him called the Asafa syndrome. A condition where u always choke on the major stage but perform better everywhere else

  • @joshuaoconnor411
    @joshuaoconnor411 Год назад

    He gave a record setting good caliber world class effort with Bolt bringing it And began a Dynasty 🤳🐐

  • @HNMusicVideos
    @HNMusicVideos Год назад

    Mr. and Mrs. Powell

  • @duttybwoy556
    @duttybwoy556 Год назад +1

    Correction Asafa weight was always fluctuating around 88, NOT 95!!! almost 100 at 188cm of height??? lol no way !! he would look like a body builder if he weighed 95kg at his height!!!
    95kg is Bolt's weight, Usain Bolt is 6.5 ,Bolt weight was always fluctuating around 95 ...
    Not Asafa's, I'm sorry for correcting you in public,but it's just in a humble way,I don't mean to disrespect this vide's work, it's really a cool and interesting video!!! I only wanted to clarify that fact which I'm very well aware of !!

    • @sprintspeedmedia
      @sprintspeedmedia  Год назад

      I am just basing his highest ever weight off what this commentator said
      ruclips.net/video/prGBWSfaX9w/видео.htmlsi=WAfyR4g_T4ME_sJa&t=130
      but yes I do believe he would've spent most of his career weighing under 90kg

    • @conandoyle1740
      @conandoyle1740 Месяц назад

      Powell was around 88kg

  • @ZEUSDAZ
    @ZEUSDAZ Год назад

    The bigger question is why did he ALWAYS bottle it during all those finals?! 😆

  • @Gerberslay
    @Gerberslay Год назад

    12:22 for all the guys who actually run track

  • @didi33333
    @didi33333 2 месяца назад

    A the should be King.

  • @didi33333
    @didi33333 Год назад +1

    Frano. Once he started to disrespect Frano, he was finished.

  • @antonioalas4814
    @antonioalas4814 11 дней назад

    Powell was dealt a bad hand… or should i say foot?

  • @Leonidas-eu9bb
    @Leonidas-eu9bb Год назад +3

    Sry. There is no way he was 95kg.
    Not even 90kg. 85kg is most realistic.

    • @richrich876
      @richrich876 Год назад +5

      Hes definitely not 85kg more 90-95
      I'm 80kg and 5inches shorter...
      And when I stand next to him hes way bigger than I am.

    • @Leonidas-eu9bb
      @Leonidas-eu9bb Год назад

      @@richrich876 you raced asafa?

    • @richrich876
      @richrich876 Год назад +2

      I wish...🤣
      Stood beside not lined up beside.

    • @TH-cx2yx
      @TH-cx2yx Год назад +4

      @@Leonidas-eu9bb Asafa is almost 6'3. he could have easily been 95kg

    • @Blakz11a
      @Blakz11a 5 месяцев назад

      Asafa was 6"1

  • @mriyefa2196
    @mriyefa2196 3 месяца назад

    What makes Asafa so fast? Running without pressure.

  • @ChessJourneyman
    @ChessJourneyman 5 месяцев назад

    "The following year Asafa discovered steroids and never looked back."

  • @bui340
    @bui340 Год назад +1

    Your knowledge on top as usual.
    The time-talk, not my cup of tea🤷

  • @mikepaulson8099
    @mikepaulson8099 Год назад

    Can’t watch it. To blurry. Need HD.

  • @larrysark733
    @larrysark733 5 месяцев назад

    Asafa never did the toe drag

  • @danejohnson6124
    @danejohnson6124 Год назад

    Powell. The most impressive nobody man.

  • @ScotlandFC1873
    @ScotlandFC1873 Год назад +1

    No way my guy said 11.4 is average☠️

    • @justaguywatchingyt2913
      @justaguywatchingyt2913 Год назад

      in actuality in the grand scheme of things its not but for a male track runner in the high school level and above it gets to be a pretty common time

  • @MrZealot1
    @MrZealot1 Год назад +2

    If I was his coach I could have had him run fast as or faster than Usain Bolt.

  • @stevenworld3364
    @stevenworld3364 Год назад +1

    He was born fast, then shaped.

  • @친절한이웃-z2m
    @친절한이웃-z2m 7 месяцев назад

    뛰는폼은 100m 선수중에 제일멋ㄷㅁ

  • @LordDarthTrader
    @LordDarthTrader 5 месяцев назад

    You didn’t really say what made him so fast. You just revised his times each year

  • @tsmith9063
    @tsmith9063 Год назад

    She is not running the 200 according to her

  • @douglaspinsak1246
    @douglaspinsak1246 6 месяцев назад

    Genetics, drugs, and hard work.

  • @alanliang9538
    @alanliang9538 Год назад

    he should be the third fastest.

  • @cecillemccalla2952
    @cecillemccalla2952 Год назад

    😊p

  • @anthonyharty1732
    @anthonyharty1732 Год назад

    What made him so fast? DRUGS!!!!!! They caught him and he was banned. 😂🤣😂

  • @bonnielalita9622
    @bonnielalita9622 Год назад

    Ped

  • @djxcel23
    @djxcel23 Год назад

    Powell one of the biggest floppers in track

    • @TH-cx2yx
      @TH-cx2yx Год назад

      @faustindutoybouley534 his 8.68 in beijing was with a 10 meter lead from the start lol. he could never deal with the pressure of someone next to him

    • @CL-fg5ne
      @CL-fg5ne 10 месяцев назад

      @faustindutoybouley534 never among the bests? He literally is one of the best sprinters of all time, he has run sub-10 97 times and has like 8 sub-9.8 times

  • @kostica2581
    @kostica2581 8 месяцев назад

    Clickbait

  • @danle3181
    @danle3181 Год назад

    Let's say...doping ?

  • @sage6336
    @sage6336 Год назад +1

    The fact he had a drug ban answers your question

  • @comradedyatlov712
    @comradedyatlov712 Год назад +1

    STERIODS!

  • @lucatrgovcevic8194
    @lucatrgovcevic8194 Год назад

    Drugs

  • @Tone202
    @Tone202 Год назад

    DRUG MADE HIM FAST!

  • @leeleeson5947
    @leeleeson5947 Год назад

    Cycling steroids

  • @88drugfree
    @88drugfree Год назад

    What Made Asafa Powell so Fast? Copious amounts of drugs