Do Sprinters Cheat, or Is 100m Sprint Performance a Jump Function?
Tonight I was re-watching Usain Bolt's recent world record 100m performance in the 2008 Olympics and it got me thinking about physiological limits and human performance trends. What are the limits to human performance, and are we approaching them asymptotically, or are there jump-shifts in the performance functions, one where new performance levels are reached, and then eventually breached, and so on?
To get people thinking, here are two graphs. The first shows the progression of records in the Boston Marathon for men since 1927. Admittedly, there are a few issues with the data, not least of which is that the distance changed slightly over the period, but the main point is in what has happened over the last decade or so.
Now let's turns to the world record progression in the men's 100m. Here, courtesy of Wikimedia, is a similar graph.
What is interesting, at least to me, is that in the longer event, the Boston Marathon, there has been a clear plateauing. The record time hasn't dropped appreciably in more than 20 years (which is not the case for women, for reasons that Stephen Jay Gould goes into in his book Full House). That is interesting for many reasons, not least of which is that small percentage increases in training, technique or fitness would make a larger difference in that event, and yet we haven't seen it.
The situation is very different in the men's 100m. While there have been various performance plateaus reached, each time that plateau has been breached and a new performance regime entered. Most recently, of course, Usain Bolt's Beijing world record took us below the 9.7 seconds mark for the first time.
What is going on here? Is there a physiological explanation? A pharmaceutical one? And I am painfully familiar with drug history of men's sprinting, so I'm cheerlessly comfortable with the idea that we're seeing better times through pharma, not through karma.
All cynicism aside, however, why is there a continuing progression of performance in a shorter event, but a plateau in the longer event? Shouldn't it be the other way around? Because it looks like we have jump regime shifts in the 100m record, right up to present, but an asymptotic wall looms in human performance in the Boston Marathon.
Some further reading:
- Projected sprint performances are physiologically unreasonable (Medicine & Science in Sports & Exercise)
- World record progression 100 metres men (Wikipedia)
- List of winners of the Boston Marathon (Wikipedia)
- Bolt blazes to gold in 9.69s (NBCOlympics)
- Full House: The spread of excellence from Plato to Darwin, by Stephen Jay Gould (Amazon)








