RE: t-and-f: How to prevent the injury to Coby Miller

2001-03-05 Thread Ben Hall
So who are you going to tell to stay in their lane? Crawford and Little leaned at the line and were off balance when Crawford stumbled and body parts started flailing. At that point all were in their own lanes. Crawford andLittleboth took a tumble with Crawford hitting Miller. The colision

Re: t-and-f: How to prevent the injury to Coby Miller

2001-03-05 Thread Conway Hill
Keith wrote: I watched the ESPN2 broadcast of the 200 meters from Atlanta today. Shawn Crawford stumbled at the finish and crashed into Coby Miller. Why don't we tell athletes to stay in their lane after a sprinting event? You also see this happen outdoors in the 100 and 200. Some runners stay

Re: t-and-f: How to prevent the injury to Coby Miller

2001-03-05 Thread Conning
In a message dated 3/5/01 5:49:37 AM Pacific Standard Time, [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes: Athletes are told to stay in their lanes following races I know that finish line officials will tell athletes to return in their lane, but that is often too late. I'm think starters should tell athletes to

Re: t-and-f: How to prevent the injury to Coby Miller

2001-03-05 Thread JimRTimes
In a message dated 3/5/01 11:15:22 AM, [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes: I'm think starters should tell athletes to stay in their lanes after they finish, in order to avoid contact with others in the race. The problem is there are 2 sets of lanes past the finish - the continuation of the

t-and-f: How to prevent the injury to Coby Miller

2001-03-04 Thread Conning
I watched the ESPN2 broadcast of the 200 meters from Atlanta today. Shawn Crawford stumbled at the finish and crashed into Coby Miller. Why don't we tell athletes to stay in their lane after a sprinting event? You also see this happen outdoors in the 100 and 200. Some runners stay in their lanes