Kederis "bore" a much faster time (20.25) , relatively speaking, the
Patoulido, and his progress to 20.09 in the Olympics is not without
precedent.


A certain fantastic American athlete progressed from 19.66 to 19.32 seconds,
not long ago, in one leap. Last year in Seville, Obikwelu and the Pole
Marczin Urbas exploded in the semi finals with sub-20.00 times, remember?

Other examples abound.

UG
______________________________________

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of CORA KOCH
Sent: Thursday, September 28, 2000 10:00 PM
To: Alan Shank; Steven L. Brower
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: t-and-f: Konstadinos Kenteris?


Given Kenteris and Paraskevi Patoulidou in 1992, the classic line should be
changed to "Beware of Greeks bearing slow times."

Ed Koch

-----Original Message-----
From: Alan Shank <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: Steven L. Brower <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED] <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: Thursday, September 28, 2000 12:05 PM
Subject: Re: t-and-f: Konstadinos Kenteris?


>"Steven L. Brower" wrote:
>
>>    Could anyone on this list shed some light on the background of this
>> individual.
>> Pr's, past rankings, ect....
>>    In other words, what's the ticket with this?
>
>Someone named K. Kederis had a 20.25, 20th performer in 2000 list coming
>in, and was not among the 10 in T & F News' predictions. I don't know
>whether that is the same guy as Kenteris, but Greece did not enter anyone
>named "Kederis."
>Cheers,
>Alan Shank
>
>

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