Please share this video to spread the message of Hope, Daring and Human Solidarity. Official data (citations at bottom) has been released recently that confirms Su Bingtian as the fastest short-distance sprinter in history, running the fastest 60m (6.29) ever recorded, under any conditions , followed by Usain Bolt's 6.31 and Christian Coleman's 6.32. Su Bingtian also set the fastest split record for 10m, 20m, 30m, 40m, 50m, as well, which means nobody is faster than him in the first 60m of the race, no matter the distance. His time for 40 yard dash would translate to an astounding 4.07 (according to another source sub-4.05) under the NFL combine testing method, way faster than the current record of 4.22 by John Ross, hence setting the current upper limit for human explosive power. His 9.83 in the 2021 Olympic Semi-Final is also among the Top 15 Fastest times in human history and Top 5 Fastest times in Olympics history. To put this in perspective, 9.83 is enough to win Gold in any Olympics 100m Finals prior to 2008 and enough to medal in any Olympics except 2012. In our politically correct era, it's easy to publicly, privately, consciously disavow racial theory concerning Intelligence 3:14/Athleticism 3:42, but everybody secretly/spontaneously believes in it under the overwhelming weight of commonsensical empirical evidence that testify to the contrary. Homologously, I doubt anyone seriously believed he could run this number before it actually happened, which is why the event nevertheless materializing was so shocking, incredible, as if in-human. Before something happens, it is always easy to proclaim the formal possibility of it happening, but nobody SERIOUSLY entertained the real possibility of it happening. In other words, it is easy for many to Fantasize, but it takes courage for the few to Dream. When, in an interview, Su was asked whether he is an exception to the racial norm, he responded: “There is nothing exceptional here. If I can do it, YOU can do it too and do it better”. First, this stance of "universality without exception" is utterly different from the weak cliche of “breaking the stereotype”--the latter concedes the applicability of stereotype to the rest of the group while reserving a spot of exception for a few, hence leaving the stereotype intact. Second, Su is not saying "you will" with a tone of surety, but "you can". He is not making the outlandish claim that "anybody will do it if they try". You can" implies a sense of unknowability---You might or might not be able to do it, but you will never know unless you try...2:59 The single greatest misunderstanding people often took from this video is the willful subjectivist fantasy of "hardwork beat genetics". No. One doesn't run the fastest 60m ever recorded without the most elite god-tier genetics possible. Indeed, Su trained MUCH LESS after he switched to his later coach Randy Huntington, who made him realize his problem was exactly the ideological belief that Asians somehow had lesser athletic talent and had to make up for that deficiency by working harder, an outdated and misguided training methodology that only predisposed him to potential career ending injuries through over-training. What Su's story exposes is that "raw genetics" is but a retroactive illusion: once you reach a certain level, it seems you've ALWAYS ALREADY had the potential to reach that level. One's "raw talents" does not exist in itself that automatically motivate or push one to be great, to do the work to be great. Rather, one's "raw talent" is a retroactive RESULT of one having performed the work which retroactively projected the "raw genetics" to be there in the first place. In other words, what we have here is the infinite speculative judgment that connects two completely heterogeneous items: "Raw talent IS Work" (it's nonsensical to say one's hardwork can beat one's talent because one's talent is always expressed in one's work which retroactively determines ones's talent which in turn is expressed in one's work....a LOOP), a formula that resonates well with the Protestant concept of Predestination and points to the inherent uncertainty of human subjectivity. What we don’t know what we know is that we don’t know what we are (in)capable of. Perhaps what we are really afraid of is not that racial theory is really true, but that it is really false, so 3:16 Charles Murray is wrong: the truly traumatic situation is not one in which each racial group is assigned its fixed proper niche in the hierarchical symbolic racial universe (or an harmonious egalitarian one where each race possess its distinctive desirable trait 4:13---isn’t this precisely what the so-called racial diversity/multiculturalism all about?), but one in which each racial group is deprived of the enjoyment of its special trait, so each individual would have to fully assume the ABYSS of its OWN freedom, deprived of the excuse to displace its fate onto the group to which it belongs... Su's progression by year: 2006 - 10.59 (+0.8) 2007 - 10.45 (+0.6) 2008 - 10.41 (+0.2) 2009 - 10.28 (-0.4) 2010 - 10.32 (0.0) 2011 - 10.16 (+0.7) 2012 - 10.19 (+1.3) 2013 - 10.06 (+0.1) 2014 - 10.10 (+0.4) 2015 - 9.99 (-0.4) 2016 - 10.08 (0.0) 2017 - 10.03 (-0.2) 2018 - 9.91 (+0.2) 2019 - 10.05 (+0.9) 2021 - 9.83 (+0.9)
Fun fact: Su is also an assistant professor at a major university and working on his Phd at the moment. He wrote several thesis studying how to run faster in a scientific way. The power of hard work and science. Truly inspiring.
The Soviets used to do the same thing - many of their top athletes and champions were also Sport Sciences Students and their Doctoral Dissertations were literally a long-term study on how they built themselves up to Champion athletes.
Ten years of hard works to improve 0.45 second, I feel extremely embarrassed to myself who often waste time in day dreaming. Respect to Su and all the athletics who keep pushing the limits.
After telling yourself this, right now you are still day dreaming, tomorrow you will still be day dreaming, the day after tomorrow, next week, next month, next year, you will still be day dreaming..
Su Bingtian is the fastest human ever in 60m sprint, the 13th fastest human in 100m sprint history, the fastest Asian of all time, the fastest professor on this planet, and most importantly a hero who inspires billions.
@@The_Andromeda_Galaxy China is a country with more than 1,3 billion population, and All Asian blooded has more than 65% population of the world, so what's wrong with billions?
I am Chinese, the people of our country are very proud of what he acheived, and I was deeply moved. Thank you for letting the rest of the world know Su Bingtian. Thank you to everyone who appreciated him in the comments. I hope everyone can take inspiration and strength from him.
THIS FAKE SIR HES ACTUALLY SO SLOW! 😠ONLY MY INDIAN MAN THE FASTEST HUMAN IN THE WORLD 🇮🇳🤗 THIS WHY IM SO LUCKY LIVE IN SUPER INDIA THE CLEANEST COUNTRY IN THE WORLD 🇮🇳🤗 , WE NEVER SCAM! WE GIVE RESPECT TO ALL WOMEN THEY CAN WALK SAFELY ALONE AT NIGHT AND WE HAVE CLEAN FOOD AND TOILET EVERYWHERE 🇮🇳🤗🚽, I KNOW MANY POOR PEOPLE JEALOUS WITH SUPER RICH INDIA 🤗🇮🇳🤗🇮🇳🤗🇮🇳🤗🇮🇳🤗🇮🇳🤗
Italy won that olympics 100m, but we all were wondered of su bingtian. Chinese people are wonderful and great hard workers. I send love and appreciation to you and to all the chinese, good luck for everything
maybe because no one trains for 60 meter dash? lol drag racing isn't over at the 60 foot mark either, it's either 1/8 or 1/4 mile. anything before that is irrelevant .
this is normal sprinting height, it is actually quite ideal. Usain Bolt is actually the freak, he is not normal and that is why he has such a big advantage
@@KennethStBriceActually taller people are generally better at sprinting, reason being is that taller people have a certain muscle or ligament that is longer the taller you are.
@@adilpickle9977 Yes the best 100-400m sprinters are usually 6‘0, because they‘re longer stride allows them to cover more ground in less steps. However the best 60m sprinters range from 5‘8-5‘10, because shorter legs have a higher stride frequency (because the stride is shorter obviously)
When I watched the Olympics last year, I always Thought he ran that Semis too hard, as he had no energy when it came to the final. But after hearing him say ‘semi final is my final’ it all make sense. If he didn’t run all out, he might not have made the final. An Amazing documentary, Su Bingtian you are a legend
THIS FAKE SIR HES ACTUALLY SO SLOW! 😠ONLY MY INDIAN MAN THE FASTEST HUMAN IN THE WORLD 🇮🇳🤗 THIS WHY IM SO LUCKY LIVE IN SUPER INDIA THE CLEANEST COUNTRY IN THE WORLD 🇮🇳🤗 , WE NEVER SCAM! WE GIVE RESPECT TO ALL WOMEN THEY CAN WALK SAFELY ALONE AT NIGHT AND WE HAVE CLEAN FOOD AND TOILET EVERYWHERE 🇮🇳🤗🚽, I KNOW MANY POOR PEOPLE JEALOUS WITH SUPER RICH INDIA 🤗🇮🇳🤗🇮🇳🤗🇮🇳🤗🇮🇳🤗🇮🇳🤗
@@ninamatthews8747 you'd be surprised. an average person running an all-out 100m won't do much to them, but that's because a) they're likely not even sprinting at 100% of their maximum, as they are limited by their coordination, form, and mind (not just motivation, literally not being able to recruit the muscle fibers) and b) the physiological strain of running say a 13 second 100m is orders of magnitude lower than running a 9.8x second 100m
I'm not a runner but I believe that logically, the weaker runners will run their best at every stage to increase their chances of getting into finals whereas the stronger runners do not give their 100% as they know they are likely to get into finals even without best effort.
Su's personal best of 9.83 seconds makes him the 5th fastest man all-time in the history of 100 metres at the Olympics, the 15th fastest man all-time in the history of the 100m event,[7] and the current holder of the 100 m Asian record.[8] Su's personal best in the 60 metres of 6.42 seconds placed him within the top five all-time in the event.[9]
THIS FAKE SIR HES ACTUALLY SO SLOW! 😠ONLY MY INDIAN MAN THE FASTEST HUMAN IN THE WORLD 🇮🇳🤗 THIS WHY IM SO LUCKY LIVE IN SUPER INDIA THE CLEANEST COUNTRY IN THE WORLD 🇮🇳🤗 , WE NEVER SCAM! WE GIVE RESPECT TO ALL WOMEN THEY CAN WALK SAFELY ALONE AT NIGHT AND WE HAVE CLEAN FOOD AND TOILET EVERYWHERE 🇮🇳🤗🚽, I KNOW MANY POOR PEOPLE JEALOUS WITH SUPER RICH INDIA 🤗🇮🇳🤗🇮🇳🤗🇮🇳🤗🇮🇳🤗🇮🇳🤗
I've never heard of him before, and in less than 15 minutes watching this I am a huge fan. What an inspiration you are, Su Bingtian. Thank you for posting this.
One thing I found extremely interesting is the fact that his dream/goal was always to be the first Asian to make it to the Olympic Final. He said it himself, "My semi-final is my final." Because the barrier before him, that had never been broken, was to make it into the finals. He did not dare dream of winning the final, he simply aimed for the next step. And he did it. But now that he did I think it opens the door up so much for future asian sprinters to dream bigger, to not just aim to reach the final but to win it.
His Semi-Finals Time was fast enough for Silver in the Finals and if things occured right again he could have won Gold beating Italy a 2nd time. That's a heavy weight laying on those he beat. He was the best 100m sprinter at the Olympics.
I didnt really know who Su was before this video, I always saw him in Bolts videos where he would just demolish all his competitors, but now seeing Su's story, makes you realize the journey of a sprinter. Truly inspirational.
You know how? It’s called chemical enhancements! That’s fact! Sorry this guy needs unbiased blind drug test! Chinese cheat cheat cheat! It’s the history of that country!
@@williamgeorge3878 I highly doubt that man, his whole journey was documented, and he seems very sincere and genuine. The work he has put in, definitely shows and is not the result of any sort of drug usuage
WOW, this is one of those videos that you refuse to click on and lurks in your recommendations for weeks but you finally click it and just wow. Im tearing in the end. This man is a hero for his country and every asian around the world. Also an outstanding message to anyone in the world and very inspirational for those that struggle in competition. Hope he gets all the praise he truly deserves.
Not just Asians. It's also for the Blacks who are told that they can't swim, or the whites who are told that blacks would be better boxers or sprinters.
Sir, I'm eternally grateful that you took time to edit and create this video. I'm not Chinese, but I can confidently, without a shred of negativity, say that Su has taken a huge stride for the entirety of Asia. I played college sports and was constantly looked down for stature and I used that to motivate my successes against Europeans and American players. I have yet to taste success to the extent Su has, but I completely share his motivation and I'm so thankful he did what he did. I wonder what our future generations will accomplish as more and more asian athletes derive motivation from lives like Su. Thank you.
@@henri.r94 sadly aging will be a factor..but he let a lot of people to believe in their dreams..underdog stories are the only part of olympics worth remembering..❤️
Don't worry man no matter how much success you achieve in sports we will be proud of your achievements. If someone is racist to you because they assume you are born to be weak with a smaller stature, you go look down upon them for their tiny brain size and simply ask them to check the Olympic weightlifting world records. The champions are always from East Asia and the Caucasus region. Ironically, no white or black American is on the list ever despite the whole population focus so much on weight training since their teenage years.
Athletic performance has nothing to do with race. It has everything to do with hard work and confidence. Just like what Mr. Su said. However with that being said, as an athlete, stay away from Asian community! Their negative theory can effect an Asian athlete's mind.
I think this is the true spirit of Olympic, not just winning a metal, but keep challenge your limit and make impossible things happen. Even though su never won a metal in 100 metres, his 9.83 run will forever be one of my favorite Olympic moment
I've watched this video 10 times, just love how he through everything to the wind, his right foot take off, doubters that said it was too risky and beat his 9.85 expectations. This guys my hero.
There are literally MILLIONS of so called "Inspirational / Motivational" videos. But none of those videos has ever touched my heart as much as this video. I am not asian. As a matter of fact, I am a tall man (6'4''). But everyone has limits or restrictions, on their own way. Sometimes, you feel life is shit for giving you those limits. And you feel like there is no hope. But as the quote said, there is no hope unless you create hope by MOVING FORWARD!!! This man is a HERO!
This dude is insane. What an accomplishment against so many odds. You can tell he worked his ass off to get there. Something to aspire to and shows where hard work can take you. Respect to you Su. You should be praised for your dedication.
Mate i beat you cousin ty in 1990 in qld state cup without drugs, this guy is known to have been abusing human growth hormone, lmao about your comment, look back in history black people only made olympic finals in sprinting and now all of a sudden a slope is there and it just so happens to be in china that year, in fact im ashamed as a sprinter to watch this guy, so bad for the sport because morons like you idolised him,
it's not only impressive because he did it.. it's also impressive because he is the FIRST one who did it... most people think that if noone else before them has done it, it's "impossible" or not worth trying.. but Su didn't fall into this mentality, he realistically found a way to play into and use his strengths in order to win. I admire him for his exreme mental strength and devotion to keep on searching for a way to make it happen... even if everyone else has arguments for why it's "impossible" for him to win. He proved them all wrong and he has all my respect
And also, to everyone in the comments still believing it's impossible and he must have used steroids or PEDs: it IS indeed possible, because Su has different advantages due to his shorter height (he can run faster at the start). so he focuses on this advantage and optimizes it so much that the other runners don't have a chance to pass him anymore... because the other runners have the advantage to be faster at the end (due to their taller height). So here you have your scientific explanation for why it is possible for the Asian to win.
THIS FAKE SIR HES ACTUALLY SO SLOW! 😠ONLY MY INDIAN MAN THE FASTEST HUMAN IN THE WORLD 🇮🇳🤗 THIS WHY IM SO LUCKY LIVE IN SUPER INDIA THE CLEANEST COUNTRY IN THE WORLD 🇮🇳🤗 , WE NEVER SCAM! WE GIVE RESPECT TO ALL WOMEN THEY CAN WALK SAFELY ALONE AT NIGHT AND WE HAVE CLEAN FOOD AND TOILET EVERYWHERE 🇮🇳🤗🚽, I KNOW MANY POOR PEOPLE JEALOUS WITH SUPER RICH INDIA 🤗🇮🇳🤗🇮🇳🤗🇮🇳🤗🇮🇳🤗🇮🇳🤗
@@isabelschneider4726 i knew that would come up , everyone used peds in the olympics . others wheren't defeated by a whide margin , they where defeated by a split second , and peds don't increment muscle mass by default , they allow the body to build more muscle mass , so he still worked for those , PEDs allow pepole to push higher , they aren't rocket boots ...
There was a post on fb that asked what was a moment in sports that brought you to tears, Su running that 9.83 brought me to tears. Incredibly hard work
It's just an exception confirming the rule. None of this sjw bull disproves the fact that there are genetic differences between races. Science is always based on raw *mass* data, not sensationism. This entire video is literally a dictionary example of anecdotal fallacy.
@@sixmillionsilencedaccounts3517 each individual has to work hard and earn what they achieve. Stop using race as an excuse. The idea that race has impact is for the weak minded.
@@sixmillionsilencedaccounts3517 Stop using "science" to advance your social agenda lmao. How is trusting science working out for ya for the vaccines and covid? Lmao
This legitimately made me cry at the end .... How he went from struggling to screaming and crying when he won ! And then teaching the younger asian runners .. It's just so beautiful, wholesome and inspiring ... Thank you so much for making such an amazing video
@@cliveelson9287 he won the semis with a PB, but raced that race like it was his final and only barely edged out Marcell. In the final, he had a poor start and finished last. The message here isn't one of triumph, but of the journey, the obstacles, and the path still ahead.
I've watched this video atleast 5 to 6 times a week since like January it's just so inspiring to me as an Asian teen getting back into sports after 3 years of forced recovery
I am crying watching this. I have just very recently got into fitness and running at almost 30 years old. I always thought I was "too old" to get into fitness, but seeing his journey gave me the motivation to always work hard and push forward, despite any limitations and preconceived notions.
Henri.R94 showed up from nowhere and created the best motivational video on the Internet. The editing, soundtrack, storytelling are just simply breathtaking. I was holding up my tears throughout the entire video... Even though I was a sprinter before, I think this video can inspire anybody in any field of work. Bravo Henri, thank you for this masterpiece!
I had no idea who he is but after the video, I can clearly say he made me realize things in a different way that I already know. I am so happy for him, he didn't give up at that plateau time and he didn't just work hard also he changed his style studied smarter. I appreciate the video, this was truly the most inspirational video I have ever seen. I still have hope.
Su Bingtian is phenomenal. His speed, prowess, strong determination and faith gave him the strenght to overcome all obstacles in track and field and his name to be written in history books not only to the Chinese people but all Asians and the world. As a Filipino and an Asian, i'm very proud of Su. He's an inspiration to young Chinese and Asian generations.
His acceleration out of the blocks is absolutely insane!!! What an incredible story of an incredible human with and amazing attitude and work ethic...your mind creates reality!!!
Acceleration seems to be inversely proportional to top speed due to leg length. His shorter strides make it faster to reach his top speed, which causes him to explode at the start but then fall back once others get up to speed.
@@Patrick67394 Thanks bro. Did you see his phenomenal acceleration? It's not really that phenomenal when you consider it's physics. It's actually to be expected.
Su Bingtian's height is only 1.72 meters ( 5 feet 7.7 inches). He had to generate a tremendous amount of strength to accelerate past his taller competitors. Similar in concept to bicycle sprinting. To go fast, you need a smaller cog in the rear and a lot of strength to accelerate the bike.
You need enough weight on you to keep your feet planted to the ground. No matter how fast your feet are if your feet can't get to the ground fast enough then you're just running like they do in cartoons running in air.
Life lesson here: Never, EVER, let society tell you what you can or cannot do, nothing is impossible once you set your mind to getting it done. No matter where you're from, the colour of your skin, height, size etc, what matters is determination, hardwork and commitment. 100% respect to Su, I'm Jamaican but even I know that China is on the horizon for success in track and field, they are not to be underestimated.
Su was aware of his limits, due to genetics and ethnicity. He accepted his limits and worked on what he knew he shined on. Limits exists and they must be acknowledged. It is delusional to avoid accepting that doesn’t matter how hard or how smart you train, some limits cannot be shattered.
Everyone has limits. You’re trying way too hard to be inspirational. It’s easier to just say “people should strive to meet their highest potential.” For Su, that glory lies in the 60 meters… but will he ever be the best at the 100m? No. There are just too many Men with better genetics that are working just as hard (if not more) than he is.
@@DrakeBrunette its a bit too late for you to be replying to this but whateves, nothing wrong with having a positive mindset and attitude towards achieving a desired goal, all it takes is commitment, hardwork and self belief to achieve something in life. Everyone has the plgential to be great at something regardless of race, genetics etc. To me you just sound a bit narrow minded cuz at the end of the day hardwork beats talent
@@DrakeBrunette its a bit too late for you to be replying to this but whateves, nothing wrong with having a positive mindset and attitude towards achieving a desired goal, all it takes is commitment, hardwork and self belief to achieve something in life. Everyone has the potential to be great at something regardless of race, genetics etc if they put their mind to it. To me you just sound a bit narrow minded cuz at the end of the day hardwork beats talent
The progress gives me chills. You can see him getting further and further ahead in the start over the years, and then finally he did it. He became so fast in the start that the other guys couldn't catch him.
@@kato093, if Su had been taller he would have won by a bigger margin. He just trained and push himself harder... Spare us your Ronaldo and genetic theory.
I agree. This boy really will be a one-off. Why is 6ft 5 bolt the best, or Ian Thorpe with his size 17 feet the best swimmer, or most sprinters black?.. genetics, that’s why
I love these real life "Rocky" type of stories. I felt this to my core & soul - cried for this guy. All his hard work for 10 years paid off. What a story of success & determination. Huge congratulations - wish I could give this guy a strong hug.
This man is an absolute inspiration. The adversity and generational doubt he must of faced... A true warrior spirit that believed beyond what convention and society could fathom. This is legendary in the truest sense.
@@matthewmea3566 bro , same thing with basketball , u know how easy it is to make a basket if you are 6,4 ,6,5 , its not even funny , these guys get pay so much money to play a easy ass game because of genetic ,and 90% of people are not allow to play because of their height ,
@@asianconnection7701 but the thing is they're playing against other tall guys so it evens out. if it's easy for all of them that's where the gameplay comes in and it's up to determination and smart training.
The way he pulls so far ahead at 10:35, the meaning of that moment, the split second culmination of the ideal of embracing one's disadvantage to turn it into an advantage.... It's one of the most beautiful things I'll ever see.
@@henri.r94 I'm imagining what type of career Su might've had if he started working with American track coaches earlier. His physical peak and technical peak will sadly never align, it seems. He spent his best prime years racing suboptimally and completely rebuilding his form.
Wow, this is surely one of the most inspirational videos on TH-cam. It really brings me to tears. His determination is an true inspiration not just for Asians but everyone in various of challenges in every facet of life.
I've been on TH-cam since it's inception, and this is my favorite video I've ever seen. Su Bingtian's story is indeed inspirational to all types of people, and, of course, Asians. I myself am South Asian and partake in a sport that I am a minority in. There have been times where people assumed I wasn't any good because of my race and it is unfortunate, but I can't tell you how much his story makes me want to keep pushing myself to be the best I can be in every way I can be. This man is goated for beating statistical, mental, whatever you want to call it barriers. Thank you for making this Henri.
Behind the scenes, who knows how much dedication, discipline, hard work, etc that Su Bingtian put in to become where he is now. So much respect to him.
What he did is not just for the Asian community but for the entire human race. Because what he did shows that its not about race or where you are from. But it's about how determined you are. How much work you put in. And how badly you want it. Anything is possible if you dream it and work for it.
I'm 5'7 and all my life had to prove myself in sports. This brought tears to my eyes I'm really happy for him and now we all know who he is and what he did.
@@ajfp2k8 What a positive attitude you have Aaron, you must be a joy at parties, huh? or are you too much of a coward to be such a callous prick in real life and only do so while anonymous?
Terrific editing, friend! Kudos to you! I'm a foreigner who's been living in China for years and I have been following Su's career throughout many of his local and international competitions. He has been such an inspiration for everyone in this country over the years. I'm happy to see his inspiration spreading and being recognized outside the borders of China.
At 10:25, Su made the gesture with his right hand. I remember watching this on Chinese TV when the Olympics were happening. The commentator interpreted the sigh as: "as long as I can run, even just a tiny little bit faster, than I could last time, that would be enough." I am really glad that he was able to achieve what he achieved after this given his long years of dedication and passion for sprinting, and how he was never satisfied and kept moving forward, while being confident in himself that he has what it takes to do better.
I have already been a big su bingtian fan but THIS made my appreciation and respect for him so much stronger. I was FREAKING OUT when he ran 9.83 stunned to the core. His energy is beyond many. I hope he goes for indoors because he is such a GREAT starter and I believe he can be in the fight for a WR or a global medal
The way he talked about asians not only chinese shows what he suffered being an Asian outside in the west . He showed them and proved them totally wrong . Asians can do anything in this world
Being in the Marines, I'm 5'4. When I do pullups, I hit the max (20 back then, I think it's a bit higher now). They're like, you have short arms! When we do the 3 mile (5k) run, I get a perfect 18 minute or better. I don't hear anyone saying, "Oh you got short legs! That's why!". See the irony? People always got shit to say.
Nothing wrong with being short or shorter, many advantages also come with individuals your size, keep it up and size comparison, is honestly.. for weak minded people. Stay strong and keep kicking everyone's ass, great job.
Great work my friend. I never wondered it took him 10 years to reach at this point. That shows how mentally strong he is, to never give up despite of all the odds were not in favour for being an Asian.
As Su himself implied, the odds against him were all programmed by idiot racial conjuring (I will not ever offer classification by race as theory). He tossed that aside, understanding stride frequency can overcome stride length. Incidentally, Bolt was seen initially as to tall to be a 100 M sprinter.
su is the first generation born on china that actually grew taller than their parents. think about that for a second, china was under such poverty that for 150 years each successive generation shrank compared to the generation before due to malnutrition. what i'm saying is that in the future there will be more and more world class athletes coming out of that country.
@@r6guy yes! Asia is getting faster. Its not only Su, Ryota Yamagata from Japan recently ran 9.95 in their Olympic trails and there are even 3 runners in Japan who has a PB under 10sec. In many Asian countries like India, Japan, China, Indonesia, people are crazy about track and field, which creates a competitive environment. Soon we'll see more Asians achieving even more than what Su has achieved.
You should really make more metamorphosis videos of people who weren't supposed to excel in their sport yet they still did. This type of videos are better than all the "motivational videos" I could find. The editing is so spot on.
Not ashamed to say this video made me quite emotional, it is very well made. I respect Su Bingtian a lot more. Breaking both Asian stereotypes as well as our human limits. Thank you.
@henri.r94, I wanted to let you know that this documentary was the epitome of “show, don’t tell”. The way you put together this story was nothing short of a masterpiece.
Su bingtian inspires me so much because I myself am Asian and I’m also doing track and field and I’m competing in the 100m event, a field in which you won’t see much Asians have success, but after seeing this video I will aspire to win and to train my hardest so that I may be able to go to the Olympics which would be my proudest moment, just going there would mean everything to me, but it would mean so much more if I win the Olympic finals, it will inspire Asians across the globe
This is so inspirational!! Su Bingtian is a legend and props to him for breaking barriers of racial theories. He will undoubtedly inspire millions of kids in East Asia, India, and indeed all over the world to smash barriers set up by older people. Love from India!!
They’re not just racial theories, they’re facts. It’s the unfortunate truth, but not all humans are made equal. Why do you think Africans usually place highest in track? It’s not a coincidence. It’s because they are more genetically disposed to be good at running. People don’t want to accept the fact that certain races are ethnic groups are better at certain things, because it hurts their feelings and damages their egos.
@@Idk-do1ui it's not like there's not any truth to that but the point of the video was to never limit yourself and to try your best to break those limitations set on you. Not just athletics but in general
@@Idk-do1ui sounds ignorant to me. Real reason is because the 7 billion people on the planet aren't lining up to spend their whole life doing one thing. A lot of times it comes down to money, under poverished countries etc. Its a meal ticket for a lotta people and other countries aren't making it their go to. Anyways, all it takes is this one short Asian to blow that theory outta the water forever. Its official, its two records in one essentially. Fastest 40 is huge per America and NFL. Said to be impossible to go under 4 secs and he missed it by .07 No one has ever gotten closer and I guarantee you any one of us could've made 100 million dollar bet against any NFL team owner on the fastest record being set by this guy and came out richer. Your view is the very ignorant lazy mindset that needs to be trashed all over. You sound like the go along to get along type, weak.
@@ryuken0088 So you’re telling me that you don’t think genetics differences between different groups make any difference? We humans are still animals, like many other species on the planet. Why is it _so crazy_ to think that natural selection may have played some part in making people who live in different areas of the planet, better at different things? Your argument for different opportunities doesn’t really make sense either. Are Africans really the people with best opportunities for Olympics? They dominate most of track and field. Not just African Americans, but Africans in general. Most people from the US are white, Hispanic, or Latino. So why is is that the Africans, the people only make up around 12% of the US population, dominate track and field for the Americans? Anyways, go ahead and call me “weak” for saying this. Feel free to hurdle a few more insults at me. Makes you look big and strong, dude. All it really comes off as is just you projecting.
Favourite part of this video by far is the footage of him at the school. Their attentiveness as he speaks, demos and advises them shows the belief that he's given them. What they thought was impossible not long before, they now believe is possible, if not by them, then by one of their peers. Really beautiful video, thank you. (Also, that start in the semi... WOW!)
@@eybysantiago2104 I'm actually not very good at Mario Kart, I just like what the blue shell represents: it's a reminder to those at the top that they should never feel too comfortable. If there's a blue shell in this story, it's Su himself. He never managed an Olympic gold here, but he just might have opened the door for someone else to do it. If that's not a blue shell, I don't know what is :)
Whn communist party puts guns on yours whole famly's ass,nd tell u to bring medals nd make world records,u will be running on 2 hands nd beat records of 4-5 usian boult togheter. This magic is presented by ccp.
Some interesting comments here lol. So apparently the CCP can just magically make people run faster, and students who appear to be inspired by a runner who's literally just broken records and achieved what many thought was impossible, aren't actually impressed, they're just scared of the CCP (which cares about a small group of students faking enthusiasm for some reason?). Look, there's plenty of legitimate criticisms to be made of the CCP, but to insist that they must be a significant player here seems a bit nuts. Why not just take it at face value? A sprinter worked his butt off, achieved a pretty incredible time, and now a whole bunch of people look up to him. How is this such an unbelievable story for some people?
This brought tears to my eyes. This man trained and WILLED HIMSELF to surpass theorized genetic LIMITS! If that isn't awe inspiring then I don't know what is! This isn't about country vs country.. this is about human vs human limits!
@@henri.r94 Hey I really appreciate that! I agree I think as time passes it will be come clear that we are all trying to outperform ourselfs as humans. I understand racial genetic predispositions can play a part in preformance I think more than that the sheer world class will, determination, dedication, technical understanding, training and technique play a larger roll as we can clearly see. Limits are in my opinion set to be broken and sometimes shattered but it's the limits we set on ourselfs and in our minds that are the greatest obstacles. Absolutely love this channel!
I always knew that this guy was fast and dangerous. I watched him a few years ago and knew he had that fight in him to reach greatness. Well done Su and congratulations to China 🇨🇳
As a Chinese 9th grade 400m runner just starting my first season off with a 53.5, this is supreme motivation for me to aim for that national age group leaderboard
Keep us updated with your new personal bests, I will be glad to watch your journey. I have love for people in athletics I was also into athletics but couldn't proceed with it due to other factors. (Clocked 54.22 in 12th grade)
After the school season i ended in may with a 51.97, ran during the summer and trained by myself to get it officially down to 51.09 but I am in 50. shape
Very kind of you to convey your message you love us china people (instead of those fake medias spreading hate). Good kamma to your this life. Sadhu sadhu sadhu.
literally made me cry seeing what tremendous work and dedication he put into this and how far he has come proving everyone wrong and he's become such a big inspiration for me not just in the field of athletics but in life. i feel like im going to explode w motivation lol.
i agree that it’s motivational. but all the other guys on top work just as hard. sure they don’t have to worry about factors like height, but they have other factors to worry about.
@@willmcclard206 man what is this comment? the video is about su NOT OTHER guys. when i come across videos of OTHER guys and i feel motivated i'd drop a comment there too about them -_-
Su has some of the most powerful starts in sprinting history. Comparing his stride frequency to others for the first 20 meters is crazy. Few extra inches of height and he would've been an olympic champion
@@richgl31 Exactly, his start his insane because he has shorter muscle which give him an advantage of acceleration in the beginning of the race but it become a disavantage for max speed this is why he gets catch up after the start.
He’s successful because he has southern dark skin Chinese explosiveness genes which northern Chinese lack because northern has more slow twitch, eastern smart efficient endurance agility. Is why he is so good.
@@numa5810 there is millions of 5’7 Africans, short doesn’t mean your most explosive, also usain bolt is the second fastest 60m. It might help acceleration, but it’s not short stature that is shining. Keep in mind, half of the world is under 5’7
@@jasonchen2976 it was actually me who made the point about height. It’s not necessarily that he is short, - it is that taller athletes cannot get that level of acceleration. It is still an achievement- he is still very impressive, but anatomy is a factor.
No matter how many times I watch it, it gives me shivers and goosebumps. If this guy was like 6-7 inches taller he could have smashed the world record i feel.
His acceleration would decrease meaning he wouldn‘t hold the 60m record anymore (shorter legs have higher stride frequency, this is the reason why best 60m sprinters are 5‘8-5‘10 😉) If he had longer legs his stride would increase for sure he would perform better in the 100-400m races but wouldn‘t be the best. His top speed may increase a little bit (longer stride cover more ground), his acceleration would decrease (longer legs have less stride frequency which explains why best 60m sprinters are 5‘8-5‘10)
Thank you blogger, this is the first time I see a video about Chinese characters. Many people in China like gold medals, but not sportsmanship. Therefore, Su Bingtian did a good job letting the public know that sportsmanship is more important than gold medals.
This seems very similar to the differences between a diesel vs gasoline engine: Diesel engines create insane amounts of torque compared to horsepower, enabling them to have fast initial acceleration speeds but contrastly hinders them at the top end. Su's stride length is excellent for transferring power down to the ground and getting him out of the block quickly, but in the last 40m his opponents can close the gap. To combat this Su trains his body to its absolute limit and gets really thicc thighs to the point that with the amount of power he's generating, it creates such a large gap that even at the top end his opponents can't close the distance. Absolutely incredible to see what human beings are capable of: Mo' powa baby!
it's not that diesel engines have a necessary trade-off between torque and horsepower, it's that the most common way to build diesel engines is with pistons doing longer strokes thus decreasing the practicality of having a higher RPM. There's nothing preventing a diesel vehicle from going at the same or a higher speed as an equivalent power petrol powered car, it's just that you'd need a more tuned gearbox with more gears that's a pain in the ass to drive.
11:32 these are the sensations that only one understands, it's a victory against life itself, thinking that 9.85 is the limit, and running 20 milliseconds faster than that, that's an internal victory that the other athletes wouldn't understand unless they knew what it means to him
He is the fastest human ever over 60 metres... ever! He is amazing. I love his character so much! He is such an ambassador for China. Hard working, intelligent, modest...
@@Fizzglg Early humans were never sprinters, that's not efficient. They were hunter gatherers and endurance runners, humans are very good at running animals to exhaustion and killing them that way, sprinting was never part of it.
My cousin is a runner and when we were watching his race, he was so surprised to how fast he was in the first 50m. He is truly inhuman when it comes to running. Especially with his given height, he is amazing. It amazed all of us.
@@kevincc13 Yep, no doubt. At the top it’s a competition of everyone on physical enhancers who also have incredible genetics, work ethic, AND training regimens but so many people act like they can get there if they took PED’s themselves. Delusional.
Please share this video to spread the message of Hope, Daring and Human Solidarity.
Official data (citations at bottom) has been released recently that confirms Su Bingtian as the fastest short-distance sprinter in history, running the fastest 60m (6.29) ever recorded, under any conditions , followed by Usain Bolt's 6.31 and Christian Coleman's 6.32. Su Bingtian also set the fastest split record for 10m, 20m, 30m, 40m, 50m, as well, which means nobody is faster than him in the first 60m of the race, no matter the distance. His time for 40 yard dash would translate to an astounding 4.07 (according to another source sub-4.05) under the NFL combine testing method, way faster than the current record of 4.22 by John Ross, hence setting the current upper limit for human explosive power. His 9.83 in the 2021 Olympic Semi-Final is also among the Top 15 Fastest times in human history and Top 5 Fastest times in Olympics history. To put this in perspective, 9.83 is enough to win Gold in any Olympics 100m Finals prior to 2008 and enough to medal in any Olympics except 2012.
In our politically correct era, it's easy to publicly, privately, consciously disavow racial theory concerning Intelligence 3:14/Athleticism 3:42, but everybody secretly/spontaneously believes in it under the overwhelming weight of commonsensical empirical evidence that testify to the contrary.
Homologously, I doubt anyone seriously believed he could run this number before it actually happened, which is why the event nevertheless materializing was so shocking, incredible, as if in-human. Before something happens, it is always easy to proclaim the formal possibility of it happening, but nobody SERIOUSLY entertained the real possibility of it happening. In other words, it is easy for many to Fantasize, but it takes courage for the few to Dream.
When, in an interview, Su was asked whether he is an exception to the racial norm, he responded: “There is nothing exceptional here. If I can do it, YOU can do it too and do it better”. First, this stance of "universality without exception" is utterly different from the weak cliche of “breaking the stereotype”--the latter concedes the applicability of stereotype to the rest of the group while reserving a spot of exception for a few, hence leaving the stereotype intact. Second, Su is not saying "you will" with a tone of surety, but "you can". He is not making the outlandish claim that "anybody will do it if they try". You can" implies a sense of unknowability---You might or might not be able to do it, but you will never know unless you try...2:59
The single greatest misunderstanding people often took from this video is the willful subjectivist fantasy of "hardwork beat genetics". No. One doesn't run the fastest 60m ever recorded without the most elite god-tier genetics possible. Indeed, Su trained MUCH LESS after he switched to his later coach Randy Huntington, who made him realize his problem was exactly the ideological belief that Asians somehow had lesser athletic talent and had to make up for that deficiency by working harder, an outdated and misguided training methodology that only predisposed him to potential career ending injuries through over-training. What Su's story exposes is that "raw genetics" is but a retroactive illusion: once you reach a certain level, it seems you've ALWAYS ALREADY had the potential to reach that level. One's "raw talents" does not exist in itself that automatically motivate or push one to be great, to do the work to be great. Rather, one's "raw talent" is a retroactive RESULT of one having performed the work which retroactively projected the "raw genetics" to be there in the first place. In other words, what we have here is the infinite speculative judgment that connects two completely heterogeneous items: "Raw talent IS Work" (it's nonsensical to say one's hardwork can beat one's talent because one's talent is always expressed in one's work which retroactively determines ones's talent which in turn is expressed in one's work....a LOOP), a formula that resonates well with the Protestant concept of Predestination and points to the inherent uncertainty of human subjectivity.
What we don’t know what we know is that we don’t know what we are (in)capable of. Perhaps what we are really afraid of is not that racial theory is really true, but that it is really false, so 3:16 Charles Murray is wrong: the truly traumatic situation is not one in which each racial group is assigned its fixed proper niche in the hierarchical symbolic racial universe (or an harmonious egalitarian one where each race possess its distinctive desirable trait 4:13---isn’t this precisely what the so-called racial diversity/multiculturalism all about?), but one in which each racial group is deprived of the enjoyment of its special trait, so each individual would have to fully assume the ABYSS of its OWN freedom, deprived of the excuse to displace its fate onto the group to which it belongs...
Su's progression by year:
2006 - 10.59 (+0.8)
2007 - 10.45 (+0.6)
2008 - 10.41 (+0.2)
2009 - 10.28 (-0.4)
2010 - 10.32 (0.0)
2011 - 10.16 (+0.7)
2012 - 10.19 (+1.3)
2013 - 10.06 (+0.1)
2014 - 10.10 (+0.4)
2015 - 9.99 (-0.4)
2016 - 10.08 (0.0)
2017 - 10.03 (-0.2)
2018 - 9.91 (+0.2)
2019 - 10.05 (+0.9)
2021 - 9.83 (+0.9)
isnt su bingtian the fastest man in the world then in 60m?
Yes, yes he is.
thanks so much for pointing out he's Asian, there was no way everyone would've known 👍
@@bos9824 yeah so hes the unofficial fastest man in the world
@@yonggeun4222 no not even close
Fun fact: Su is also an assistant professor at a major university and working on his Phd at the moment. He wrote several thesis studying how to run faster in a scientific way. The power of hard work and science. Truly inspiring.
@@henri.r94 😂 no doubt about that at least officially 🤣
Wow💪🔥
The Soviets used to do the same thing - many of their top athletes and champions were also Sport Sciences Students and their Doctoral Dissertations were literally a long-term study on how they built themselves up to Champion athletes.
@@carljacobson7156 well and massive amounts of steroids and other peds.
@@kevinhurst9885 Almost ALL Speed and Power Track Athletes used PEDs - no matter the country.
Ten years of hard works to improve 0.45 second, I feel extremely embarrassed to myself who often waste time in day dreaming. Respect to Su and all the athletics who keep pushing the limits.
That’s a massive improvement for 10 years props to him
After telling yourself this, right now you are still day dreaming, tomorrow you will still be day dreaming, the day after tomorrow, next week, next month, next year, you will still be day dreaming..
@@RayFliesAway unless you break the chain like a real man would.
Daydreaming is important work.
That is a nice way to put it. He made it a goal to advance at end of each by 0.045 second faster than the prior year.
Su Bingtian is the fastest human ever in 60m sprint, the 13th fastest human in 100m sprint history, the fastest Asian of all time, the fastest professor on this planet, and most importantly a hero who inspires billions.
hero ? you need to cast your net wider
@@matthewheffernan8315 Many people got inspired by him, so he is a hero to them.
Well said
Billions? Idk about that.
@@The_Andromeda_Galaxy China is a country with more than 1,3 billion population, and All Asian blooded has more than 65% population of the world, so what's wrong with billions?
This 15 minute video feels like 5 minutes. What a masterclass in editing, inspiration, and the human spirit. I come back to it regularly.
But is there no taller asian than this asian that have the potential run faster than 9.85?
I am Chinese, the people of our country are very proud of what he acheived, and I was deeply moved. Thank you for letting the rest of the world know Su Bingtian. Thank you to everyone who appreciated him in the comments. I hope everyone can take inspiration and strength from him.
Congratulations China
THIS FAKE SIR HES ACTUALLY SO SLOW! 😠ONLY MY INDIAN MAN THE FASTEST HUMAN IN THE WORLD 🇮🇳🤗 THIS WHY IM SO LUCKY LIVE IN SUPER INDIA THE CLEANEST COUNTRY IN THE WORLD 🇮🇳🤗 , WE NEVER SCAM! WE GIVE RESPECT TO ALL WOMEN THEY CAN WALK SAFELY ALONE AT NIGHT AND WE HAVE CLEAN FOOD AND TOILET EVERYWHERE 🇮🇳🤗🚽, I KNOW MANY POOR PEOPLE JEALOUS WITH SUPER RICH INDIA 🤗🇮🇳🤗🇮🇳🤗🇮🇳🤗🇮🇳🤗🇮🇳🤗
Iam india💐💐💐💐💐💐💐💐💐💐💐💐💐💐💐💐💐💐💐💐💐💐💐💐💐💐💐
Bing chilling
Italy won that olympics 100m, but we all were wondered of su bingtian. Chinese people are wonderful and great hard workers. I send love and appreciation to you and to all the chinese, good luck for everything
6:20 Usain Bolt once said about this in a documentary. "There was this kid right next to me, He got a flying start which made me stumble".
That guy is from France not asian
@@islandboy5541 It had to be this asian one that made him stumble. Cause the one on the left wasn't impressive compared to the asian.
Usain bolt fast as fuck yo cuz it looked like he should have lost badly
Anyone has a link to the documentary?:)
@Lè Kènzo dnt come with ur french shit here
is nobody gonna mention the cinematics, this man's editing needs a gold medal.
he put the music from star wars the clone wars in there too lmao
I agree, his only 2 videos have drawn in 11million views. Who knows maybe he's working hard on the 3rd. I can't wait😂
他已经赢得了奥运会铜牌
@@sebeast1 Also Batman theme.
@@sebeast1what’s the song name
Just remember, NO ONE has EVER ran 60m faster than this man, at 31 Years old.
Insanity and Legendary, he will forever rightfully be remembered.
@@yoshimitsux2236 Keep coping in your WWE fantasies.
facts hurt your feels
@@yoshimitsux2236 Keep coping in your WWE fantasies.
maybe because no one trains for 60 meter dash? lol
drag racing isn't over at the 60 foot mark either, it's either 1/8 or 1/4 mile. anything before that is irrelevant .
Once a black dude breaks the 60 meter record they will make a record for fastest east asian to run 5 meters@@Hardy_H_H
Nothing but respect for Su, his hard work, and his achievements. 5'8" and did the unthinkable.
this is normal sprinting height, it is actually quite ideal. Usain Bolt is actually the freak, he is not normal and that is why he has such a big advantage
Its only unthinkable for those who don't know how to think
@@KennethStBrice no it aint theres a reason why most sprinters are tall
@@KennethStBriceActually taller people are generally better at sprinting, reason being is that taller people have a certain muscle or ligament that is longer the taller you are.
@@adilpickle9977 Yes the best 100-400m sprinters are usually 6‘0, because they‘re longer stride allows them to cover more ground in less steps. However the best 60m sprinters range from 5‘8-5‘10, because shorter legs have a higher stride frequency (because the stride is shorter obviously)
When I watched the Olympics last year, I always Thought he ran that Semis too hard, as he had no energy when it came to the final. But after hearing him say ‘semi final is my final’ it all make sense. If he didn’t run all out, he might not have made the final. An Amazing documentary, Su Bingtian you are a legend
THIS FAKE SIR HES ACTUALLY SO SLOW! 😠ONLY MY INDIAN MAN THE FASTEST HUMAN IN THE WORLD 🇮🇳🤗 THIS WHY IM SO LUCKY LIVE IN SUPER INDIA THE CLEANEST COUNTRY IN THE WORLD 🇮🇳🤗 , WE NEVER SCAM! WE GIVE RESPECT TO ALL WOMEN THEY CAN WALK SAFELY ALONE AT NIGHT AND WE HAVE CLEAN FOOD AND TOILET EVERYWHERE 🇮🇳🤗🚽, I KNOW MANY POOR PEOPLE JEALOUS WITH SUPER RICH INDIA 🤗🇮🇳🤗🇮🇳🤗🇮🇳🤗🇮🇳🤗🇮🇳🤗
@@indiasuperclean6969 relax bro it's not that deep
Its crazy how a 10 second race can absorb all his energy.
@@ninamatthews8747 you'd be surprised. an average person running an all-out 100m won't do much to them, but that's because a) they're likely not even sprinting at 100% of their maximum, as they are limited by their coordination, form, and mind (not just motivation, literally not being able to recruit the muscle fibers) and b) the physiological strain of running say a 13 second 100m is orders of magnitude lower than running a 9.8x second 100m
I'm not a runner but I believe that logically, the weaker runners will run their best at every stage to increase their chances of getting into finals whereas the stronger runners do not give their 100% as they know they are likely to get into finals even without best effort.
It's kind of scary how explosive this guy is to get that 60m record.
I would not want to see him angry ! He’s built like a pit bull terrier with those huge but agile back legs and stocky front !
How is his 100m time? lol
Su's personal best of 9.83 seconds makes him the 5th fastest man all-time in the history of 100 metres at the Olympics, the 15th fastest man all-time in the history of the 100m event,[7] and the current holder of the 100 m Asian record.[8] Su's personal best in the 60 metres of 6.42 seconds placed him within the top five all-time in the event.[9]
THIS FAKE SIR HES ACTUALLY SO SLOW! 😠ONLY MY INDIAN MAN THE FASTEST HUMAN IN THE WORLD 🇮🇳🤗 THIS WHY IM SO LUCKY LIVE IN SUPER INDIA THE CLEANEST COUNTRY IN THE WORLD 🇮🇳🤗 , WE NEVER SCAM! WE GIVE RESPECT TO ALL WOMEN THEY CAN WALK SAFELY ALONE AT NIGHT AND WE HAVE CLEAN FOOD AND TOILET EVERYWHERE 🇮🇳🤗🚽, I KNOW MANY POOR PEOPLE JEALOUS WITH SUPER RICH INDIA 🤗🇮🇳🤗🇮🇳🤗🇮🇳🤗🇮🇳🤗🇮🇳🤗
@@harvestfarms but how fast is your 100m time?
I've never heard of him before, and in less than 15 minutes watching this I am a huge fan. What an inspiration you are, Su Bingtian. Thank you for posting this.
One thing I found extremely interesting is the fact that his dream/goal was always to be the first Asian to make it to the Olympic Final. He said it himself, "My semi-final is my final." Because the barrier before him, that had never been broken, was to make it into the finals.
He did not dare dream of winning the final, he simply aimed for the next step. And he did it. But now that he did I think it opens the door up so much for future asian sprinters to dream bigger, to not just aim to reach the final but to win it.
a small step for man, a big step for asian kind
Well said!
@@brucexu5972 :/
His Semi-Finals Time was fast enough for Silver in the Finals and if things occured right again he could have won Gold beating Italy a 2nd time. That's a heavy weight laying on those he beat. He was the best 100m sprinter at the Olympics.
@@dpw181 I think he can go sub 9.8 if he tweaks his mechanics a bit more. If that happens he has a shot at a medal at World's and Olympics.
It feels illegal to watch this without knowing how much effort and dedication Su has put into this
@Tom Joney You’re jealous
For real, dude should be charging us.
💯💯💯💯
This is why Chinese medicine should be classified as illegal drugs too, some people saw their urine sample they were purple.
@@aczbdk whatever education you had should be banned too
@@mellowmonsoon278
Looks like you need to learn more about Communazi PRC
Brutal determination
Not just breaking records but breaking the limits of the mind and body
He was in Animatrix
I'm Swedish and my entire family was screaming for Bingtian. One of the greatest achievements i have ever seen in the Olympics!
salute to you Sir
Thank you
I am also fan of Stefan edberg and Jan ove waldner
I didnt really know who Su was before this video, I always saw him in Bolts videos where he would just demolish all his competitors, but now seeing Su's story, makes you realize the journey of a sprinter. Truly inspirational.
Very inspirational indeed
You know how? It’s called chemical enhancements! That’s fact! Sorry this guy needs unbiased blind drug test! Chinese cheat cheat cheat! It’s the history of that country!
@@williamgeorge3878 I highly doubt that man, his whole journey was documented, and he seems very sincere and genuine. The work he has put in, definitely shows and is not the result of any sort of drug usuage
Same👍💪
WOW, this is one of those videos that you refuse to click on and lurks in your recommendations for weeks but you finally click it and just wow. Im tearing in the end. This man is a hero for his country and every asian around the world. Also an outstanding message to anyone in the world and very inspirational for those that struggle in competition. Hope he gets all the praise he truly deserves.
that's exactly what happened with me. i let it sit on my homepage for over a month
Not just Asians. It's also for the Blacks who are told that they can't swim, or the whites who are told that blacks would be better boxers or sprinters.
He's the hero of China.
th-cam.com/video/MukE3pzAXV4/w-d-xo.html
Nothing is impossible... No matter what you are... who you... are or where your from.... Mad respect for Su....
Sir, I'm eternally grateful that you took time to edit and create this video. I'm not Chinese, but I can confidently, without a shred of negativity, say that Su has taken a huge stride for the entirety of Asia. I played college sports and was constantly looked down for stature and I used that to motivate my successes against Europeans and American players. I have yet to taste success to the extent Su has, but I completely share his motivation and I'm so thankful he did what he did. I wonder what our future generations will accomplish as more and more asian athletes derive motivation from lives like Su. Thank you.
@@henri.r94 yeah hopefully he’ll continue getting faster. Down to 9.75 . I bet it’s possible.
@@henri.r94 sadly aging will be a factor..but he let a lot of people to believe in their dreams..underdog stories are the only part of olympics worth remembering..❤️
FREE HONG KONG
Don't worry man no matter how much success you achieve in sports we will be proud of your achievements. If someone is racist to you because they assume you are born to be weak with a smaller stature, you go look down upon them for their tiny brain size and simply ask them to check the Olympic weightlifting world records. The champions are always from East Asia and the Caucasus region. Ironically, no white or black American is on the list ever despite the whole population focus so much on weight training since their teenage years.
Athletic performance has nothing to do with race. It has everything to do with hard work and confidence. Just like what Mr. Su said. However with that being said, as an athlete, stay away from Asian community! Their negative theory can effect an Asian athlete's mind.
I think this is the true spirit of Olympic, not just winning a metal, but keep challenge your limit and make impossible things happen. Even though su never won a metal in 100 metres, his 9.83 run will forever be one of my favorite Olympic moment
Impressive writing, I love it!
我同意
Wow. I can't believe I've never heard of this guy. What a legendary athlete.
finaly someone who wouldnt eat his shit and just respects him.
im puking everywhere reading these comments
It's because he lost 😔
Don't limit yourself to your own world anymore. In fact, he is very famous, especially in East Asia
He is the 14 fastest 100-meter sprinter of all time with a time of 9.82 in the 100 meter
Dah, western media. Only bad stuff for China KEKW
I've watched this video 10 times, just love how he through everything to the wind, his right foot take off, doubters that said it was too risky and beat his 9.85 expectations. This guys my hero.
God bless
th-cam.com/video/MukE3pzAXV4/w-d-xo.html
事实
@@googlelord1678 so what, is there a problem with that? Lol
My goodness Su is as intense of a human being as I’ve ever seen. What an inspiration. What an athlete!
What pharmaceuticals!
@@AntidumbisPeaceOmind I'll be back in five years to confirm this
@@teaezra5916 what a feeble life you have with no accompishments at all!
@A Z ignorat anonymous clown keyboard warrior
@K get help, youre a definitive degenerate loser whos done nothing with their life.. get help last time ill repeat myself
This is one of the best sports documentaries ever. The music the vibe everything
There are literally MILLIONS of so called "Inspirational / Motivational" videos. But none of those videos has ever touched my heart as much as this video. I am not asian. As a matter of fact, I am a tall man (6'4''). But everyone has limits or restrictions, on their own way. Sometimes, you feel life is shit for giving you those limits. And you feel like there is no hope. But as the quote said, there is no hope unless you create hope by MOVING FORWARD!!!
This man is a HERO!
no one fucking cares
💯
"As a matter of fact, I am a tall man" lmao
In parkour , smaller height is a very big cheat. This is guy is too cheated for cops.
@@thetreethatbleeds4079 He forgot to add (as an aside too), that he is white, and "extremely handsome".
This dude is insane. What an accomplishment against so many odds. You can tell he worked his ass off to get there. Something to aspire to and shows where hard work can take you. Respect to you Su. You should be praised for your dedication.
Mate i beat you cousin ty in 1990 in qld state cup without drugs, this guy is known to have been abusing human growth hormone, lmao about your comment, look back in history black people only made olympic finals in sprinting and now all of a sudden a slope is there and it just so happens to be in china that year, in fact im ashamed as a sprinter to watch this guy, so bad for the sport because morons like you idolised him,
Jesus loves you please repent and forgive
it's not only impressive because he did it.. it's also impressive because he is the FIRST one who did it... most people think that if noone else before them has done it, it's "impossible" or not worth trying.. but Su didn't fall into this mentality, he realistically found a way to play into and use his strengths in order to win. I admire him for his exreme mental strength and devotion to keep on searching for a way to make it happen... even if everyone else has arguments for why it's "impossible" for him to win. He proved them all wrong and he has all my respect
And also, to everyone in the comments still believing it's impossible and he must have used steroids or PEDs: it IS indeed possible, because Su has different advantages due to his shorter height (he can run faster at the start). so he focuses on this advantage and optimizes it so much that the other runners don't have a chance to pass him anymore... because the other runners have the advantage to be faster at the end (due to their taller height). So here you have your scientific explanation for why it is possible for the Asian to win.
Maximum RASPECT TO SU HE WAS N IS THE 1st Asian to do this. When u are told u can't , just work harder n prove them wrong
Roid argument is dumb i guarantee they all roid
THIS FAKE SIR HES ACTUALLY SO SLOW! 😠ONLY MY INDIAN MAN THE FASTEST HUMAN IN THE WORLD 🇮🇳🤗 THIS WHY IM SO LUCKY LIVE IN SUPER INDIA THE CLEANEST COUNTRY IN THE WORLD 🇮🇳🤗 , WE NEVER SCAM! WE GIVE RESPECT TO ALL WOMEN THEY CAN WALK SAFELY ALONE AT NIGHT AND WE HAVE CLEAN FOOD AND TOILET EVERYWHERE 🇮🇳🤗🚽, I KNOW MANY POOR PEOPLE JEALOUS WITH SUPER RICH INDIA 🤗🇮🇳🤗🇮🇳🤗🇮🇳🤗🇮🇳🤗🇮🇳🤗
@@isabelschneider4726 i knew that would come up , everyone used peds in the olympics .
others wheren't defeated by a whide margin , they where defeated by a split second , and peds don't increment muscle mass by default , they allow the body to build more muscle mass , so he still worked for those , PEDs allow pepole to push higher , they aren't rocket boots ...
There was a post on fb that asked what was a moment in sports that brought you to tears, Su running that 9.83 brought me to tears. Incredibly hard work
"All the norms, laws, statistical generalizations are meant to be broken by oneself."
Such strong words.
It's just an exception confirming the rule. None of this sjw bull disproves the fact that there are genetic differences between races. Science is always based on raw *mass* data, not sensationism. This entire video is literally a dictionary example of anecdotal fallacy.
An exception doesn't make the rule.
@@sixmillionsilencedaccounts3517 each individual has to work hard and earn what they achieve.
Stop using race as an excuse.
The idea that race has impact is for the weak minded.
S....st....STEROIDS.
@@sixmillionsilencedaccounts3517 Stop using "science" to advance your social agenda lmao. How is trusting science working out for ya for the vaccines and covid? Lmao
This legitimately made me cry at the end .... How he went from struggling to screaming and crying when he won ! And then teaching the younger asian runners .. It's just so beautiful, wholesome and inspiring ... Thank you so much for making such an amazing video
He didn't win that race though, but it was an absolutely insane PB, and he broke the barrier that he didn't believe was possoble.
He did tho
@@cliveelson9287 he won the semis with a PB, but raced that race like it was his final and only barely edged out Marcell. In the final, he had a poor start and finished last. The message here isn't one of triumph, but of the journey, the obstacles, and the path still ahead.
@@TheGuyCalledX Still, he wasn't last, one guy got disqualified and another got injured. He wasn't last because he tried
@@TheGuyCalledX I was talking about the semi, he won the semifinal
I've watched this video atleast 5 to 6 times a week since like January it's just so inspiring to me as an Asian teen getting back into sports after 3 years of forced recovery
keep it up bro, dedication is one of the srongest tools you can have.
Hugs and best wishes!
nothing is impossible
Please do not do that ... if you have that speed turn into a long jumper
As an american I love this documentary
I am crying watching this. I have just very recently got into fitness and running at almost 30 years old. I always thought I was "too old" to get into fitness, but seeing his journey gave me the motivation to always work hard and push forward, despite any limitations and preconceived notions.
👊❤️👊❤️👊
This makes me proud of humans, what a bloody legend this guy is.
Horses are faster , I’m more proud of them .
well said
the power of human potential
@stranger_on_youtube
Glock 9mm?
@@LogicPak😅
Henri.R94 showed up from nowhere and created the best motivational video on the Internet. The editing, soundtrack, storytelling are just simply breathtaking. I was holding up my tears throughout the entire video... Even though I was a sprinter before, I think this video can inspire anybody in any field of work. Bravo Henri, thank you for this masterpiece!
I had no idea who he is but after the video, I can clearly say he made me realize things in a different way that I already know. I am so happy for him, he didn't give up at that plateau time and he didn't just work hard also he changed his style studied smarter. I appreciate the video, this was truly the most inspirational video I have ever seen.
I still have hope.
Same, agree 💯. Dream big and never give up!
You took the words right out of my mouth.
This is probably one of the most, if not most, inspiring video I have seen in my life. Love from India!!!!
This is so inspiring. It literally brought tears to my eyes. This guy has worked so hard to get where he is.
Same, I couldn't help but feel emotional... truly inspiring .
Brang tears to my eyes laughing about how hes abusing human growth hormone, wake up lmao
@@krisward6589 evidence? Also he wouldn’t be the only one on juice?
Hey...you're me
@@paulbarclay4114
So evidence he is?
Su Bingtian is phenomenal. His speed, prowess, strong determination and faith gave him the strenght to overcome all obstacles in track and field and his name to be written in history books not only to the Chinese people but all Asians and the world. As a Filipino and an Asian, i'm very proud of Su. He's an inspiration to young Chinese and Asian generations.
His acceleration out of the blocks is absolutely insane!!! What an incredible story of an incredible human with and amazing attitude and work ethic...your mind creates reality!!!
man has to be the fastest accelerating human who ever lived. Which sounds damn good if you want my 2 cts
Acceleration seems to be inversely proportional to top speed due to leg length.
His shorter strides make it faster to reach his top speed, which causes him to explode at the start but then fall back once others get up to speed.
@@chunksloth man you're a genius. Truly groundbreaking stuff you have discovered.
@@Patrick67394 Thanks bro.
Did you see his phenomenal acceleration? It's not really that phenomenal when you consider it's physics. It's actually to be expected.
He’s faster from the start because he’s smaller and lighter. Blacks will always top this sport
This man is a great inspiration. He broke boundaries and believed in his dream. Thank you for showing us that anything is possible when we fight.
Su Bingtian's height is only 1.72 meters ( 5 feet 7.7 inches). He had to generate a tremendous amount of strength to accelerate past his taller competitors.
Similar in concept to bicycle sprinting. To go fast, you need a smaller cog in the rear and a lot of strength to accelerate the bike.
You need enough weight on you to keep your feet planted to the ground. No matter how fast your feet are if your feet can't get to the ground fast enough then you're just running like they do in cartoons running in air.
Except that's not how gravity works bud
I heard that Usain bolt also once struggled because his height was too tall. So far as I know, the optimal height for a sprinter is 177~180cm.
Life lesson here: Never, EVER, let society tell you what you can or cannot do, nothing is impossible once you set your mind to getting it done. No matter where you're from, the colour of your skin, height, size etc, what matters is determination, hardwork and commitment. 100% respect to Su, I'm Jamaican but even I know that China is on the horizon for success in track and field, they are not to be underestimated.
DEFINITELY AGREED 💪🏾
Su was aware of his limits, due to genetics and ethnicity. He accepted his limits and worked on what he knew he shined on.
Limits exists and they must be acknowledged. It is delusional to avoid accepting that doesn’t matter how hard or how smart you train, some limits cannot be shattered.
Everyone has limits. You’re trying way too hard to be inspirational. It’s easier to just say “people should strive to meet their highest potential.”
For Su, that glory lies in the 60 meters… but will he ever be the best at the 100m? No. There are just too many Men with better genetics that are working just as hard (if not more) than he is.
@@DrakeBrunette its a bit too late for you to be replying to this but whateves, nothing wrong with having a positive mindset and attitude towards achieving a desired goal, all it takes is commitment, hardwork and self belief to achieve something in life. Everyone has the plgential to be great at something regardless of race, genetics etc. To me you just sound a bit narrow minded cuz at the end of the day hardwork beats talent
@@DrakeBrunette its a bit too late for you to be replying to this but whateves, nothing wrong with having a positive mindset and attitude towards achieving a desired goal, all it takes is commitment, hardwork and self belief to achieve something in life. Everyone has the potential to be great at something regardless of race, genetics etc if they put their mind to it. To me you just sound a bit narrow minded cuz at the end of the day hardwork beats talent
Love from Mongolia. As an asian man I’m really motivated just looking at his sheer dedication. Rise my fellow asian men. We will show em.
Azi humuust potentsial ih bgaa. Yalanguya mongolchuudad buur ih bgaa
you dont need to show, genghis khan already showed them whos boss
@@NguyễnPhúTrọng-w9g thats kinda weird bro. like saying the japenese showed asia who was the boss
@@jaylamo why is it weird? the original comment was asian men rises, showing them, i only said no need we already have
The progress gives me chills. You can see him getting further and further ahead in the start over the years, and then finally he did it. He became so fast in the start that the other guys couldn't catch him.
@@kato093 I guess you are not buying into the message of this video and still are chalking it up to genetic determinism.
What a debie downer.
@@kato093, if Su had been taller he would have won by a bigger margin. He just trained and push himself harder... Spare us your Ronaldo and genetic theory.
@@kato093 you are one person who will talk about CR7 in every discussion 🤣
I agree. This boy really will be a one-off. Why is 6ft 5 bolt the best, or Ian Thorpe with his size 17 feet the best swimmer, or most sprinters black?.. genetics, that’s why
@@DavidL1986, Also Jamaican sprinters start training from they are young children. From primary school to college age.
I love these real life "Rocky" type of stories. I felt this to my core & soul - cried for this guy. All his hard work for 10 years paid off. What a story of success & determination. Huge congratulations - wish I could give this guy a strong hug.
@TH-cam Username clown
Balled my eyes out I can't stop like holy shit...I'm so dehydrated...
That makes the 2 of us
I'm still crying....
yes.Being asian myself i would agree with you.
This man is an absolute inspiration. The adversity and generational doubt he must of faced... A true warrior spirit that believed beyond what convention and society could fathom. This is legendary in the truest sense.
SU is not only an athlete, but also an associate professor at a top university in China
His off the blocks timing is pure perfection. His start makes up for his height in the long "Run".
more like the short run
if the rules were different ,and the races were instead just 50 yd dash ,shorter racer will have a faster start due to their height, ,
@@asianconnection7701 yeah
@@matthewmea3566 bro , same thing with basketball , u know how easy it is to make a basket if you are 6,4 ,6,5 , its not even funny , these guys get pay so much money to play a easy ass game because of genetic ,and 90% of people are not allow to play because of their height ,
@@asianconnection7701 but the thing is they're playing against other tall guys so it evens out. if it's easy for all of them that's where the gameplay comes in and it's up to determination and smart training.
The way he pulls so far ahead at 10:35, the meaning of that moment, the split second culmination of the ideal of embracing one's disadvantage to turn it into an advantage.... It's one of the most beautiful things I'll ever see.
@@henri.r94 I'm imagining what type of career Su might've had if he started working with American track coaches earlier. His physical peak and technical peak will sadly never align, it seems. He spent his best prime years racing suboptimally and completely rebuilding his form.
@@henri.r94 What was Bingtian's split time at the 80 metre mark in this race?
Wow, this is surely one of the most inspirational videos on TH-cam. It really brings me to tears. His determination is an true inspiration not just for Asians but everyone in various of challenges in every facet of life.
A decade to master a craft against all odds, this man’s willpower is on another level
I've been on TH-cam since it's inception, and this is my favorite video I've ever seen. Su Bingtian's story is indeed inspirational to all types of people, and, of course, Asians. I myself am South Asian and partake in a sport that I am a minority in. There have been times where people assumed I wasn't any good because of my race and it is unfortunate, but I can't tell you how much his story makes me want to keep pushing myself to be the best I can be in every way I can be. This man is goated for beating statistical, mental, whatever you want to call it barriers. Thank you for making this Henri.
what is The sport
th-cam.com/video/MukE3pzAXV4/w-d-xo.html
what sport do you play? I play lacrosse which is also a minority asian sport.
Behind the scenes, who knows how much dedication, discipline, hard work, etc that Su Bingtian put in to become where he is now. So much respect to him.
It is so inspiring
💉💉
All of em are on it@@barcaman1013
The hardships of the training is what we dont see on tv. Respect to all athletes.
They are great
Excellent video! Thank you. Never heard of Su Bingtian, but now I have. What a story! What a will to win!
What he did is not just for the Asian community but for the entire human race. Because what he did shows that its not about race or where you are from. But it's about how determined you are. How much work you put in. And how badly you want it. Anything is possible if you dream it and work for it.
Exceptions don't disprove the rule
There is a reason why he is labelled as the first asian male to do under 10 secs, it's kinda abt "race"
I'm 5'7 and all my life had to prove myself in sports. This brought tears to my eyes I'm really happy for him and now we all know who he is and what he did.
Lol im 5'2 and i play rugby as a winger. At least yourheight is everage
You are so gullible, believing in fake news lol……unless you’re a wumao, of course
@@ajfp2k8 What a positive attitude you have Aaron, you must be a joy at parties, huh? or are you too much of a coward to be such a callous prick in real life and only do so while anonymous?
Usain Bolt is a Giant. His Stride is so much bigger. Imagine a light weight boxer fighting a Heavyweight Boxer. LOL
@@lossantoscity3249 strided doesnt matter thats a myth his height has nothing to do with his succesz
Terrific editing, friend! Kudos to you! I'm a foreigner who's been living in China for years and I have been following Su's career throughout many of his local and international competitions. He has been such an inspiration for everyone in this country over the years. I'm happy to see his inspiration spreading and being recognized outside the borders of China.
The 100m is just a number someone came up with- if the race was 60m this guy would be the champ - crazy
🔥 for sure ..... He set his own class of world record ..... fastest 60 meters of all time
At 10:25, Su made the gesture with his right hand. I remember watching this on Chinese TV when the Olympics were happening. The commentator interpreted the sigh as: "as long as I can run, even just a tiny little bit faster, than I could last time, that would be enough." I am really glad that he was able to achieve what he achieved after this given his long years of dedication and passion for sprinting, and how he was never satisfied and kept moving forward, while being confident in himself that he has what it takes to do better.
that victory scream made me tear up. Imagine the emotions after all those hard work and perseverance finally pays off.
Truly inspiring..
Wumao hahaha
@@elgringo808 racist, hahaha 😂
That CCP ain't sh!t ⚰️ 💀 🇨🇳 🔫
@@henri.r94 bullshit wumao hahahaha
@@elgringo808 you just jealous no of your kind can run this fast
I have already been a big su bingtian fan but THIS made my appreciation and respect for him so much stronger. I was FREAKING OUT when he ran 9.83 stunned to the core. His energy is beyond many. I hope he goes for indoors because he is such a GREAT starter and I believe he can be in the fight for a WR or a global medal
and he is not young in this energy demanding arena
The way he talked about asians not only chinese shows what he suffered being an Asian outside in the west . He showed them and proved them totally wrong . Asians can do anything in this world
真的太不容易了,淚目淚目...在b站就給我看的熱淚盈眶,特地跑過來給兄弟點贊!
@@henri.r94 我也是从b站过来的,教员那段真的看一次泪目一次
@@henri.r94 我也,b站没有号来这里支持下
th-cam.com/video/MukE3pzAXV4/w-d-xo.html
This is the best motivational video I've ever seen on TH-cam. A 30-year-old Asian can push the boundaries of race. Is there anything we can't do?
@ he's not eating chicken fillet baguettes anyway
@ lol you're delusional
Well you certainly can't free uyghurs crom their "camp"
@@ea8455 they could they just don't want to
@@ea8455 they’ll put yo family in dem camps
woww. damn dude, this cut... the music, the editing, the message, the flow -- simply inspiring. BRAVO SIR!
@@henri.r94 yeah, the music was japanese taiko drums for a chinese runner 🤣 good job
@@henri.r94 that's like decorating a Jewish athelete with Nazi medals 🤣😂
@@user-pd9ju5dk5s bruh shuddupp your comments are obviously annoying
@@geovannycruz9361 not as annoying as your slang spelling, bruh
And only 2 videos on his page. Nicely done boss.
What a video tribute to the fastest man to run a 60 metres in human history. Run like hell, Su Bingtian. Love and respect from India 🇮🇳
Being in the Marines, I'm 5'4. When I do pullups, I hit the max (20 back then, I think it's a bit higher now). They're like, you have short arms! When we do the 3 mile (5k) run, I get a perfect 18 minute or better. I don't hear anyone saying, "Oh you got short legs! That's why!". See the irony? People always got shit to say.
Nothing wrong with being short or shorter, many advantages also come with individuals your size, keep it up and size comparison, is honestly.. for weak minded people. Stay strong and keep kicking everyone's ass, great job.
the problem is caring.
I'm 5'1 in the Marines. There are always haters.
@@kuvue7539 i know someone of 4'6 working at a convenience store.
@@bober1019 sure, I was replying back about the Marines and that clerk got nothing to do with the Marines. Have a bless day.
Great work my friend. I never wondered it took him 10 years to reach at this point. That shows how mentally strong he is, to never give up despite of all the odds were not in favour for being an Asian.
@@henri.r94 THANK YOU SIR FOR MENTIONING INDIA,
THIS VIDEO INSPIRED ME
As Su himself implied, the odds against him were all programmed by idiot racial conjuring (I will not ever offer classification by race as theory). He tossed that aside, understanding stride frequency can overcome stride length. Incidentally, Bolt was seen initially as to tall to be a 100 M sprinter.
su is the first generation born on china that actually grew taller than their parents. think about that for a second, china was under such poverty that for 150 years each successive generation shrank compared to the generation before due to malnutrition. what i'm saying is that in the future there will be more and more world class athletes coming out of that country.
@@r6guy yes! Asia is getting faster. Its not only Su, Ryota Yamagata from Japan recently ran 9.95 in their Olympic trails and there are even 3 runners in Japan who has a PB under 10sec. In many Asian countries like India, Japan, China, Indonesia, people are crazy about track and field, which creates a competitive environment. Soon we'll see more Asians achieving even more than what Su has achieved.
@@fitveganathleteintegrateda1695 This. @spook the odds were never against him; his mind was against him and he changed it.
This guy was so much fun to watch. He doesn't get enough recognition, but he is one of the worlds best athletes
This is why Chinese medicine should be classified as illegal drugs too, some people saw their urine sample they were purple.
@@aczbdk 😅
@@aczbdk This is why there are so many asthmatics among Western players!
@@aczbdk😂
@@aczbdk Keep coping in your WWE fantasies.
Amazing work Su. Thanks for representing asians around the world.
You should really make more metamorphosis videos of people who weren't supposed to excel in their sport yet they still did. This type of videos are better than all the "motivational videos" I could find. The editing is so spot on.
Look up Charles Oliveira Road to Champion, he was diagnosed with heart murmurs and bone disorders yet look at him now
This video was beautifully made. Respect to the editor, and major respect to Su Bingtian.
@@henri.r94 Make more dude.
Only one little thing...Christian Coleman holds the 60m world record.
Not ashamed to say this video made me quite emotional, it is very well made. I respect Su Bingtian a lot more. Breaking both Asian stereotypes as well as our human limits. Thank you.
@henri.r94, I wanted to let you know that this documentary was the epitome of “show, don’t tell”. The way you put together this story was nothing short of a masterpiece.
Su bingtian inspires me so much because I myself am Asian and I’m also doing track and field and I’m competing in the 100m event, a field in which you won’t see much Asians have success, but after seeing this video I will aspire to win and to train my hardest so that I may be able to go to the Olympics which would be my proudest moment, just going there would mean everything to me, but it would mean so much more if I win the Olympic finals, it will inspire Asians across the globe
I am sending you love and energy to achieve your goals! BRAVO to your spirit.
He’s a remarkable person and his words are poetry. Thanks for this edit 🙏
This is so inspirational!! Su Bingtian is a legend and props to him for breaking barriers of racial theories. He will undoubtedly inspire millions of kids in East Asia, India, and indeed all over the world to smash barriers set up by older people. Love from India!!
They’re not just racial theories, they’re facts. It’s the unfortunate truth, but not all humans are made equal. Why do you think Africans usually place highest in track? It’s not a coincidence. It’s because they are more genetically disposed to be good at running.
People don’t want to accept the fact that certain races are ethnic groups are better at certain things, because it hurts their feelings and damages their egos.
@@Idk-do1ui it's not like there's not any truth to that but the point of the video was to never limit yourself and to try your best to break those limitations set on you. Not just athletics but in general
@@Idk-do1ui sounds ignorant to me. Real reason is because the 7 billion people on the planet aren't lining up to spend their whole life doing one thing. A lot of times it comes down to money, under poverished countries etc. Its a meal ticket for a lotta people and other countries aren't making it their go to. Anyways, all it takes is this one short Asian to blow that theory outta the water forever. Its official, its two records in one essentially. Fastest 40 is huge per America and NFL. Said to be impossible to go under 4 secs and he missed it by .07 No one has ever gotten closer and I guarantee you any one of us could've made 100 million dollar bet against any NFL team owner on the fastest record being set by this guy and came out richer. Your view is the very ignorant lazy mindset that needs to be trashed all over. You sound like the go along to get along type, weak.
@@ryuken0088 So you’re telling me that you don’t think genetics differences between different groups make any difference? We humans are still animals, like many other species on the planet. Why is it _so crazy_ to think that natural selection may have played some part in making people who live in different areas of the planet, better at different things?
Your argument for different opportunities doesn’t really make sense either. Are Africans really the people with best opportunities for Olympics? They dominate most of track and field. Not just African Americans, but Africans in general.
Most people from the US are white, Hispanic, or Latino. So why is is that the Africans, the people only make up around 12% of the US population, dominate track and field for the Americans?
Anyways, go ahead and call me “weak” for saying this. Feel free to hurdle a few more insults at me. Makes you look big and strong, dude. All it really comes off as is just you projecting.
Genetic talent for running still belong to Black, well but Asian also do best at else where, one of them is grinding 😂
One of the best videos ive seen in YT in long while
Favourite part of this video by far is the footage of him at the school. Their attentiveness as he speaks, demos and advises them shows the belief that he's given them. What they thought was impossible not long before, they now believe is possible, if not by them, then by one of their peers. Really beautiful video, thank you. (Also, that start in the semi... WOW!)
Yooo you think you can’t beat him to first place in Mario Kart cause you’re a blue shell
@@eybysantiago2104 I'm actually not very good at Mario Kart, I just like what the blue shell represents: it's a reminder to those at the top that they should never feel too comfortable. If there's a blue shell in this story, it's Su himself. He never managed an Olympic gold here, but he just might have opened the door for someone else to do it. If that's not a blue shell, I don't know what is :)
That's that good old Chinese propaganda fear attention. You'd listen attentively to almost anyone if the CCP was gonna get you for not listening
Whn communist party puts guns on yours whole famly's ass,nd tell u to bring medals nd make world records,u will be running on 2 hands nd beat records of 4-5 usian boult togheter. This magic is presented by ccp.
Some interesting comments here lol. So apparently the CCP can just magically make people run faster, and students who appear to be inspired by a runner who's literally just broken records and achieved what many thought was impossible, aren't actually impressed, they're just scared of the CCP (which cares about a small group of students faking enthusiasm for some reason?). Look, there's plenty of legitimate criticisms to be made of the CCP, but to insist that they must be a significant player here seems a bit nuts. Why not just take it at face value? A sprinter worked his butt off, achieved a pretty incredible time, and now a whole bunch of people look up to him. How is this such an unbelievable story for some people?
This brought tears to my eyes. This man trained and WILLED HIMSELF to surpass theorized genetic LIMITS! If that isn't awe inspiring then I don't know what is! This isn't about country vs country.. this is about human vs human limits!
@@henri.r94 Hey I really appreciate that! I agree I think as time passes it will be come clear that we are all trying to outperform ourselfs as humans. I understand racial genetic predispositions can play a part in preformance I think more than that the sheer world class will, determination, dedication, technical understanding, training and technique play a larger roll as we can clearly see. Limits are in my opinion set to be broken and sometimes shattered but it's the limits we set on ourselfs and in our minds that are the greatest obstacles. Absolutely love this channel!
Pharmaceutical limits can push genetic limits
@@henri.r94 Absolutely! I'll check it out thank you!
@@Pinpadprompts 😀😀...we are all thinking it but🤐
This man is still genetically elite 1 in a 100million
I always knew that this guy was fast and dangerous. I watched him a few years ago and knew he had that fight in him to reach greatness. Well done Su and congratulations to China 🇨🇳
As a Chinese 9th grade 400m runner just starting my first season off with a 53.5, this is supreme motivation for me to aim for that national age group leaderboard
Solid time king, keep grinding
Keep us updated with your new personal bests, I will be glad to watch your journey. I have love for people in athletics
I was also into athletics but couldn't proceed with it due to other factors.
(Clocked 54.22 in 12th grade)
After the school season i ended in may with a 51.97, ran during the summer and trained by myself to get it officially down to 51.09 but I am in 50. shape
My 10th grade goal is 48.9
Su is incredibly inspiring. What amazing spirit! Hope folks in China know we love this guy too. This translates everywhere.
Very kind of you to convey your message you love us china people (instead of those fake medias spreading hate). Good kamma to your this life. Sadhu sadhu sadhu.
@@samaxsama Are you from India?
This guy’s start is INSANE
literally made me cry seeing what tremendous work and dedication he put into this and how far he has come proving everyone wrong and he's become such a big inspiration for me not just in the field of athletics but in life. i feel like im going to explode w motivation lol.
i agree that it’s motivational. but all the other guys on top work just as hard. sure they don’t have to worry about factors like height, but they have other factors to worry about.
@@willmcclard206 man what is this comment? the video is about su NOT OTHER guys. when i come across videos of OTHER guys and i feel motivated i'd drop a comment there too about them -_-
@@willmcclard206yeah like whats the deal with you ??? What are you on about??
His screams and moans at the end of the race TRULY show us how much he has sacrifices and how much this meant to him. WOW
This dude is the definition of mind over matter! What an inspiration!
Su has some of the most powerful starts in sprinting history. Comparing his stride frequency to others for the first 20 meters is crazy. Few extra inches of height and he would've been an olympic champion
Well…if he was taller then his start would not be so impressive.
@@richgl31 Exactly, his start his insane because he has shorter muscle which give him an advantage of acceleration in the beginning of the race but it become a disavantage for max speed this is why he gets catch up after the start.
He’s successful because he has southern dark skin Chinese explosiveness genes which northern Chinese lack because northern has more slow twitch, eastern smart efficient endurance agility. Is why he is so good.
@@numa5810 there is millions of 5’7 Africans, short doesn’t mean your most explosive, also usain bolt is the second fastest 60m. It might help acceleration, but it’s not short stature that is shining. Keep in mind, half of the world is under 5’7
@@jasonchen2976 it was actually me who made the point about height. It’s not necessarily that he is short, - it is that taller athletes cannot get that level of acceleration. It is still an achievement- he is still very impressive, but anatomy is a factor.
No matter how many times I watch it, it gives me shivers and goosebumps. If this guy was like 6-7 inches taller he could have smashed the world record i feel.
His acceleration would decrease meaning he wouldn‘t hold the 60m record anymore (shorter legs have higher stride frequency, this is the reason why best 60m sprinters are 5‘8-5‘10 😉) If he had longer legs his stride would increase for sure he would perform better in the 100-400m races but wouldn‘t be the best. His top speed may increase a little bit (longer stride cover more ground), his acceleration would decrease (longer legs have less stride frequency which explains why best 60m sprinters are 5‘8-5‘10)
Stride frequency would naturally decrease so it wouldn’t work that way lol
Calm down sir !!!
I'd say if his legs alone were 2" longer... he'd be slightly faster...
No he wouldn't. Bolt's literally 0.01 seconds slower in the first 60m and the last 40m we know he can't be matched
Thank you blogger, this is the first time I see a video about Chinese characters. Many people in China like gold medals, but not sportsmanship. Therefore, Su Bingtian did a good job letting the public know that sportsmanship is more important than gold medals.
This seems very similar to the differences between a diesel vs gasoline engine:
Diesel engines create insane amounts of torque compared to horsepower, enabling them to have fast initial acceleration speeds but contrastly hinders them at the top end.
Su's stride length is excellent for transferring power down to the ground and getting him out of the block quickly, but in the last 40m his opponents can close the gap.
To combat this Su trains his body to its absolute limit and gets really thicc thighs to the point that with the amount of power he's generating, it creates such a large gap that even at the top end his opponents can't close the distance.
Absolutely incredible to see what human beings are capable of: Mo' powa baby!
Greetings, fellow donut media enjoyer.
Turbo powa baby
Wherever we go we find car guys thats culture. ❤️
Absolutely amazing comparison. Like I get it.. Can't stop nodding my head in agreement..
it's not that diesel engines have a necessary trade-off between torque and horsepower, it's that the most common way to build diesel engines is with pistons doing longer strokes thus decreasing the practicality of having a higher RPM. There's nothing preventing a diesel vehicle from going at the same or a higher speed as an equivalent power petrol powered car, it's just that you'd need a more tuned gearbox with more gears that's a pain in the ass to drive.
11:32 these are the sensations that only one understands, it's a victory against life itself, thinking that 9.85 is the limit, and running 20 milliseconds faster than that, that's an internal victory that the other athletes wouldn't understand unless they knew what it means to him
I think you mean 20ms
@@jibster5903 I think you both meant 2ms
@@adamwolverinez 🤔 🤣excitement can cause us to mess up
@@adamwolverinez if 1000 milliseconds = 1 second then how one earth can it be 2... its 20
@@nathanielthomas7642 I just looked it up. My primary school education was poor 😢
This is the kind of guy we say.
RESPECT, SU BINGTIAN.
Your name will be remembered by generations.
@Axileus lol there's jealous white NeoNazi here
@Axileus you just jealous no white colonzer ever run this fast
@Axileus you just jealous no of your kind can run this fast
@@richard2052 people do remember 100 m runners more than 60 m
@@sanghamitramitra2629 do you know what the point they argue about?
One of the greatest videos on youtube
He is the fastest human ever over 60 metres... ever! He is amazing. I love his character so much! He is such an ambassador for China. Hard working, intelligent, modest...
I have a feeling early humans were much faster since they had to walk or run everywhere they went and were evolved to run after there food
@@Fizzglg (they weren’t)
@@henryskehan3761 and how do you know that🤨
@@Fizzglg they didnt work out? they didnt have coaches? they ate whatever tf they wanted? like no chance they were faster than now
@@Fizzglg Early humans were never sprinters, that's not efficient. They were hunter gatherers and endurance runners, humans are very good at running animals to exhaustion and killing them that way, sprinting was never part of it.
as an asian, I'm really proud of this man.
way to go, mate
As a Caucasian, this is the most inspiring thing I've ever seen. I got chills the whole time. What an incredible human being.
@@jerdonsbabbler3515 you ain't no caucasian , you white, caucasian are people like khabib.
Su made a big impact, but black people are gods children
@@breaks3085 Yes. We are all God’s children.
@@jerdonsbabbler3515 nope just black people
My cousin is a runner and when we were watching his race, he was so surprised to how fast he was in the first 50m. He is truly inhuman when it comes to running. Especially with his given height, he is amazing. It amazed all of us.
Performance enhancers will do that.
From his research, he changed his start out position to make him faster.
Drugs will help watch Russia in few years they will be busted
@@Whistler112 fairly certain everyone at that level is on PED
@@kevincc13 Yep, no doubt. At the top it’s a competition of everyone on physical enhancers who also have incredible genetics, work ethic, AND training regimens but so many people act like they can get there if they took PED’s themselves. Delusional.
Su Bingtian is a total beast 👍🏽👏🏽 Shows what a person can do when they put in the work and don’t limit themselves. What a pro! Great job 👏🏽 ❤🎉