In the early years of manned flight, many considered the sound barrier to be a hard barrier, until Chuck Yeager became the first man to exceed Mach 1 in 1947. Nowadays, we routinely fly faster than that.
Likewise, in running, the 4-minute mile was considered a hard barrier until Roger Bannister crossed the line in 1954. The 4-minute mile is still a laudable goal, but not considered a hard barrier in human performance.
This past Saturday in Georgia, I watched Jiles Wright, a shooter from Arkansas, set a new worlds record in CFDA shooting. Jiles hit a standard CFDA target in 0.278/secod in sanctioned competition. The CFDA has strict rules for recoding a world's record, and Jiles met all the criteria.
The CFDA considers a worlds record to be unattainable at anything faster than 0.267. (CFDA rules, page 25). This is based on testing done in 2021 based on human reaction time and draw speed. I understand the reasoning and the intent.
I also understand that barriers are meant to be overcome and that records are meant to be broken. The CFDA may want to reconsider a hard barrier to human performance.
Congratulations to Jiles. I was honored to be there to watch him set a new world's record.
3 comments:
That is Bill Jordan speed.
https://www.legendsofamerica.com/bill-jordan/
Congrats to him! And yes, records are meant to be broken!
When will CFDA start drug testing? No, I'm not serious. But, chew does contain nicotine, and it's an upper.
Post a Comment