OTHER SPORTS.
The longest jumps ever made in sports
There are so many sports disciplines in which people jump. In addition to athletics, in which jumps are divided into four categories (long, high, triple, and pole vaulting), many sportsmen and women excel in real flights, for example, with skis and snowboards, but also with cars, motorcycles, bicycles, and....parachutes.
Man has always dreamed, after all, of flying, and this is one of the most direct ways to experience that feeling of freedom that humans have been chasing for centuries.
The magazine Forbes has grouped together 10 of the longest leaps made by athletes in history. Some of them are truly impressive.
High jump - Javier Sotomayor
In Salamanca, Spain, on June 27, 1993, Cuban Javier Sotomayor jumped an impressive 2.45 meters in the high jump. A record still unbeaten after 30 years.
Triple jump - Jonathan Edwards
In Gothenburg, în Sweden, on August 7, 1995, the Englishman Jonathan Edwards managed to defeat gravity by an impressive 18.29 meters (without wind) and by 18.43 meters with the wind in his favor. The best triple hurdler ever.
Bike jumping - Fabio Wibmer
In Saalbach, Austria, on May 1, 2018, Austrian Fabio Wibmer set an unofficial record for the longest bike jump over a snowy slope to riding a modified mountain bike. The length of the jump was 43 meters.
Pole Vaulting - Armand Duplantis
It is the most recent record among those considered in this article. At Eugene, in the United States, during the Indo-Golden World Athletics Championships, the Swede Armand Duplantis reached the sky with a leap of an impressive 6.21 meters.
Horse Jumping - André Ferreira
At Johannesburg, South Africa, on April 25, 1975, André Ferreira riding Something accomplished the longest horse jump in history with 8.40 meters. A record that is difficult to beat, not least because it would be very dangerous for the animal indeed.
Ski jumping - Stefan Kraft
In Vikrsund, Norway, on March 18, 2017, Austrian Stefan Kraft flew 253.5 meters, the current world record. In this discipline, however, it is not only the distance that counts, but also the coordination and cleanliness of the athletic gesture.
Long jump - Mike Powell
In Tokyo, Japan, on August 30, 1991, American Mike Powell jumped an impressive 8.95 meters. Since then, no one has ever come so close to jumping over 9 meters.
Motorcycle jumping - Robbie Maddison
At Las Vegas, in the Nevada desert (USA), on December 31, 2007, stunt-man Robbie Maddison jumped an impressive 98.34 meters with his KTM 500 SX-F. He himself admitted that that was not his longest jump: in fact, in training, by his own confession, he jumped a full 107 meters.
Jumping with snowboard - Mads Jonsson
At Hemsedal, in Norway in 2005, snowboarder Mads Jonsson jumped his board an impressive 57 meters, all with a nice 360°, just so we don't miss anything. Living legend.
Balón Greyjoy - Wikipedia.org
Jump from space (with parachute) - Alan Eustace
We all remember Felix Baumgartner 's flight from the stratosphere (jump from what 39,000 meters). Well, believe it or not, just two years later the vice-president of Google Alan Eustace surpassed this record by as much as 2,500 meters by attracting in the mythical setting dl the desert of Roswell, in the New Mexico.
ENGINES
23/06/2024
Formula1 is one of the most watched and followed sports shows in the world. The premier category of motorsport features the most extreme, fastest cars and the most talented and skilled drivers in the world. Over the years, safety has also made great strides, mindful of past tragedies.
So many great champions have in fact lost their lives whose World Championship circuits, others have come very close, and still others, in more recent times, have been saved by luck and technology, which today makes it possible to safeguard the lives of drivers despite traveling at over 300 km/h.
In this article we offer a brief sequence of what have been the most frightening and terrible accidents, including fatal ones, in F1 history.
ENGINES
20/06/2024
Imagination, intuition, keen eye and speed of execution. Formula 1 drivers employ these skills, on the track, to try to file down a tenth of a second in each corner, and off the track to taunt their colleagues.
When they take off their helmets, some prefer to relax, locking themselves in motor homes, alone or with family members.
Others, however, are eager to have fun and often do so by pulling pranks on teammates or other team members. We have chosen some of the most successful ones on and off the track.
OTHER SPORTS.
19/06/2024
On Sunday, 16 April, former Dutch footballer Arjen Robben ran the Rotterdam Marathon, completing it in less than three hours. An excellent result for the former Bayern Munich phenomenon who, even now at 39 years of age, still continues to dedicate himself to the world of sport, even without the classic feint to return with his left hand.
Less sprinting and more endurance, it may be a coincidence, but many former footballers, once they have hung up their boots, devote themselves to the queen of races, the marathon.
Robben is in fact only the latest in a long list of champions who attempt the feat and test their physiques, trained for years in very different ways.
ENGINES
17/06/2024
The calendar of the first World Championship in Formula 1, that of 1950, contained seven grands prix. Seven circuits, therefore, three of which are incredibly still used (Silverstone, Montecarlo, Monza), one... almost (Spa-Francorchamps), two completely abandoned (Bremgarten, Reims).
Here are some of the tracks on which the Formula 1 has left traces of its history, but which are no longer part, for various reasons, of the calendar.
Let's start with the first two decades.
Browse the gallery of abandoned Formula 1 circuits.