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The five hardest records to break at the Olympics: Phelps won 23 gold medals, and only one yellow man made the list

As we all know, records are used to break, but these five Olympic records, the younger generation can only look up. Although "faster, higher, stronger" is the spirit of the Olympic Games in previous years, and each Olympic Games has countless outstanding young people trying to create their own Olympic records, but there are some records, let alone broken, even equalization is almost impossible!

Bolt 100m Olympic record: 9.63 seconds

The five hardest records to break at the Olympics: Phelps won 23 gold medals, and only one yellow man made the list

As a 100-meter trapeze man seen once in a century, Bolt, a sprinter from Jamaica, is undoubtedly the eternal god of the 100-meter event. Bolt has both world records and Olympic records in the 100-meter event, and in the 2008 Beijing Olympic Games, Bolt set an Olympic record of 9.68 seconds, and in the London Olympic Games in 2012, he set his 100 meters to 9.63 seconds! In addition, Bolt also has a world record of 100 meters , 9.58 seconds , which alone will take at least 50 years to surpass.

Isinbayeva pole vault Olympic record: 5 m 05

The five hardest records to break at the Olympics: Phelps won 23 gold medals, and only one yellow man made the list

Isinbayeva, the "queen of pole vaulting" from Russia, is also the most dominant athlete in pole vaulting in athletics. She was the first woman to break the pole vault to 5 meters, since breaking the world record in 2003, Isinbayeva has set a new pole vault record 28 times, especially at the 2008 Beijing Olympic Games, Isinbayeva not only set a new Olympic record with a score of 5.05 meters, but also set a new world record at that time.

Phelps: 23 gold medals

The five hardest records to break at the Olympics: Phelps won 23 gold medals, and only one yellow man made the list

Nicknamed "Flying Fish", American swimmer Michael Phelps is undoubtedly a legend in the swimming world, and at the Beijing Olympic Games, Phelps set a record, winning 8 gold medals in a single Olympic Games. In the end, Phelps' career total olympic gold medals were 23, the first in Olympic history, and the second place was only 9, which can be said to pull this gap to the point where it is impossible to break.

Liu Xiang 110m hurdles: 12.91 seconds

The five hardest records to break at the Olympics: Phelps won 23 gold medals, and only one yellow man made the list

As China's best track and field athlete, liu xiang ran a perfect time of 12.91 seconds in the 110-meter hurdles at the 2004 Athens Olympic Games, helping China win the first gold medal in the 110-meter hurdles while also creating olympic records. Until now, even in the past 17 years, no athlete has been able to break Liu Xiang's record.

Uwe-Horn javelin record: 104.8 m

The five hardest records to break at the Olympics: Phelps won 23 gold medals, and only one yellow man made the list

The German javelin thrower, Uwe Horn, has an unbreakable record: the javelin record of 104.8 meters he set at the 1984 Berlin Olympics. What is this concept? You know, before he threw this result, the best olympic javelin was 99.72 meters, which directly set a new record of 5.18 meters! Become the first athlete in the history of human sports to break through the 100-meter mark. Subsequently, because Horn's 100-meter performance was too far, in order not to hurt the audience by mistake, the center of gravity of the javelin was shifted forward by 4 centimeters, reducing the distance of the javelin's sliding. As a result, this record is no longer possible to break. (ikuet)