There have been two necessities for the Stade de France monitor for the 2024 Paris Olympics: make it purple and make it quick.
The color was, in fittingly Parisian vogue, about creating a novel stage for athletes to carry out. A lighter hue than the standard purple tracks, following within the footsteps of the 2016 Olympics in Rio de Janeiro, the place the monitor was navy blue and never purple for the primary time.
Making it sooner just isn’t as easy as a design alternative. In reality, a ‘quick monitor’ has develop into probably the most hackneyed of athletics sayings — no host metropolis goes to ask for a gradual one, are they?
However Paris was quick: seven Olympic information and three monitor and area world information have been set on the Video games. This excludes world-best decathlon performances and area occasions (hammer throw, shot put), which don’t use a runway or the monitor.
Mixed, the variety of Olympic/world information has trended upwards at latest Video games: 5 in London (2012); six in Rio; 10 in Tokyo (2020) and the identical once more in Paris. It’s an oversimplification that athletes are getting greater, sooner and stronger. People are additionally getting smarter and expertise is getting higher.
T&F Olympic/World information, Paris 2024
Workforce USA
4x400m combined relay
USA
World document
Joshua Cheptegei
10000m
Uganda
Olympic document
Mondo Duplantis
Pole vault
Sweden
World document
Cole Hocker
1500m
USA
Olympic document
Winfred Yavi
3000m steeplechase
Bahrain
Olympic document
Arshad Nadeem
Javelin
Pakistan
Olympic document
Sydney McLaughlin-Levrone
400m hurdles
USA
World document
Marileidy Paulino
400m
Dominican Republic
Olympic document
Religion Kipyegon
1500m
Kenya
Olympic document
USA males
4x400m
USA
Olympic document
It was not simply that information went in Paris, however how. 13 males ran faster than Kenenisa Bekele’s 10,000m Olympic document from 2008 (27:01), with Uganda’s Joshua Cheptegei profitable in 26:43.
4 males broke Jakob Ingebrigtsen’s 1500m Olympic document from Tokyo, together with Ingebrigtsen, just for him to not medal. 4 girls broke Religion Kipyegon’s 1500m Olympic document, additionally from Tokyo, with Kipyegon profitable in 3:51.
GO DEEPER
How the Ingebrigtsen-Kerr 1500m rivalry was pushed to new heights – though neither man received
The ladies’s 400m ultimate was the quickest ever, with all 9 athletes going underneath 50 seconds. The lads’s 100m ultimate was the toughest to qualify for in Olympic historical past. By no means earlier than had a sub-10 second semi-final not assured a spot.
The ultimate itself was the deepest of all time, the one occasion of all 9 males going sub-10 in a wind-legal race, and the smallest first-to-eighth hole in a world ultimate — 0.12 seconds separated Noah Lyles’ gold and Indirect Seville.
Equally, the boys’s 800m ultimate was the primary occasion of 4 males operating underneath 1:42 in the identical race and that was a race the place the Olympic document wasn’t damaged.
Maurizio Stroppiana is the vp of Mondo, an Italian firm that produces artificial athletics tracks. Mondo first made an Olympics monitor for Moscow in 1980, 12 years and three Video games after they have been first launched at Mexico Metropolis in 1968. Mondo have manufactured each monitor since Barcelona in 1992.
“Mondo tracks are recognized to be the quickest on the planet, with 300-plus information so far and over 70 per cent of all present information,” says Stroppiana.
When you assume numbers like that imply Mondo have cracked the science of creating fast tracks, they form of have, however the science is much less good than you may count on. Mondo’s tracks are constructed from “vulcanised rubber”, says Stroppiana.
When Paris hosted the Olympics in 1924, it was on a cinder monitor. “It was like dust,” explains Stroppiana. “So, aside from getting soiled, it was extra like operating in a area versus operating on a 400m (artificial) monitor”.
‘Quick tracks’ is one thing of a misnomer. The athlete is quick (or not), it’s about making a monitor environment friendly. “We are attempting to minimise the vitality that’s misplaced. The monitor compresses (because the foot hits the monitor) and it’ll then return that vitality in probably the most environment friendly method, though part of it would actually be misplaced,” says Stroppiana.
Athletes produce round thrice their physique weight in vertical pressure when operating. How a lot of that’s translated into horizontal pressure — them transferring forwards — is dependent upon the “braking and propulsive forces”, Stroppiana says.
Mondo carried out “elliptical air cells throughout the base layer of the monitor”, which they discovered to have a double profit: a 2.6 per cent improve in web horizontal vitality return, and a 1.9 per cent enchancment in shock absorption.
It’s about defending athletes whereas making an attempt to maximise efficiency, although these issues are interrelated. “The monitor has to offer a sure degree of consolation and cushion,” says Stroppiana.
He outlines that the determinants of maximal vitality return are the “kind of fabric, the elasticity of the fabric. We now have these aerosols on the underside of the monitor. That helps the cushioning impact and the way that vitality is returning as equally as attainable”.
“What we observed within the earlier monitor (Tokyo) is that, relying on the place the athlete stepped (with the foot), you get totally different outcomes. We modified the form to offer a extra uniform response and to extend the world of despair of the monitor,” says Stroppiana.
“This makes the monitor higher as a result of they won’t really feel any distinction, the elastic response is precisely the identical all through the monitor to ensure that the rhythm of the athlete (will) be maintained.”
If that sounds easy and easy, it isn’t. Stroppiana says “it took us about two years to fine-tune this new answer. We developed this mathematical mannequin on the College of Milan”. It lets them run simulations and take a look at new combos sooner. The four-year Olympic cycle provides very best preparation time.
One fantasy Stroppiana is eager to bust is monitor hardness. “These narratives began within the 1996 (Atlanta) Olympic Video games as a result of that they had some nice document occasions,” he says. “They began saying, ‘Sure it’s quick, it’s quick as a result of it’s exhausting’. And since then we haven’t been in a position to change that standpoint.”
How exhausting is the Paris monitor? “It’s softer than earlier than,” says Stroppiana. “We actually got here to grasp that’s not a very good answer making the monitor exhausting. And in addition, (it) doesn’t essentially translate into sooner occasions. In reality, it might really result in damage. So now we have modified that within the final, six, seven years.”
They use a lower-carbon manufacturing technique and extra sustainable supplies now than earlier than, together with calcium carbonate from mussel shells.
Unsurprisingly, it isn’t low-cost. Stroppiana costs the Paris monitor at “wherever from two to 3 million”, explaining that the highest artificial half “is barely 14 millimetres thick. It’s fairly skinny”. He says that tracks are likely to final round 15 years earlier than needing alternative or relaying.
Many years of educational analysis element the impression of altitude (positively for sprints, with the lowered air resistance; negatively for distance operating, with the lowered oxygen) and wind.
The 1968 Olympics had the added impression of being the highest-altitude summer season Video games ever, at over 2,000m (7,000 ft). Sprinting and leaping information have been smashed to items. Of the 12 dash occasions, solely the ladies’s 400m didn’t see an Olympic or world document, however distance races have been gradual.
Dash performances over 1,000 metres usually are not thought of authorized and ‘altitude-assisted’, with a following wind of as much as two metres the edge for wind-legal dash performances.
It means a very good monitor wants the fitting location to be optimum for (authorized) information. Saint-Denis, the place Stade de France is located in northern Paris, is inside 50 metres of sea degree. Stroppiana talks concerning the stadium making a “microclimate” to “present extra beneficial (efficiency) circumstances”.
He explains that “the stadium’s structure, together with its oval form and partially coated roof, helps to scale back wind interference. The stadium’s seating association and the peak of the stands contribute to shielding the monitor”.
Trying forward, the 2028 Video games in Los Angeles, USA, and the 2032 Video games in Brisbane, Australia, are each in coastal cities.
For Stroppiana, the way forward for track-making lies in Mondo working with shoe/spike manufacturers, who’re notoriously “secretive about their very own information. Now there may be this motion towards open innovation, which implies collaborating inside an business, however not via competing manufacturers”.
“I feel the following evolution of the monitor surfaces is to make changes for these totally different (area) disciplines — an space of enchancment for all of the runways,” says Stroppiana.
He went on to say that Mondo works with Adidas, Nike, Asics, ON and Puma, amongst others, and collaborated with the latter for Paris.
“Earlier than Tokyo, we labored with Asics as a result of they gave us some perception. We put in our monitor at their analysis laboratory and so they have been testing differing kinds, totally different options, to see which one (monitor) could be finest.
“They do their very own analysis and so they attempt to guarantee that the (monitor/spike) interplay is nearly as good as attainable, involved about how the spike will seize onto the floor, which is important.”
Totally different occasions require totally different size spikes. Stroppiana speaks of 400m spikes having “totally different properties on the right-hand facet” to help bend operating (as the surface of the foot hits the monitor first on touchdown and athletes run round to the left).
There’s a trade-off to be achieved: Mondo “need to assure the right traction however minimise the friction. So if the spikes have been to penetrate an excessive amount of on the floor, then it slows the athletes down”, says Stroppiana. “This is without doubt one of the traits of the highest put on layer: it needs to be spike resistant.”
Exceptions from which are pole vault and javelin as a result of athletes are transferring with a lot pressure that the spike must penetrate the floor to keep away from damage.
“In Paris, in the event you look carefully on the javelin runway, the final portion is barely totally different in color (to the monitor)” says Stroppiana. “Why? As a result of that part has been particularly engineered for javelin throwers. We labored with the German group and the Finnish group to check totally different options”. He says they needed a runway with “extra spike resistance and to have a greater grip.
“Usually the monitor needs to be the identical. You can’t have totally different properties for various areas. However for javelin, they (World Athletics) accepted these modifications.” It labored: Pakistan’s Arshad Nadeem smashed the Olympic document by over 2.5m, throwing 92.97m, to earn Pakistan’s first athletics gold.
Stroppiana is optimistic a few future with extra changes. “For the lengthy distance, you might create a piece the place it’s particularly made,” he says, suggesting an inside lane. “In reality, now we have performed some tracks like this — just for coaching, not for competitors — the place you’ve got a differentiated elastic response”.
There’s little question the 2028 LA monitor will probably be much more environment friendly. Mondo have 4 years to check and re-test new combos and spike manufacturers to work with. The principle query that continues to be is: what color will or not it’s?
(Prime photograph: Nathan Laine/Bloomberg by way of Getty Pictures)