Genzebe Dibaba DESTROYS Women's 1 Mile - Lausanne Diamond League 2017

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  • čas přidán 17. 07. 2017
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  • Sport

Komentáře • 34

  • @borood1188
    @borood1188 Před 5 lety +16

    Everytime she runs she is going for a world record.

  • @borood1188
    @borood1188 Před 6 lety +18

    Genzebe the greatest ever

    • @MrEmanResu
      @MrEmanResu Před 5 lety

      Except for her sister, Tirunesh.

    • @borood1188
      @borood1188 Před 5 lety +1

      MrEmanResu No chance, bud
      Genzebe: 8 world records
      Tirunesh: 1 world record
      Genzebe is also top three all time in five additional events. Tirunesh is not even top ten in any event other than her world record event.

    • @sagahammer
      @sagahammer Před 5 lety +2

      Bo Rood No Tirunesh won race after race after race, and destroyed the best athletes winning all the olympic golds and the world championships. She ran faster last laps than the winner of the 800 metres Kelly Holmes. Genzebe is great but Tirunesh was the greatest.

    • @borood1188
      @borood1188 Před 5 lety

      @@sagahammer Tirunesh is nowhere near Genzebe. Get off drugs,man.

    • @betht840
      @betht840 Před 3 lety +2

      @@borood1188 wtf? Tirunsh was never beaten in 10000m race for 11 years. Tirunesh is a legend.. Then comes her sister.

  • @markmccoskrie2871
    @markmccoskrie2871 Před 6 lety +3

    Genzebe Dibaba you can do it, maybe run more evenly paced laps next time. Good luck.

  • @elly_twell
    @elly_twell Před rokem

    Dibaba is an inspiration 😳❤️

  • @tadessetegegne6429
    @tadessetegegne6429 Před 5 lety +3

    የኛ አንበሳ አርገሽ ምታኮሪን እኮ እድሜና ጤና ይስጥሽ

  • @Redseaafar00
    @Redseaafar00 Před 6 lety +3

    ጅግና

  • @tegesttegest4135
    @tegesttegest4135 Před 6 lety +2

    sweet

  • @rajaejazmehmood6276
    @rajaejazmehmood6276 Před 5 lety +2

    Sweet I love you more

  • @sudhirtalekar5464
    @sudhirtalekar5464 Před 5 lety

    GREAT RUN.

  • @borood1188
    @borood1188 Před 4 lety +1

    Nakaayi and her life as a rabbit before she became gold medalist

  • @SavikujaTero
    @SavikujaTero Před 2 lety +2

    Nowadays it looks like some athletes are taking part in beauty content. Some of them look better than the models.

  • @saronham760
    @saronham760 Před 6 lety +10

    Really she destroyed all womens . coz she is Ethiopian!!!!

    • @michaelclayton2323
      @michaelclayton2323 Před 5 lety +2

      because she trains hard and loves herself enough to set high goals with her talents. much is given, much is required in returned. I have ran 5 marathons in my life... so I would know about running and heart.

  • @jeffrey64
    @jeffrey64 Před 5 lety

    These announcers and their "expertise!!"

  • @lukapp6902
    @lukapp6902 Před 6 lety +2

    Ethiopia is best

  • @ndspeedster
    @ndspeedster Před 5 lety +3

    and im sure back then that Russian woman was using steroids like they all were back in the day.

  • @PJOh
    @PJOh Před 2 lety

    One of the articles I read about the so-called Cohen Modal Haplotype mentioned that the Arsi in Ethiopia have this Kohanim sub-haplotype. The famous Dibaba family of distance runners is of Arsi background, according to my Tigrayan friend. They are well known for their strength and for their talent in breeding the best animals.
    One caution about the article is that you should take the deep time dating with a grain of salt. But some have deduced that the theoretical "Aaron haCohen" lived about 3,000-3,500 years ago; so if that is the Aaron of the Bible, it would match up perfectly with Biblical chronology.
    Interestingly, as the article mentions, a very large percentage of Asians are members of the same larger haplogroup from which the Aaronic subgroup descended. By extension, it would appear that many first nations may also be part of the larger group of which the Aaronic group is a subclass. I wonder whether the larger group could be related to Melchizedek, whom some identify as Shem.
    The Cohen Modal Haplogroup appears most concentrated in the area of southern Arabia and the Western part of the Caspian Sea, which would be where Azerbaijan and Chechnya are. It is somewhat less concentrated in the horn of Africa, Sudan, and the rest of Western Asia, but still quite high. Much of that the area of present-day Yemen used to be part of the Aksumite kingdom.
    Interestingly, one of the common surnames of the Cohanim is "Kagan". Might that have something to do with the Turkic Kaganates, for example, some of which extended across the entire latitude of Asia? Bear in mind that many linguists believe Korean and Turkic languages are strongly related languages. It would appear that they both have common ancestral origins in the ancient land of Ur where Abraham originated.
    The strong genetic relation between the Arsi Oromo and many of the Asians in East Asia seems to be another link between the Omotic people, of which the Arsi are members, and the Mandarin Chinese, both of whom have tonal languages.
    Here are some key excerpts of the article:
    "If you assume that Aaron HaCohen started the Cohen line (which is a core assumption in Orthodox Judaism), then ALL of his male descendants will be in the same Haplogroup.
    The original ancestor of Cohanim is very likely from the J1 lineage. Specifically, J1-P58 lineage and in particular ZS227 seems to be the Cohen paternal line.
    The two most common Jewish subgroup of J1-P58 are Z18297 and ZS227. ZS227 includes the Cohanim haplotype [1].
    Here is J1 from Wikipedia:
    Men from this lineage share a common paternal ancestor, which is demonstrated and defined by the presence of the SNP mutation referred to as M267, which was announced in (Cinnioğlu 2004). This haplogroup is found today in significant frequencies in many areas in or near the Middle East, and parts of the Caucasus, Sudan and Ethiopia. It is also found in high frequencies in parts of North Africa, Southern Europe, and amongst Jewish groups, especially those with Cohen surnames. It can also be found much less commonly, but still occasionally in significant amounts, throughout Europe and as far east as Central Asia and the Indian Subcontinent. [2]
    J1-P58, the Central Semitic branch of J1, appears to have expanded from Israel/Palestine/Jordan across the Arabian peninsula during the Bronze Age, from approximately 3,500 to 2,500 BCE (5500-4500 years ago) [3, 1].
    . . .
    Cohen Modal Haplotype (CMH)
    The original scientific research was based on the hypothesis that a majority of present-day Jewish Kohanim share a pattern of values for 6 unique markers (YSTR), which researchers named the Cohen Modal Haplotype (CMH) [4].
    Of those who did belong to Haplogroup J, the Kohanim were more than twice as likely to have a pattern close to the CMH-6, suggesting a much more recent common ancestry for most of them compared to an average non-Cohen Jew of Haplogroup J [4].
    This means that you need to belong in J to have the CMH [4].
    Additional research using 12 unique markers, which is more accurate, indicated that about half of contemporary Jewish Kohanim shared Y-chromosomal J1 M267, specifically haplogroup J-P58 (also called J1c3). Other Kohanim groups share a different ancestry, including haplogroup J2a (J-M410). Both of these groups are in the “J” line [4].
    Genetics research published in 2013 and 2016 for haplogroup J1 places the Y-chromosomal Aaron within subgroup Z18271, with an age estimate 2,638 - 3,280 years ago [4].
    In a study published in 2009, based on genotypes at 12 markers (Y-STRs), they identified an extended CMH on the J-P58* background that predominates in both Ashkenazi and non-Ashkenazi Cohanim and is remarkably absent in non-Jews [5].
    The estimated divergence time of this lineage based on 17 STRs is 3,190 +/- 1,090 years. These results support the hypothesis of a common origin of the CMH in the Near East well before the dispersion of the Jewish people into separate communities, and indicate that the majority of contemporary Jewish priests descend from a limited number of paternal lineages [5].
    . . . what the study found was that people who are Cohanim were way more likely to be from the J group, particularly J-P58.
    So it’s likely that Cohanim descended from that individual with those markers. This is used as evidence that Cohanim came from one 1 male.
    So if there is an Aaron Hacohen, J-P58 is probably his lineage (but to be 3000-3500 year ago, it would need to be a subgroup of J1-P58 such as ZS227), and anyone who isn’t in that group got mixed up with being a Cohen somewhere in the last 3000 years."

    • @mubatsievonne4649
      @mubatsievonne4649 Před 9 měsíci

      Why are you giving people anthropology lessons?I can bet the rest of the readers are as bored as I am.Go to the university and give your lecture,this is hardly the forum.

  • @bontuoromia8516
    @bontuoromia8516 Před 6 lety +5

    Don't forget she's beautiful Oromo girl 😍😍😍😍😍😍😍

  • @sephakabathomaja3091
    @sephakabathomaja3091 Před 5 lety

    Semenya and Dibaba must meet.

    • @jonamstutz227
      @jonamstutz227 Před 4 lety +1

      Semenya shouldnt be allowed to run w women...unfair advantage as transgender...in fact I believe "she" has already been ruled not allowed in womens competition...and rightly so

    • @onigbajamo
      @onigbajamo Před 2 lety +1

      @@jonamstutz227 Semenya isn't transgender, idiot.

  • @abyssiniaethiopia7667
    @abyssiniaethiopia7667 Před 2 lety

    Ethiopia is best