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First, it's all American!
Second, it's all about track and field, not basketball!
Thirdly, Alan Johnson holds the world record in the first 110m hurdles and Michael Johnson holds the world record in the first 100m and 200m!!
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It's American, Alain is 110 hurdles, Mike is 100 200 400 sprints far! Thank you.
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On the first floor, Michael Johnson doesn't seem to run 100, right?
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Alain Johansson is a 110m hurdler and a former hegemon.
Michael Johnson is a sprinter who focuses on the 100 meters, 200 meters.
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It is not at all a level, and it is impossible to distinguish between ......
But ask the landlord: Who are the two in front of you......
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Yes, the 200 and 400, 200 previous world records are held by him.
Michael Johnson, who showed athletic prowess in high school, won the men's 200m and 400m at the 1988 U.S. Track and Field Championships, won 58 consecutive titles in his strongest event, the 400m, between 1990 and 1997, and was also a 200m runner, winning 32 200m titles between 1990-92. On June 23, 1996, at the U.S. Olympic track and field qualifiers, Michael Johnson broke the men's 200m world record that had been dormant for 17 years by second.
At Atlanta 1996, Michael Johnson showed the best combination of speed and power in track history when he won the men's 200m and 400m, both of which had not been won by a male athlete at the same Olympic Games. In the 400m, he quickly won by an Olympic record of seconds, and then broke his own world record in the 200m, with a new record of seconds. The 200m world record and two gold medals in the 200m and 400m at the Atlanta Olympics culminated Michael Johnson's career.
Three years after his historic performance at Atlanta 1996, Johnson broke Reynolds' 11-year-old world record in the 400m final at the 1999 World Championships. It was also his fourth consecutive 400m world title, and three days later he took home the 4,400m relay gold medal, becoming the first man in history to win nine world gold medals. His upright running posture with his neck raised became a unique sight on the 400-meter course.
At Sydney 2000, at the age of 33, he won the 400m (43.84 seconds) and the 4x400m (last bar), after which he retired with honor.