Joke Collection Website - Cold jokes - Physical fitness test should not be an obstacle to competition. How anti-human is the physical examination?

Physical fitness test should not be an obstacle to competition. How anti-human is the physical examination?

Recently, the qualifying round of the 2020 national swimming championship season Tokyo Olympic Games is in full swing, but during the competition, many athletes failed to advance to the finals because of unqualified physical examination results, and even if you achieved excellent results in the competition, you failed to meet the standards because of physical fitness tests.

Among them, Olympic champion Ye finished third in the women's 400-meter individual medley preliminaries with a score of 4 minutes 43.93 seconds. However, because her physical fitness test scores were not up to standard, she ranked ninth and could not advance to the final, and not only Ye, but also Fu Jian and them won the first place in the preliminaries respectively. Wang Jianjia and breaking the Asian record also missed the final because of the unqualified medical examination results. Not only did Ye, Fu and Wang Jianjia fail to pass the final because of the unqualified physical examination results, but there were many famous swimmers before them who failed the physical fitness test and could not advance to the final.

Therefore, in the eyes of many people, physical examination has become a stumbling block for these athletes to reach the Tokyo Olympic Games, and it is also the biggest stumbling block on their Olympic road. There are ten items in the physical examination, including squat, push-ups and pull-ups for 3 kilometers. According to the relevant regulations, male athletes must run 3 kilometers within 1 1 minute to get full marks in this event, while female athletes must run within 1 minute.

So this is a great test for these athletes, especially for those athletes whose personal events have little to do with running. Some netizens said that it would be a bit funny not to know how to conduct targeted tests in combination with athletes' own occupations.