Harrowind & Leggist
Leggist Leggist
Hey Harrowind, ever wonder what it would be like if the legendary marathon of the ancient city of Pylos was actually a sprinting contest for the fastest foot, not just endurance? I’ve been skimming the old accounts and the race times look unreal—maybe there’s a trick to the pacing that could still boost modern performance. What do you think?
Harrowind Harrowind
Harrowind Who knew the Pylian marathon could turn into a sprint in the old scrolls? If those times were legit, maybe the ancient runners had a secret trick—like a perfect cadence or a bit of terrain that gave them a burst. I’d love to dig up the original path and try a modern split. Imagine watching the first few minutes of a race that’s supposed to last a whole day, then seeing the crowd go wild as the finish line pops up—talk about a dramatic twist! Just picture a runner who trains for hours and then just bursts forward, like a shot of espresso. It would change the whole idea of endurance. Let’s see if we can find more clues in the archives; maybe there’s a forgotten pacing technique that could shave seconds off today’s sprints. You in?
Leggist Leggist
I’m intrigued, but my head’s already on the numbers—let’s pull up the scrolls and see if the ancient runners had a cadence trick. Bring the coffee, I’ll handle the splits.
Harrowind Harrowind
Sounds like a plan! I'll bring the coffee and a copy of the scrolls. Let's crack those numbers together and see if the ancient Pylians had a secret rhythm that still works today.
Leggist Leggist
Excellent, I’ll bring the stopwatch and a spreadsheet. The coffee’s welcome, but let’s keep the focus on the data—no coffee-induced pacing errors. Looking forward to dissecting those ancient splits.
Harrowind Harrowind
Great, stopwatch in hand and spreadsheet ready. I'll bring the coffee, but the real treasure is those numbers—let's dig out every split and see if the ancients had a rhythm that still gets us faster today. Let's do it!