Post anything to do with Golden men winning here
you have to post 3
>>6120028>Golden men winning hereNo such thing, you don't even have 3 LMAO
>>6120029thx didn't know>>6120031just post anything to do with Golden men winning man, can be anything, geopolitics related, love, etc.
>>6120028fastest 60m split in history was ran by a Golden man, not a white man, not a black man
>>6120033sorry I was just being a dick
ohhhhh you mean yellow
>>6120028Some days I wish I was dead lol anyone else feel the same way. I regret my past actions god forgive me. I hope things are well with everyone
>>6120028>>6120034So golden men means chinese?
>goldenmore like comedy gold
STAY WINNING GOLDEN BOYS! THE WHITE MAN WILL RUE THEY DAY HE LAUGHED AT OUR PENIS!
Maybe use another word because people think "golden showers" when you say golden men
>>6120122I'm pretty sure thats exactly what he meant.
>>6120034>Golden manwhat, why is he not yellow.ohhhh
>>6120028There's already a piss threat on gif
>>6120034Wow look at that yellow boy go! Good for him.
GOLD BOYS HAVE HUGE PENIS! GOLD BOYS MAKE MICROHIP! ALL GIRL LOVE GOLD BOY!!!
AMERICAN DRIVE BIG TRUCK BECAUSE HE HAVE SMALL PENISGOLD BOY MAKE SMALL CHIP BECAUSE HE HAS BIG PENIS
ooooh you guys are talking about chinks i clicked on this thread confused thinking "wtf is golden man"looks like chinks have invented a new copium for being dicklet manlet bugpeopleLMAO you guys are so sadno type of man on this earth will ever be as insecure as chinksyou guys are more insecure than pajeets and thats impressive>golden>manHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA
>>6120221relax buddy
let the gold boy have his thread
cmon gold boy, give us more videos of cool sexy gold boys
ooh I get it you're not yellow you're gold, haha ok buddy
lol ricelet could only manage 3 webms
just lol at all the seethingthe fuck is wrong with beige mutts and incel shitskins that makes them have such meltdowns upon seeing a Golden man win at lifedoes it demonstrate to them their own inferiority?pathetic
>mr president, another gold man webm just dropped
Funny part is that every woman who decides to get rice'd ends up feeling like killing themselves when they see the chink-eyed muttgoblin they give birth to.
>>6120461wrong, Golden men have the most eugenic ubermensch-producing genetics
>>6120221This guy bombed the WMAF thread and isn't even making this AMWF thread out of appreciation, he's just mad
>>6120463every single person in this video is ugly and needs to be euthanized.
YELLOWMAN BIG AND STRONG, HAVE BIG PENISWHITE MAN VERY SMALL, VERY TEENY TINY PENISYELLOW MAN TAKE YOUR WOMEN
>>6120454>Golden>mfw
>>6120463>teens calling their parents mommy and daddythat's fuckin weird, man.
For a supposedly golden people, these guys sure are obsessed with bleaching their genes and getting all that yellow out.
>>6120463>>6120454>>6120033>>6120028Pretty telling that "winning" to you means being with a good looking white woman
STAY WINNING GOLDEN BOYS YOULL GET A WHITE WOMAN SOMEDAY DONT LET THESE RACIST TELL YOU YOURE WORTHLESS
>>6120759>>6120778has nothing to do with race bro, pretty telling that that’s the first thing you reach forGolden men are WINNING because we pull the top tiers of every race^ Pokimane who is North African
>>6120712>>6120667>being this mad spawn of Golden men have a loving family instead of engaging in incest or getting sexually assaulted like certain other demographics
>>6120794This whole thread is about nothing other than race. Now back to work yellow boy, my iphone won't make itself.
>>6120778Everyone wants a hot white bitch
>>6120454One thing I've noticed, white girls that like asians do not like shitskins, white girls that like shitskins do not like asians
imagine woman doing somethibg so cute and not even kissing her or really acknowledging it
>>6120101Ginseng or turmeric I think. or curry maybe
>>6120797how does it feel to be a pathetic skinny fat ugloid while Golden men are mogging in the olympics?>>6120813Golden men attract top tier wifey women of all races, really just that simple>>6120820haha ikr, Golden men are taking the "no simping" thing too far
>>61210562nd weakest race after indians.
>>6121063> best muscle insertions> fastest non-African in the 100m dash> fastest man in water> sweeps weightlifting medals in olympics every 4 years> weak
>>6121093>weakyes
>>6121095alright keep coping
>>6120034Impossibru, nobody can beat Africans at running
>>6120794That number should be 100%
>>6121105> Su Bingtian recorded the fastest 60m split in history during his 9.83-second Asian 100m record run at the 2021 Tokyo Olympics, clocking an incredible \(6.29\) seconds at the 60-meter mark. This split is notable for being faster than Usain Bolt's 60m mark of \(6.31\) seconds during his \(9.58\)s world record 100m race.limiting beliefs don't apply to Golden men
you will never convince me yellow fever isn't a mental disorder for both genders
>>6120028This is a Jewish falseflag.
>>6121145It's not Yellow Fever, it's Golden Staph
>>6120028disgusting
>Su Bingtian (Chinese: 苏炳添; pinyin: Sū Bǐngtiān; born 29 August 1989)[7] is a Chinese former track and field athlete specializing in the 100 metres event. He was the first-ever Asian-born sprinter to break the 10-second barrier and remains the only Asian sprinter to ever break 9.9 seconds.
Su's personal best of 9.83 seconds makes him the all-time 10th-fastest man in the history of 100 metres at the Olympics, the all-time 19th-fastest man in the history of the 100 m event,[10] and the current holder of the 100 m Asian record.[11] Su's personal best in the 60 metres of 6.42 seconds placed him within the all-time top six in the event.
>At the 2020 Tokyo Olympics, Su made history by becoming the first sprinter of non-African descent to reach the Olympic 100 m final since 1980. In the semi-final, as well as setting his 100 m personal best (9.83), Su also ran the fastest 30 m and 60 m ever recorded under any conditions (3.73 and 6.29 seconds).[14] Su was a silver medalist at the World Indoor Championships in 2018, the gold medalist at the 2018 Asian Games 100 m, a silver medalist in the 4 × 100 m relay at the World Relays in 2015, and a bronze medalist in the 4 × 100 m relay at the 2020 Tokyo Olympics.
>Su's career started with his entry into the Guangdong provincial track and field team in China, known for its history of producing outstanding national-level Chinese short distance sprinters and warm weather year-round which is conducive to outdoor track training. His first professional track coach and mentor Yuan Guoqiang was the first Chinese 100 m national record holder in the early 80s at the start of digital-timing era and was a short (5'6) sprinter himself. When Su's admittance into Guangdong Dong track and field team was met with initial resistance by other coaches, Yuan Guoqiang took special notice of Su's personality, stride frequency and stride tempo, whom other coaches easily passed on and overlooked for his supposed lack of talent due to Su's short stature at the time.[18] According to Yuan, Su was "methodical, professional, absolutely concentrated, and an intelligent runner. Few athletes I coached were as committed as he was to the sports".Su broke onto the continental scene with three straight wins in the 100 metres on the Asian Grand Prix series in May 2009.[19] His first medal came in the 4 × 100 metres relay at the 11th Chinese Games later that year, where he helped the Guangdong team including Liang Jiahong and Wen Yongyi to the gold medal.[20]He also began representing China internationally that year and shortly after the National Games he won the gold medal over 60 metres at the 2009 Asian Indoor Games, running a personal best of 6.65 seconds.[21] He was selected for the relay at the 2009 Asian Athletics Championships and won a silver medal alongside Guo Fan, Liang Jiahong and Zhang Peimeng. He took the individual 100 m title at the East Asian Games, defeating Japanese rival Shintaro Kimura.[22]He equalled the Chinese indoor record in the 60 m in Chengdu in 2010, running 6.58 seconds.[23] At the 2010 Asian Games he won the relay gold with a national and Games record time.[24]
>During March 2011, Su set a new Chinese national 60 metres indoor record in Chengdu with a time of 6.56 seconds. He went on to establish himself as his country's top male sprinter that year: he won the 100 m title at the 2011 Asian Athletics Championships in a personal best of 10.21 seconds, was the bronze medalist at the 2011 Summer Universiade, then competed at the 2011 World Championships in Athletics in Daegu (running in the heats of the relay).[25] He ended the season by breaking the Chinese record to win the 100 m at the Chinese Athletics Championships with a time of 10.16 seconds, improving upon Zhou Wei and Chen Haijian's former best mark.[26]In 2012, Su qualified for the 2012 IAAF World Indoor Championships, marking his first participation in an indoor IAAF World Championships. Su subsequently reached the semi-final of the 60 m at the 2012 IAAF World Indoor Championships. Later that year, Su also became a 100 m semi-finalist at the 2012 Summer Olympics.[27] He ran a wind-aided (+2.9 m/s) 10.04 seconds at the start of the outdoor season and ended it by defending his national title in the 100 m.[28] With the Chinese relay team he ran national records twice that season, timing 38.71 seconds in May and improving to 38.38 seconds with Guo Fan, Liang Jiahong and Zhang Peimeng in the heats of the Olympics.[29]His 2013 began with two 60 m national records in Nanjing, where he ran 6.56 seconds and then 6.55 seconds.[30] Zhang Peimeng beat Su's 100 m national record in May 2013, but Su quickly responded with a personal best of 10.06 seconds at the IAAF World Challenge Beijing.
>Later that year, Su qualified for the 2013 IAAF World Championships, marking his first participation in an outdoor IAAF World Championships in an individual event. On 10 August 2013, Su raced in the sixth heat of the first round in the 100 metres, subsequently qualifying to the semi-finals by clocking 10.16 seconds. The following day, he was drawn into the first semi-final against former world champion Justin Gatlin. Su was disqualified in the race due to his false start, thereby rendering him unable to progress to the finals.[32] Su's compatriot Zhang Peimeng also once again replaced Su as the 100 m national record holder, by clocking a time of 10.00 seconds in the semi-finals of the 2013 IAAF World Championships.>Starting from 2014, Su Bingtian was part of the Chinese Track and Field initiative led by its national head coach Yuan Guoqiang (Su's early mentor and provincial coach in Guangdong Track and Field team) that 1) sent its top track athletes to USA for more systematic and scientific training in order to be competitive internationally 2) hired competent foreign track coaches to coach locally at China. They trained at the IMF Academy Track & Field and Cross Country located at Florida.[33] Su's aim was to break 10 second barrier through participating in this initiative.
>It was through this initiative that Su first met his later mentor and coach Randy Huntington, who was responsible for coaching Chinese national team of long jumpers at the time in China. Their encounter was not pre-planned. It was by coincidence that Randy Huntington chanced upon Su's training nearby. Su's decision to change his starting leg was a reaction to Randy Huntington's suggestion. Randy performed a test on Su by pushing him randomly when he was not prepared, and the first step Su took in reaction to this push was taken by his right one. Randy suggested he changed his starting leg to the right one for that would fit Su's natural neurological pattern better.[34] The aim was to change his entire 100 m pace and allow him suffer from less de-acceleration after the first 60 m while maintaining his advantage at explosive start in the first half of the race. At the beginning of his transition to change starting leg, Su was for a time even slower out of block than a female sprinter when he trained at IMF Academy after he returned to USA. His first 60 m race after implementing the change was only 6.71 and his 100 m best was 10.80.>Yuan Guoqiang said that Su was so obsessed with perfecting his start at the time that he would work on his block start even when he was taking a walk, woke up in the middle of the night and contemplated why he couldn't perform the move as well as other world class athletes, and he would proceed to discuss the matter with his teammate Xie Zhenye.
>On 30 May 2015, at the Prefontaine Classic in Eugene, Oregon, Su clocked a historic 9.99 seconds in the 100 m, becoming the first Asian-born sprinter to achieve a sub-10 second clocking.[36] Su's historic sub-10 second clocking allowed him once again to regain the 100 m national record from compatriot Zhang Peimeng, ending their national record 'tug-of-war' which had begun in 2013. Su's coach Yuan Guoqiang later stated that: "Zhang Peimeng's 10.00 national record set at the World Championships in Moscow has given him (Su) more courage; it convinced him (Su) even more that a sub-10 clocking was not an impossible mission for Chinese athletes."[36]>Later that year, Su qualified for the 2015 IAAF World Championships which were held in his home country of China. On 22 August 2015, Su raced in the first heat of the first round of the 100 metres finishing second behind Asafa Powell in 10.03 seconds. The following day, he was drawn in the first semi-final against defending champion Usain Bolt. Su finished in fourth clocking a time of 9.986 seconds tying Jimmy Vicaut's time in the third semi-final; since they were tied for the eighth-fastest time, they were both entered into the final, marking the first-ever nine-man final in World Championship history. Su then raced in the final, finishing 9th with a time of 10.06 seconds. Su subsequently became the first ever Asian-born athlete to run in a 100 m World Championship final.
@grok what is piss boy yapping about?
JEALOUS WHITE BOY
>On 29 August 2015, Su raced with his teammates Mo Youxue, Xie Zhenye and Zhang Peimeng in the 4 × 100 metres relay. Running the third leg, Su aided his team to a third-place finish in the heats, qualifying them for the final with a then Asian record time of 37.92 seconds. In the final, the Chinese team crossed the line in third behind the United States and Jamaica in 38.01 seconds, giving them a Bronze Medal finish. However, subsequent disqualification of the United States due to improper baton exchange meant that the Chinese team were promoted to a Silver medal finish in the Bird's Nest Stadium; with their Bronze being awarded to Canada.>With his eyes on the 2016 Summer Olympics, Su began the year by running the 60 metres at various indoor meets in the US, ultimately qualifying for the 2016 IAAF World Indoor Championships in Portland, Oregon. On 18 March 2016, Su won his 60 metres heat at the championships with a time of 6.64 seconds. Later in the day, Su finished second in his semi-final clocking 6.50 seconds; a new personal best and equalling the Asian record. He went on to finish fifth in the final with a time of 6.54 seconds.
>>6121322>>6121341based brah, thanks for educating these fools
>all that chinkopium>mfw
WHITEY IS ABSOLUTELY SEETHING
>Outdoors, Su ran only three meets before the Olympics. He and his teammates ran and won two 4 × 100 metre relay races in his home country of China; one in Shanghai at the Shanghai Golden Grand Prix; and one in Beijing at the IAAF World Challenge Beijing. On 26 May 2016, Su finished seventh in 100 metres at the 2016 Prefontaine Classic in a wind-aided 10.04 seconds, unable to repeat the success he had on the same track the year before.>Su arrived in Rio de Janeiro for the Olympic Games, having qualified for the 100 metres and the 4 × 100 metres relay. In the 100 metres, Su finished third in his heat in 10.17 seconds, qualifying him as one of the fastest losers for the semi-final. The following day, on August 14, 2016, Su finished fourth in his semi-final in 10.08 seconds; a season's best time. However, his time was unable to qualify him for the final. 4 days later, on 18 August 2016, Su raced with his teammates Tang Xingqiang, Xie Zhenye and Zhang Peimeng in the heats of the 4 × 100 metre relay. Running the third leg, Su helped his team to a second-place finish in their heat behind the United States. Their time of 37.82 seconds set a new Asian record for the event. The following day, the Chinese team finished fourth in the final following a disqualification by team USA, narrowly missing out on an Olympic medal. Su ended his season after the Olympics.
>>6121063Asians are pretty fucking strong, I think mestizos are the second weakest
>On 27 May 2017, Su once again achieved a sub-10 second time in the 100 m at the 2017 Prefontaine Classic with a personal best 9.92 seconds.[41] However, the tailwind (+2.4 m/s) was above the allowed limit of 2.0 m/s, invalidating the time as an official national record or personal best.>Later that year, Su qualified for the 2017 IAAF World Championships. On 4 August 2017, Su raced in the fourth heat of the first round in the 100 metres subsequently qualifying to the semi-finals by clocking 10.03 seconds. The following day, he was drawn in the second semi-final against former world champion Yohan Blake. Su finished in third clocking a time of 10.10 seconds putting him through to the final where he subsequently finished 8th with a time of 10.27 seconds.
>>6121372to be fair, it's usually some offwhite ethny or poopjeet that seethes the hardest in these cases, when they see the Golden men they viewed lower, or as down in the dumps with them, swooping in to grab the tier stacies they could only dream of
>Various stellar performances by Su Bingtian in 2018 made it a historically significant year for Chinese athletics.>On 3 March 2018, Su made history by becoming the first male Chinese sprinter to win an individual IAAF World Indoor Championships medal, as he took silver in the 2018 edition's men's 60 metres final. Su's 6.42 second performance in the event made him the current holder of the 60 m Asian record; it also places Su within the top 6 of all-time 60 metres performances.>On 22 June 2018, Su took gold in the men's 100 metres final of the 2018 IAAF World Challenge meet in Madrid with a historic 9.91 seconds; tying the Asian record previously set by Nigerian-born Qatari Femi Ogunode.[43] Su's result of 9.91 seconds also simultaneously allowed him to regain his 100 m national record which compatriot Xie Zhenye had broken only three days earlier with a time of 9.97 seconds.[44] One week later, Su continued his fantastic form by equalling his 9.91-second Asian record at the 2018 Meeting de Paris.
>On 26 August 2018, Su won the gold medal in the men's 100 metres event at the 2018 Asian Games. He won the event with a time of 9.92 seconds breaking the Asian Games record previously set by Femi Ogunode at the 2014 Asian Games.[46]>Representing team Asia-Pacific, Su capped off his record-breaking year with a silver medal in the 2018 IAAF Continental Cup men's 100 m final. Su finished 0.02 seconds behind team Americas representative Noah Lyles, with a time of 10.03 seconds.[47]>Reflecting on his 2018 performances, Su remarked the following: "It is really a miraculous and amazing year for me, the most memorable one in my career. I achieved a series of good results, and most importantly, I made such results in competing with the best sprinters in the world, which was quite a boost to my confidence."
>At the end of 2018, Su made it known that his sights were now set on breaking the 9.90 second barrier in the 100 m as his primary goal for 2019.[48]>On 14 February 2019, Su started the year out strong with a 60 m victory at the 2019 AIT International Grand Prix, clocking a stadium-record time of 6.52 seconds.[49] Two days later, Su quickly followed up his good form with a resounding 60 m victory at the Birmingham meet of the 2019 IAAF World Indoor Tour. The winning time was clocked at 6.47 seconds beating out rivals Reece Prescod and Mike Rodgers to the gold.>At the 2019 IAAF World Relays, Su raced with his teammates Wu Zhiqiang, Xie Zhenye and Liang Jinsheng in the 4 × 100 metres relay. Running the third leg, Su aided his teammates to a second-place finish in the heats, qualifying them for the final with a time of 38.51 seconds.[51] In the final, the Chinese team crossed the line in a season's best 38.16 seconds, subsequently missing out on a bronze medal finish by just 0.01 seconds.
>On 1 August 2021, Su clocked a time of 9.827 seconds to win his heat of the 2020 Summer Olympics men's 100 m semi-finals, thereby setting a new Asian record and becoming the second Asian sprinter to have ever qualified for a men's 100 metres Olympic final, after Takayoshi Yoshioka at the 1932 Summer Olympics and the first Asian to qualify for 100 m Olympic Final since the start of the digital timing era. Between 1980 and 2020, Su is the only sprinter of non-African descent to ever make Olympic 100 m Men's Finals in a span of 40 years. In the semi-finals Su was placed ahead of eventual gold-medalist Marcell Jacobs and also achieved the fastest time ever recorded for 60 m-split with 6.29 seconds, also the fastest 60 m all-time under any conditions surpassing both Usain Bolt's prior record of 6.31 seconds for 60 m split in his 100 m world record run and Christian Coleman's 6.34 official indoor world record.[14] Su's 9.83 was also the fastest Olympic semi-final run prior to 2021. However, to this day, Kishane Thompson and Oblique Seville ran faster semi-final Olympic times 9.80 and 9.81 respectively and Su is currently joint third with Noah Lyles at 9.83. [53][circular reference] Su subsequently went on to achieve a sixth-place finish in the final with 9.98 seconds.[54] He and his teammates also qualified for the final of the men's 4 × 100 m relay and finished fourth in that race in 37.79 seconds, equalling the Chinese national record set in 2019.[55] On 18 February 2022, Great Britain was stripped of its silver medal in the men's 4 × 100 m relay after the Court of Arbitration for Sport confirmed CJ Ujah's doping violation. Su and his teammates were subsequently promoted to a bronze medal position
>>6120028>10 imagesching chong chinaman went to milk a cowching chong chinaman didn't know howching chong chinaman pulled the wrong titching chong chinaman was covered in shit
>Su Bingtian (Chinese: 苏炳添; pinyin: Sū Bǐngtiān; born 29 August 1989)[7] is a Chinese former track and field athlete specializing in the 100 metres event. He was the first-ever Asian-born sprinter to break the 10-second barrier and remains the only Asian sprinter to ever break 9.9 seconds.>Su's personal best of 9.83 seconds makes him the all-time 10th-fastest man in the history of 100 metres at the Olympics, the all-time 19th-fastest man in the history of the 100 m event,[10] and the current holder of the 100 m Asian record.[11] Su's personal best in the 60 metres of 6.42 seconds placed him within the all-time top six in the event.>At the 2020 Tokyo Olympics, Su made history by becoming the first sprinter of non-African descent to reach the Olympic 100 m final since 1980. In the semi-final, as well as setting his 100 m personal best (9.83), Su also ran the fastest 30 m and 60 m ever recorded under any conditions (3.73 and 6.29 seconds).[14] Su was a silver medalist at the World Indoor Championships in 2018, the gold medalist at the 2018 Asian Games 100 m, a silver medalist in the 4 × 100 m relay at the World Relays in 2015, and a bronze medalist in the 4 × 100 m relay at the 2020 Tokyo Olympics.
>Su's career started with his entry into the Guangdong provincial track and field team in China, known for its history of producing outstanding national-level Chinese short distance sprinters and warm weather year-round which is conducive to outdoor track training. His first professional track coach and mentor Yuan Guoqiang was the first Chinese 100 m national record holder in the early 80s at the start of digital-timing era and was a short (5'6) sprinter himself. When Su's admittance into Guangdong Dong track and field team was met with initial resistance by other coaches, Yuan Guoqiang took special notice of Su's personality, stride frequency and stride tempo, whom other coaches easily passed on and overlooked for his supposed lack of talent due to Su's short stature at the time.[18] According to Yuan, Su was "methodical, professional, absolutely concentrated, and an intelligent runner. Few athletes I coached were as committed as he was to the sports".>Su broke onto the continental scene with three straight wins in the 100 metres on the Asian Grand Prix series in May 2009.[19] His first medal came in the 4 × 100 metres relay at the 11th Chinese Games later that year, where he helped the Guangdong team including Liang Jiahong and Wen Yongyi to the gold medal.[20]>He also began representing China internationally that year and shortly after the National Games he won the gold medal over 60 metres at the 2009 Asian Indoor Games, running a personal best of 6.65 seconds.[21] He was selected for the relay at the 2009 Asian Athletics Championships and won a silver medal alongside Guo Fan, Liang Jiahong and Zhang Peimeng. He took the individual 100 m title at the East Asian Games, defeating Japanese rival Shintaro Kimura.[22]>He equalled the Chinese indoor record in the 60 m in Chengdu in 2010, running 6.58 seconds.[23] At the 2010 Asian Games he won the relay gold with a national and Games record time.[24]
>During March 2011, Su set a new Chinese national 60 metres indoor record in Chengdu with a time of 6.56 seconds. He went on to establish himself as his country's top male sprinter that year: he won the 100 m title at the 2011 Asian Athletics Championships in a personal best of 10.21 seconds, was the bronze medalist at the 2011 Summer Universiade, then competed at the 2011 World Championships in Athletics in Daegu (running in the heats of the relay).[25] He ended the season by breaking the Chinese record to win the 100 m at the Chinese Athletics Championships with a time of 10.16 seconds, improving upon Zhou Wei and Chen Haijian's former best mark.[26]>In 2012, Su qualified for the 2012 IAAF World Indoor Championships, marking his first participation in an indoor IAAF World Championships. Su subsequently reached the semi-final of the 60 m at the 2012 IAAF World Indoor Championships. Later that year, Su also became a 100 m semi-finalist at the 2012 Summer Olympics.[27] He ran a wind-aided (+2.9 m/s) 10.04 seconds at the start of the outdoor season and ended it by defending his national title in the 100 m.[28] With the Chinese relay team he ran national records twice that season, timing 38.71 seconds in May and improving to 38.38 seconds with Guo Fan, Liang Jiahong and Zhang Peimeng in the heats of the Olympics.[29]>His 2013 began with two 60 m national records in Nanjing, where he ran 6.56 seconds and then 6.55 seconds.[30] Zhang Peimeng beat Su's 100 m national record in May 2013, but Su quickly responded with a personal best of 10.06 seconds at the IAAF World Challenge Beijing.
>In March of 2012 Su became a raging faggot and proceeded to suck every single white cock in Beijing. Later that year, Su qualified for the 2013 IAAF World Championships, marking his first participation in an outdoor IAAF World Championships in an individual event. On 10 August 2013, Su raced in the sixth heat of the first round in the 100 metres, subsequently qualifying to the semi-finals by clocking 10.16 seconds. The following day, he was drawn into the first semi-final against former world champion Justin Gatlin. Su was disqualified in the race due to his false start, thereby rendering him unable to progress to the finals.[32] Su's compatriot Zhang Peimeng also once again replaced Su as the 100 m national record holder, by clocking a time of 10.00 seconds in the semi-finals of the 2013 IAAF World Championships.
>>6120794shocking that 60% of her incels stuck around. The whole point of girl streamers is giving the viewers the false hope of having a 1 in 1,000,000,000,000 chance.
>Later that year, Su graduated to fisting and became a toilet slave for Chad Thundercock, marking his first participation in an outdoor IAAF World Championships in an individual event. On 10 August 2013, Su raced in the sixth heat of the first round in the 100 metres, subsequently qualifying to the semi-finals by clocking 10.16 seconds. The following day, he was drawn into the first semi-final against former world champion Justin Gatlin. Su was disqualified in the race due to his false start, thereby rendering him unable to progress to the finals.[32] Su's compatriot Zhang Peimeng also once again replaced Su as the 100 m national record holder, by clocking a time of 10.00 seconds in the semi-finals of the 2013 IAAF World Championships.>Starting from 2014, Su Bingtian was part of the Chinese extreme cuckolding initiative led by its national head coach Yuan Guoqiang (Su's early mentor and provincial coach in Guangdong Track and Field team) that 1) sent its top track athletes to USA for more systematic and scientific training in order to become the most cucked faggots imaginable 2) hired competent foreign track coaches to coach locally at China. They trained at the IMF Academy Track & Field and Cross Country located at Florida.[33] Su's aim was to become the most cucked an on earth through participating in this initiative.
>It was through this initiative that Su first met his later mentor and coach Randy Huntington, who was responsible for coaching Chinese national team of cuckolds at the time in China. Their encounter was not pre-planned. It was by coincidence that Randy Huntington chanced upon Su's training nearby. Su's decision to change his starting leg was a reaction to Randy Huntington's suggestion. Randy performed a test on Su by sodomizing him randomly when he was not prepared, and the first step Su took in reaction to this gaping was taken by his right one. Randy suggested he changed his starting leg to the right one for that would fit Su's natural neurological pattern better.[34] The aim was to change his entire homosexuality and allow him suffer from less de-gaping after the first 60 minuets while maintaining his advantage at explosive start in the first half of the cucking. At the beginning of his transition to change starting leg, Su was for a time even slower out of block than a female sprinter when he trained at IMF Academy after he returned to USA. His first 60 min cucking after implementing the change was only 6.71 and his 100 min best was 10.80.>Yuan Guoqiang said that Su was so obsessed with perfecting his start at the time that he would work on his block start even when he was taking a walk, woke up in the middle of the night and contemplated why he couldn't perform the move as well as other world class athletes, and he would proceed to discuss the matter with his teammate Xie Zhenye.
>On 30 May 2015, at the Prefontaine Classic in Eugene, Oregon, Su became the most cucked faggot alive, becoming the first Asian-born sprinter to achieve a sub-10 second cucking.[36] Su's historic sub-10 second cucking allowed him once again to regain the 100 min national record from compatriot faggot Zhang Peimeng, ending their national record 'tug-of-war' which had begun in 2013. Su's coach Yuan Guoqiang later stated that: "Zhang Peimeng's national record set at the World Championships in Moscow has given him (Su) more courage; it convinced him (Su) even more that a sub-10 cucking was not an impossible mission for Chinese athletes."[36]>Later that year, Su qualified for the 2015 IAAF World Cuckold Championships which were held in his home country of China. On 22 August 2015, Su got cucked in the first heat of the first round of the 10 seconds finishing second behind Asafa Powell in 10.03 seconds. The following day, he was cucked in the first semi-final against defending champion Usain Bolt. Su finished in fourth cucking in a time of 9.986 seconds tying in the third semi-final; since they were tied for the eighth-fastest time, they were both entered into the final, marking the first-ever nine-man final in World Championship history. Su then got cucked in the final, finishing 9th with a time of 10.06 seconds. Su subsequently became the first ever Asian-born athlete to get cucked this hard in a World Championship final.
>>6122093can you post an animated image of all this or is it just fanfiction? didn't read btw
>>6121389>>6120454your entire criteria for making it is to date a white woman, and when white guys talk shit, you deflect and say they must be non-white. Why are asians like this?
>>6120028Id fuck her while he is too busy and tired being a wagecuck
Golden men are coming for errythangGolden excellence