HOME WEB NEWS IMAGES CLASSIFIEDS YELLOW PAGESPOLLS - SURVEYS WIKI COUNTRIES PHOTOS US UK INDIA
Avoo.com provides meta search results from various sources

World_record_progression_100_metres_men


Google



1

The first world record in the 100 m for men (athletics) was recognised by the International Association of Athletics Federations in 1912.

World record progression for the men\'s 100 m

Contents

Records 1912-1976

Time Athlete Nat Location of race Date
10.6 Don Lippincott  United States Stockholm, Sweden July 6, 1912
Jackson Scholz  United States September 16, 1920
10.4 Charlie Paddock  United States Redlands, California, USA April 23, 1921
Eddie Tolan  United States Stockholm, Sweden August 8, 1929
Copenhagen, Denmark August 25, 1929
10.3 Percy Williams  Canada Toronto, Ontario, Canada August 9, 1930
Arthur Jonath  Germany Bochum, Germany July 5, 1932
Eddie Tolan  United States Los Angeles, California, USA August 1, 1932
Ralph Metcalfe  United States Los Angeles, California, USA August 1, 1932
Ralph Metcalfe  United States Budapest, Hungary August 12, 1933
Eulace Peacock  United States Oslo, Norway August 6, 1934
Chris Berger  Netherlands Amsterdam, Netherlands August 26, 1934
Ralph Metcalfe  United States Osaka, Japan September 15, 1934
Dairen, China September 23, 1934
Takanori Yoshioka  Japan Tokyo, Japan June 15, 1935
10.2 Jesse Owens  United States Chicago, Illinois, USA June 20, 1936
Harold Davis  United States Compton, California, USA June 6, 1941
Lloyd LaBeach  Panama Fresno, California, USA May 15, 1948
Barney Ewell  United States Evanston, Illinois, USA July 9, 1948
Emmanuel McDonald Bailey  Great Britain Belgrade, Yugoslavia August 25, 1951
Heinz Fütterer  West Germany Yokohama, Japan October 31, 1954
Bobby Joe Morrow  United States Houston, Texas, USA May 19, 1956
Ira Murchison  United States Compton, California, USA June 1, 1956
Bobby Joe Morrow  United States Bakersfield, California, USA June 22, 1956
Ira Murchison  United States Los Angeles, California, USA June 29, 1956
Bobby Joe Morrow  United States
10.1 Willie Williams  United States Berlin, Germany August 3, 1956
Ira Murchison  United States August 4, 1956
Leamon King  United States Ontario, California, USA October 20, 1956
Santa Ana, California, USA October 27, 1956
Ray Norton  United States San Jose, California, USA April 18, 1959
10.0 Armin Hary  West Germany Zürich, Switzerland June 21, 1960
Harry Jerome  Canada Saskatoon, Canada July 15, 1960
Horacio Esteves  Venezuela Caracas, Venezuela August 15, 1964
Bob Hayes  United States Tokyo, Japan October 15, 1964
Jim Hines  United States Modesto, California, USA May 27, 1967
Enrique Figuerola  Cuba Budapest, Hungary June 17, 1967
Paul Nash  South Africa Krugersdorp, South Africa April 2, 1968
Oliver Ford  United States Albuquerque, New Mexico, USA May 31, 1968
Charles Greene  United States Sacramento, California, USA June 20, 1968
Roger Bambuck  France
9.9 Jim Hines  United States
Ronnie Ray Smith  United States
Charles Greene  United States
Steve Williams  United States Los Angeles, California, USA June 21, 1972
Eddie Hart  United States Eugene, Oregon, USA July 1, 1972
Reynaud Robinson  United States
Silvio Leonard  Cuba Ostrava, Czechoslovakia June 5, 1975
Steve Williams  United States Siena, Italy July 16, 1975
Berlin, Germany August 22, 1975
Gainesville, Florida, USA March 27, 1976
Harvey Glance  United States Columbia, South Carolina, USA April 3, 1976
Baton Rouge, Louisiana, USA May 1, 1976
Don Quarrie  Jamaica Modesto, California, USA May 22, 1976

Records post-1976

After 1976, the I.A.A.F. required fully automatic timing to the hundredth of a second for events 400 metres and under when submitted for record consideration. http://easyweb.easynet.co.uk/rsparks/auto-uk.htm

Jim Hines\' 1968 Olympic gold medal victory was the fastest recorded fully electronic 100 meter race to that time.

Ben Johnson\'s 9.79 run at Seoul is included in this list though it was never ratified; Carl Lewis\'s two records at 9.93 were deemed by the I.A.A.F to have equalled the world record after Johnson\'s 9.83 time was rescinded; Lewis\'s 9.92 recognized as the world record from January 1, 1990.Track and Field News, November 1989, vol. 42, #11, p. 37

Time Athlete Nat Location of race Date
9.95 Jim Hines  United States Mexico City, Mexico October 14, 1968
9.93 Calvin Smith  United States Colorado Springs, Colorado, USA July 3, 1983
Carl Lewis  United States Rome, Italy August 30, 1987
Zurich, Switzerland August 17, 1988
9.83 Records rescinded after positive drug test for stanozolol during 1988 Olympics and later admission to drug use. Ben Johnson  Canada Rome, Italy August 30, 1987
9.79 Ben Johnson  Canada Seoul, South Korea September 24, 1988
9.92 Carl Lewis  United States Seoul, South Korea September 24, 1988
9.90 Leroy Burrell  United States New York, New York, USA June 14, 1991
9.86 Carl Lewis  United States Tokyo, Japan August 25, 1991
9.85 Leroy Burrell  United States Lausanne, Switzerland July 6, 1994
9.84 Donovan Bailey  Canada Atlanta, Georgia, USA July 27, 1996
9.79 Maurice Greene  United States Athens, Greece June 16, 1999
9.78Ruling in 2005 on his involvement with BALCO scandal rescinded all records and medals from 2001 onwards. Tim Montgomery  United States Charléty, Paris, France September 14, 2002
9.77 Asafa Powell  Jamaica Athens, Greece June 14, 2005
Justin Gatlin  United States Doha, Qatar May 12, 2006
Asafa PowellPowell equals World 100 m record – 9.77 – first quotes

Sunday 11 June 2006

 Jamaica Gateshead, England June 11, 2006
Asafa Powell  Jamaica Zurich, Switzerland August 18, 2006
9.74 Asafa Powell  Jamaica Rieti, Italy September 9, 2007

Record discrepancies

  • Charlie Paddock set a record of 10.2s for 110 yards (100.584 m) in 1921; this was never ratified as a 100 m record.

Sears, Edward Seldon (2001). Running Through the Ages. McFarland & Company, p.175. ISBN 0786409711. 

  • Ben Johnson\'s time of 9.79 on 24 September 1988 was disallowed and never ratified as a record as he tested positive for stanozolol after the race. Johnson subsequently admitted to steroid use between 1981 and 1988, and his world record of 9.83 set on 30 August 1987 was rescinded by the IAAF Council in September 1989.
  • Tim Montgomery\'s time of 9.78 from 14 September 2002 was annulled following disqualification for banned drug use. By that time, however, it had been surpassed by Asafa Powell.
  • Justin Gatlin was briefly credited with an outright world record time of 9.76 from 12 May 2006 until 17 May 2006, but the IAAF later ratified the record as 9.77 as his time of 9.766 had erroneously been rounded down to the nearest hundredth instead of rounded up. This time made Gatlin co-world record holder with Asafa Powell. However, in 2007 this record was annulled following Gatlin\'s failed doping test.

Notes


This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from Wikipedia


Advertise with Us | Search Marketing | Help | Suggest a Site | Privacy Policy
© 2008 www.avoo.com. All rights reserved.