Athletics 100 metres hurdles | |
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![]() A 100 m hurdles race at Atlanta 1996 | |
World records | |
Women | ![]() |
Olympic records | |
Women | ![]() |
World Championship records | |
Women | ![]() |
The 100 metres hurdles, or 100-meter hurdles, is a track and field event run mainly by women (the male counterpart is the 110 metres hurdles). For the race, ten hurdles of a height of 33 inches (83.8 cm) are placed along a straight course of 100 metres (109.36 yd). The first hurdle is placed after a run-up of 13 metres from the starting line. The next 9 hurdles are set at a distance of 8.5 metres from each other, and the home stretch from the last hurdle to the finish line is 10.5 metres long. The hurdles are set up so that they will fall over if bumped into by the runner, but weighted so this is disadvantageous. Fallen hurdles do not count against runners provided that they do not run into them on purpose. Like the 100 metres sprint, the 100 m hurdles begins with athletes in starting blocks.
The fastest 100 m hurdlers run the distance in a time of around 12.5 seconds. The world record set by Tobi Amusan stands at 12.12 seconds.
The race started back in the 1830s in England where wooden barriers were placed along a 100-yard stretch. The hurdles event was included as part of the inaugural Women's World Games in 1922, and made its first appearance in the Olympic Games in 1932 as 80m hurdles.
Starting with the 1972 Summer Olympics, the women's race was lengthened to 100m hurdles.[1]
The hurdles sprint race has been run by women since the beginning of women's athletics, just after the end of World War I. The distances and hurdle heights varied widely in the beginning. While the men had zeroed in on the 110 m hurdles, the International Women's Sport Federation had registered records for eight different disciplines by 1926 (60 yards/75 cm height, 60 yards/61 cm, 65 yards/75 cm, 83 yards/75 cm, 100 yards/75 cm, 100 yards/61 cm, 120 yards/75 cm, 110 metres/75 cm). At the first Women's World Games in 1922, a 100 m hurdles race was run.
From 1926 until 1968, the distance was 80 metres: women had to clear eight hurdles placed at a distance of 8 metres from each other and a height of 30 inches (76.2 cm).
Just like with the men's races, until 1935 no more than three hurdles could be knocked over, or the runner was disqualified, and records were only officially registered if the runner had cleared all her hurdles clean.
In 1935, this rule was abandoned, and L-shaped hurdles were introduced that fell over forward easily and greatly reduced the risk of injury to the runner. Hurdles are weighted, so when properly set for the height (for women, closer to the fulcrum of the "L"), they serve as a consistent disadvantage to making contact with the barrier.
Distance | Number of hurdles |
Height | Distance made up of | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Runup | Intervals | Home stretch | |||
80 m | 8 | 76.2 cm | 12 m | 8.0 m | 12.0 m |
100 m | 10 | 83.8 cm | 13 m | 8.5 m | 10.5 m |
The 80 m hurdles was on the list of women's sports demanded by the International Women's Sport Federation for the Olympic Summer Games in 1928, but was not included as an Olympic discipline until 1932. Starting with 1949, the 80 m hurdles was one of the disciplines included in the women's pentathlon.
During the 1960s, some experimental races were run over a distance of 100 metres using hurdles with a height of 30 inches (76.2 cm). During the 1968 Summer Olympics, a decision was made to introduce the 100 m hurdles from 1969, using hurdles with a height of 33 inches (83.8 cm).
The first international event in the 100 m hurdles occurred at the European Athletics Championships, which were won by Karin Balzer of the GDR.
The modern 100 m race has an extra two hurdles compared to the 80 m race, which are higher and spaced slightly further apart. The home stretch is shorter by 1.5 m.
Currently, women run 110 m hurdles at the World Athletics Relays, a mixed team event, which was instituted in 2019.
A version of the 100 metres hurdles is also used for 50- to 59-year-old men in Masters athletics. They run the same spacing as women, which coordinates with existing markings on most tracks, but run over 36-inch (0.914 m) hurdles. In the 60-69 age range, the spacings are changed. Women over age 40 and men over age 70 run 80 metre versions with different heights and spacings.[2][3]
100 m hurdles:
Ath.# | Perf.# | Time (s) | Wind (m/s) | Reaction (s) | Athlete | Nation | Date | Place | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 1 | 12.12 | +0.9 | 0.144 | Tobi Amusan | ![]() |
24 JUL 2022 | Eugene | [6][7] |
2 | 2 | 12.20 | +0.3 | 0.149 | Kendra Harrison | ![]() |
22 JUL 2016 | London | [8] |
3 | 3 | 12.21 | +0.7 | Yordanka Donkova | ![]() |
20 AUG 1988 | Stara Zagora | ||
4 | 12.24 | +0.9 | Donkova #2 | 28 AUG 1988 | Stara Zagora | ||||
+0.7 | Harrison #2 | 28 MAY 2016 | Eugene | ||||||
4 | 6 | 12.25 | +1.4 | Ginka Zagorcheva | ![]() |
08 AUG 1987 | Drama | ||
6 | 12.26 | +1.5 | Donkova #3 | 07 SEP 1986 | Ljubljana | ||||
5 | 8 | 12.26 | +1.7 | Ludmila Narozhilenko | ![]() |
06 JUN 1992 | Seville | ||
+1.2 | Brianna Rollins | ![]() |
22 JUN 2013 | Des Moines | [9] | ||||
−0.2 | 0.172 | Jasmine Camacho-Quinn | ![]() |
01 AUG 2021 | Tokyo | [10][11] | |||
11 | 12.27 | −1.2 | Donkova #4 | 28 AUG 1988 | Stara Zagora | ||||
+0.9 | 0.155 | Harrison #3 | 24 JUL 2022 | Eugene | [12][13] | ||||
+0.1 | 0.166 | Camacho-Quinn #2 | 02 SEP 2022 | Brussels | [14][15] | ||||
14 | 12.28 | +1.8 | Narozhilenko #2 | 11 JUL 1991 | Kyiv | ||||
+0.9 | Narozhilenko #3 | 06 JUN 1992 | Seville | ||||||
8 | 14 | 12.28 | +1.1 | 0.145 | Sally Pearson | ![]() |
03 SEP 2011 | Deagu | [16] |
14 | 12.28 | +0.1 | 0.152 | Harrison #4 | 04 JUL 2017 | Székesfehérvár | [17] | ||
18 | 12.29 | −0.4 | Donkova #5 | 17 AUG 1986 | Cologne | ||||
−0.3 | 0.163 | Amusan #2 | 08 SEP 2022 | Zürich | [18][19] | ||||
20 | 12.30 | −0.2 | 0.126 | Amusan #3 | 07 AUG 2022 | Birmingham | [20] | ||
9 | 20 | 12.30 | +0.6 | 0.153 | Nia Ali | ![]() |
21 JUL 2023 | Monaco | [21] |
10 | 22 | 12.31 | +0.3 | 0.143 | Britany Anderson | ![]() |
24 JUL 2022 | Eugene | [22][23] |
22 | 12.31 | −0.2 | 0.158 | Camacho-Quinn #3 | 27 MAY 2023 | Los Angeles | [24] | ||
12.31 | +0.6 | 0.165 | Harrison #5 | 21 JUL 2023 | Monaco | [25] | |||
25 | 12.32 | +1.6 | Narozhilenko #4 | 04 JUN 1992 | Saint-Denis | ||||
11 | 25 | 12.32 | +0.8 | 0.119 | Danielle Williams | ![]() |
20 JUL 2019 | London | [26][27] |
12 | 12.33 | −0.3 | Gail Devers | ![]() |
23 JUL 2000 | Sacramento | |||
13 | 12.34 | +1.9 | Sharika Nelvis | ![]() |
26 JUN 2015 | Eugene | [28] | ||
14 | 12.35 | +0.9 | Jasmin Stowers | ![]() |
15 MAY 2015 | Doha | [29] | ||
−1.4 | Alaysha Johnson | ![]() |
25 JUN 2022 | Eugene | [30] | ||||
16 | 12.36 | +1.9 | Grażyna Rabsztyn | ![]() |
13 JUN 1980 | Warsaw | |||
+2.0 | Masai Russell | ![]() |
01 APR 2023 | Austin | [31] | ||||
18 | 12.37 | +1.5 | Joanna Hayes | ![]() |
24 AUG 2004 | Athens | |||
−0.2 | Dawn Harper | ![]() |
07 AUG 2012 | London | |||||
20 | 12.38 | +0.1 | Tia Jones | ![]() |
02 SEP 2022 | Brussels | [32] | ||
21 | 12.39 | +1.5 | Vera Komisova | ![]() |
05 AUG 1980 | Rome | |||
+1.8 | Nataliya Grygoryeva | ![]() |
11 JUL 1991 | Kyiv | |||||
23 | 12.40 | +0.6 | Janeek Brown | ![]() |
08 JUN 2019 | Austin | [33] | ||
+0.4 | Alia Armstrong | ![]() |
13 MAY 2023 | Baton Rouge | [34] | ||||
25 | 12.41 | +0.5 | Alina Talay | ![]() |
31 MAY 2018 | St. Pölten | [35] |
Any performance with a following wind of more than 2.0 metres per second does not count for record purposes. Below is a list of all wind-assisted times equal or superior to 12.32: