100 meter run

The 100-meter run is a sprint discipline in athletics and is held on a straight route, with each runner having to stay in his own lane from start to finish. You start in the low start with the help of starting blocks . At the Olympic Games , the 100-meter route is the shortest sprint distance.
The best men achieve a time under 10 seconds, the best women stay under 11 seconds. How fast a person could run the 100-meter route under optimal conditions is a matter of dispute among scientists. Mark Denny from Stanford University assumes a time of 9.48 seconds, John Barry (Cambridge University) and Reza Noubary (Bloomsburg University) even think 9.4 seconds are possible. The Australian Jeremy Richmond shows in a study that a human best time of 9.27 seconds can be achieved.
The men's world record set by Usain Bolt in 9.58 s at the World Championships in Berlin in 2009 corresponds to an average speed of 10.44 m / s or 37.58 km / h . The maximum speed that an athlete reaches during a run is well over 40 km / h for men. Donovan Bailey's top speed on his world record of 9.84 s was approximately 12.1 m / s or 43.56 km / h. Usain Bolt even reached a top speed of around 12.5 m / s or 44.72 km / h in his record run of 9.58 s.
The women's world record of 10.49 s set by Florence Griffith-Joyner in 1988 corresponds to an average speed of 9.53 m / s or 34.31 km / h.
Although the speed decreases with increasing distance (and it is not possible to run at top speed in the curve, as some force has to be put into the change of direction), the average speeds in the 200-meter run are often slightly higher than in the 100-meter run. Run, due to the comparatively longer distance on which you can run at top speed after the slower start phase. In addition, the reaction time at the start is only included once, which takes around 15 hundredths of a second.
Records with tailwind support are only recognized if the wind speed does not exceed 2.0 m / s ( IAAF rule 163.8). Since 1938, wind measurements have been stipulated for the recognition of records.
The 100-meter route is also used in the 4 x 100-meter relay race (men and women) and as the first sub-discipline in the decathlon . Until 1949, the 100-meter run was a sub-discipline in the women's all-around event (three-way, pentathlon ).
The friction and elasticity when pushing off the ground influence the running speed, which is why the type of running shoes and the nature of the surface are important for the time that can be achieved.
In top international sport, there is a decisive loss of time in the neuronal feedback processes in the brain that take place with every step. Fewer steps (through more step length) and a complete symmetry of the legs reduce this feedback time.
history
The 100-meter run is derived from the 100- yard run (91.44 m), which was held on grass and cinder tracks in the 19th century with the advent of athletics in English-speaking countries.
In 1887, the American Charles H. Sherrill invented the low start by digging small depressions in which the feet found support when pushing off. In 1921, the Australian sprinter Charlie Booth built the first, still primitive, starting blocks out of wooden blocks with a metal base and continued to develop them.
1928-29, the US coach developed George Breshnahan and William Tuttle the starting blocks used to the present day, by the International Athletics Association IAAF registered since 1937th
Experiments with electronic stopwatches began in the 1920s, and a target camera was used for the first time at the Olympic Games in 1932 . Since the beginning of 1977 records have only been recognized after electronic timekeeping .
The introduction of running tracks with synthetic surfaces in the 1960s brought significant progress in performance; the first 100-meter world record on it was the 9.95 s by Jim Hines at the 1968 Olympic Games in Mexico City .
The first sprint competition in Germany took place on June 6, 1880 on the racecourse in Hamburg-Horn on yard tracks and was also the first ever athletics competition in Germany. 100 and 120 yards were run with a handicap (plus an English mile ). Runs over 100 meters are known from the mid-1890s. Already with the first participation of women in the German championships, on 14./15. August 1920, the 100-meter run was part of the competition program (together with the 4-by-100-meter relay , the long jump and the shot put ).
At the Olympic Games, the 100-meter run has been part of the program for men since 1896 and for women since 1928. In 1900 and 1904 , another short sprint course was the 60-meter run .
regulate
The rules for the 100-meter run are set by the IAAF .
The reaction time at the start is measured by sensors in the start pistol and the starting blocks . A response time of less than 100 milliseconds is considered an early start . Up until 2003, an early start was allowed per participant, only the second lead to a disqualification. Since 2003, a false start has been added to the entire field of participants. Since there were still deliberate early starts in order to disrupt the concentration of the competitors, the rule was changed again in 2009, since then the first early start has already led to the participant being disqualified. The tightening of the rules was controversial, especially after Usain Bolt was disqualified at the 2011 World Championships in Daegu .
Anyone who gets on the track of a competitor will also be disqualified.
Reaching the finish line with the torso is decisive for timing.
doping
The Athletics is like almost all other sports also the problem of doping affected. In the past, numerous athletes were convicted in the 100-meter run in particular, or there were hardly any indications of a doping past that could be refuted without any consequences. The doping control system is subject to intensive changes over times and epochs and is applied very differently in different countries. That is why many of the services mentioned here should be viewed with a certain degree of skepticism.
Milestones
Men:
- First recorded time: 11.0 s over 110 yards (100.58 m), William MacLaren , July 27, 1867 at Haslingden
- First time under 11 seconds: 10.8 s (10 4/5 s), Cecil Lee , on September 25, 1891 in Brussels (stopwatches: 10.6 s, 10.8 s, 11.0 s)
- First official world record: 10.6 s, Donald Lippincott , 1912
- First time of 10.0 s, Armin Hary , June 21, 1960
- First time under 10 seconds:
-
handstopped : 9.9 s, each June 20, 1968 in Sacramento : Jim Hines , Ronnie Ray Smith and Charles Greene
-
electronically stopped : 9.95 s, Jim Hines on October 14, 1968 in Mexico City
-
handstopped : 9.9 s, each June 20, 1968 in Sacramento : Jim Hines , Ronnie Ray Smith and Charles Greene
Women:
- First recorded time: 17.4 s, Aino Rannanpaa , May 15, 1902, Helsinki
- First official world record: 13.6 s (13 3/5 s): Marie Mejzlíková , August 5, 1922
- First time under 13 seconds: 12.8 s (12 4/5 s), Mary Lines , August 20, 1922
- First electronically stopped world record: 12.18 s, Winsome Cripps ,
- First time under 12 seconds: 11.9 s, Tollien Schuurman , on June 5, 1932 in Haarlem
- First time under 11 seconds:
-
Handstopped : 10.9 s, Renate Stecher , on June 7, 1973 in Ostrava
-
electronically stopped : 10.88 s, Marlies Göhr , on July 1, 1977 in Dresden
-
Handstopped : 10.9 s, Renate Stecher , on June 7, 1973 in Ostrava
World records with the longest existence:
- Men: 10.2 s, Jesse Owens , on June 20, 1936 in Chicago , undercut after 20 years in 10.1 s on August 3, 1956 in Berlin by Willie Williams
- Women: 10.49s, Florence Griffith-Joyner , on July 17, 1988 in Indianapolis ; valid world record (as of February 15, 2019)
Most successful athlete
-
Three Olympic victories:
-
Usain Bolt , 2008 , 2012 and 2016
-
- Two Olympic victories:
-
Wyomia Tyus , 1964 and 1968
-
Carl Lewis , 1984 and 1988
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Gail Devers , 1992 and 1996
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Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce , 2008 and 2012
-
- Four world championship titles:
-
Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce , 2009 , 2013 , 2015 and 2019
-
- Three world championship titles:
-
Carl Lewis , 1983 , 1987 and 1991
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Maurice Greene , 1997 , 1999 and 2001
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Usain Bolt , 2009 , 2013 and 2015
-
- Two world championship titles:
-
Marion Jones , 1997 and 1999
-
- Most successful German
-
Armin Hary , Olympic champion 1960
-
Renate Stecher , Olympic champion in 1972 and second in 1976
-
Annegret Richter , Olympic Champion 1976
-
Marlies Göhr , world champion 1983
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Silke Gladisch , world champion 1987
-
Katrin Krabbe , world champion 1991
-
Speed curve of a 100 meter race
At the 1991 World Championships in Tokyo , the first six of the finals managed a time under 10 seconds. The following tables show the course of this 100 meter race as an example. Acceleration up to approx. 40 meters is possible, after which the runners can only increase their speed slightly. The winner, Carl Lewis , was even able to accelerate to around the 80-meter point in this race.
During its fastest phase, it reached a running speed of over 43 km / h (12.05 m / s). This high pace in the final stages helped him to victory, because Leroy Burrell led to about the 80-meter point .
The third, Dennis Mitchell , is one of the slowest of these six runners in terms of the fastest 10-meter section, but ultimately benefited from his quick start, which nowadays would be declared a false start because it had less than 100 milliseconds of reaction time .
The British sprinter Linford Christie said in a conversation that he had increasingly focused his training work in recent years (of his career) on maintaining the speed in the last 20 meters. He hoped that this would improve his overall time. In this context, physiologists point out the limited short-term energy reserves - ATP and creatine phosphate - which on average last eight seconds at this level of performance. In this respect, the drop in performance over the last 20 meters is of course and not solely due to signs of fatigue in the coordinative area. It is not known to what extent the two causes - creatine phosphate depletion on the one hand and fatigue on the other - are not known.
space | runner | RZ | 10 m | 20 m | 30 m | 40 m | 50 m | 60 m | 70 m | 80 m | 90 m | 100 m |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Carl Lewis | 0.14 | 1.88 | 2.96 | 3.88 | 4.77 | 5.61 | 6.46 | 7.3 | 8.13 | 9.00 | 9.86 |
2 | Leroy Burrell | 0.12 | 1.83 | 2.89 | 3.80 | 4.68 | 5.55 | 6.41 | 7.28 | 8.12 | 9.01 | 9.88 |
3 | Dennis Mitchell | 0.090 | 1.80 | 2.87 | 3.80 | 4.68 | 5.55 | 6.42 | 7.28 | 8.14 | 9.02 | 9.91 |
4th | Linford Christie | 0.126 | 1.85 | 2.91 | 3.83 | 4.72 | 5.57 | 6.43 | 7.29 | 8.14 | 9.04 | 9.92 |
5 | Frank Fredericks | 0.151 | 1.86 | 2.92 | 3.84 | 4.73 | 5.60 | 6.47 | 7.33 | 8.18 | 9.07 | 9.95 |
6th | Raymond Stewart | 0.114 | 1.81 | 2.88 | 3.79 | 4.68 | 5.54 | 6.41 | 7.29 | 8.16 | 9.06 | 9.96 |
space | runner | RZ | 20 m | 40 m | 60 m | 80 m | 100 m |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Usain Bolt | 0.146 | 2.89 | 4.64 | 6.31 | 7.92 | 9.58 |
2 | Tyson Gay | 0.144 | 2.92 | 4.70 | 6.39 | 8.02 | 9.71 |
3 | Asafa Powell | 0.134 | 2.91 | 4.71 | 6.42 | 8.10 | 9.84 |
4th | Daniel Bailey | 0.129 | 2.92 | 4.73 | 6.48 | 8.18 | 9.93 |
5 | Richard Thompson | 0.119 | 2.90 | 4.71 | 6.45 | 8.17 | 9.93 |
6th | Dwain Chambers | 0.123 | 2.93 | 4.75 | 6.50 | 8.22 | 10.00 |
7th | Marc Burns | 0.165 | 2.94 | 4.76 | 6.52 | 8.24 | 10.00 |
8th | Darvis Patton | 0.149 | 2.96 | 4.85 | 6.65 | 8.42 | 10.34 |
space | runner | 10 m | 20 m | 30 m | 40 m | 50 m | 60 m | 70 m | 80 m | 90 m | 100 m |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Carl Lewis | 1.88 | 1.08 | 0.92 | 0.89 | 0.84 | 0.85 | 0.84 | 0.83 | 0.87 | 0.86 |
2 | Leroy Burrell | 1.83 | 1.06 | 0.91 | 0.88 | 0.87 | 0.86 | 0.87 | 0.84 | 0.89 | 0.87 |
3 | Dennis Mitchell | 1.80 | 1.07 | 0.93 | 0.88 | 0.87 | 0.87 | 0.86 | 0.86 | 0.88 | 0.89 |
4th | Linford Christie | 1.85 | 1.06 | 0.92 | 0.89 | 0.85 | 0.86 | 0.86 | 0.85 | 0.90 | 0.88 |
5 | Frank Fredericks | 1.86 | 1.06 | 0.92 | 0.89 | 0.87 | 0.87 | 0.86 | 0.85 | 0.89 | 0.88 |
6th | Raymond Stewart | 1.81 | 1.07 | 0.91 | 0.89 | 0.86 | 0.87 | 0.88 | 0.87 | 0.90 | 0.90 |
space | runner | 10 m | 20 m | 30 m | 40 m | 50 m | 60 m | 70 m | 80 m | 90 m | 100 m |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Carl Lewis | 19.15 | 33.33 | 39.13 | 40.45 | 42.86 | 42.35 | 42.86 | 43.37 | 41.38 | 41.86 |
2 | Leroy Burrell | 19.67 | 33.96 | 39.56 | 40.91 | 41.38 | 41.86 | 41.38 | 42.86 | 40.45 | 41.38 |
3 | Dennis Mitchell | 20.00 | 33.64 | 38.71 | 40.91 | 41.38 | 41.38 | 41.86 | 41.86 | 40.91 | 40.45 |
4th | Linford Christie | 19.46 | 33.96 | 39.13 | 40.45 | 42.35 | 41.86 | 41.86 | 42.35 | 40.00 | 40.91 |
5 | Frank Fredericks | 19.35 | 33.96 | 39.13 | 40.45 | 41.38 | 41.38 | 41.86 | 42.35 | 40.45 | 40.91 |
6th | Raymond Stewart | 19.89 | 33.64 | 39.56 | 40.45 | 41.86 | 41.38 | 40.91 | 41.38 | 40.00 | 40.00 |
space | runner | 10 m | 20 m | 30 m | 40 m | 50 m | 60 m | 70 m | 80 m | 90 m | 100 m |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Carl Lewis | 5.32 | 9.26 | 10.87 | 11.24 | 11.90 | 11.76 | 11.90 | 12.05 | 11.49 | 11.63 |
2 | Leroy Burrell | 5.46 | 9.43 | 10.99 | 11.36 | 11.49 | 11.63 | 11.49 | 11.90 | 11.24 | 11.49 |
3 | Dennis Mitchell | 5.56 | 9.35 | 10.75 | 11.36 | 11.49 | 11.49 | 11.63 | 11.63 | 11.36 | 11.24 |
4th | Linford Christie | 5.41 | 9.43 | 10.87 | 11.24 | 11.76 | 11.63 | 11.63 | 11.76 | 11.11 | 11.36 |
5 | Frank Fredericks | 5.38 | 9.43 | 10.87 | 11.24 | 11.49 | 11.49 | 11.63 | 11.76 | 11.24 | 11.36 |
6th | Raymond Stewart | 5.52 | 9.35 | 10.99 | 11.24 | 11.63 | 11.49 | 11.36 | 11.49 | 11.11 | 11.11 |
statistics
Olympic Games medalist
Men
Women
World Championships medalist
Men
Women
German champion
See the list of German champions in the 100-meter run
World record development
Men
Time (s) | Surname | date | place | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Hand-timed times | ||||
10.6 |
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July 6, 1912 | Stockholm | |
10.6 |
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September 29, 1912 | Prague | |
10.6 |
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July 25, 1920 | Geneva | |
10.6 |
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September 12, 1920 | Kristiania | |
10.6 |
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September 16, 1920 | Stockholm | |
10.4 |
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April 23, 1921 | Redlands | |
10.4 |
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May 6, 1923 | Paris | |
10.4 |
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August 29, 1926 | Halle (Saale) | |
10.4 |
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September 12, 1926 | Brieg | |
10.4 |
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September 4, 1927 | Hanover | |
10.4 |
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September 4, 1927 | Hanover | |
10.4 |
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April 21, 1928 | Havana | |
10.4 |
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July 1, 1928 | Frankenthal | |
10.4 |
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June 15, 1928 | Dusseldorf | |
10.4 |
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August 26, 1928 | Barmen | |
10.4 |
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May 12, 1929 | Oldenburg | |
10.4 |
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June 30, 1929 | Mannheim | |
10.4 |
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July 13, 1929 | Bremen | |
10.4 |
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July 21, 1929 | Neuss | |
10.4 |
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July 28, 1929 | Budapest | |
10.4 |
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July 31, 1929 | Cologne | |
10.4 |
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July 31, 1929 | Cologne | |
10.4 |
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August 8, 1929 | Stockholm | |
10.4 |
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August 18, 1929 | Berlin | |
10.4 |
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August 25, 1929 | Copenhagen | |
10.4 |
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September 8, 1929 | Bochum | |
10.4 |
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September 8, 1929 | Bochum | |
10.4 |
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June 1, 1930 | Flensburg | |
10.4 |
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July 13, 1930 | Berlin | |
10.4 |
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July 20, 1930 | Stockholm | |
10.4 |
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2nd August 1930 | Koenigsberg | |
10.3 |
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August 9, 1930 | Toronto | |
10.3 |
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June 5, 1932 | Bochum | |
10.3 |
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August 1, 1932 | los Angeles | |
10.3 (10.38) |
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August 1, 1932 | los Angeles | |
10.3 (10.38) |
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August 1, 1932 | los Angeles | |
10.3 |
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August 18, 1932 | Chicago | |
10.3 |
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July 23, 1933 | Dusseldorf | |
10.3 |
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June 28, 1933 | Malmo | |
10.3 |
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July 30, 1933 | Dusseldorf | |
10.3 |
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August 12, 1933 | Cologne | |
10.3 |
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August 12, 1933 | Budapest | |
10.3 |
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July 1, 1934 | Berlin | |
10.3 |
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July 22, 1934 | Frankfurt am Main | |
10.3 |
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August 6, 1934 | Oslo | |
10.3 |
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August 6, 1934 | Oslo | |
10.3 |
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August 26, 1934 | Amsterdam | |
10.3 |
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September 15, 1934 | Osaka | |
10.3 |
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September 15, 1934 | Osaka | |
10.3 |
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September 23, 1934 | Dairen | |
10.3 |
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September 23, 1934 | Dairen | |
10.3 |
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June 15, 1935 | Tokyo | |
10.3 |
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July 6, 1935 | Osaka | |
10.3 |
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August 6, 1935 | Basel | |
10.2 |
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June 20, 1936 | Chicago | |
10.2 |
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June 6, 1941 | Compton | |
10.2 |
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August 8, 1943 | Willemstad | |
10.2 |
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November 16, 1946 | Port of Spain | |
10.2 |
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May 15, 1948 | Fresno | |
10.2 |
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June 4, 1948 | Compton | |
10.2 |
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July 7, 1948 | Evanston | |
10.2 |
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August 25, 1951 | Belgrade | |
10.2 |
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March 13, 1954 | Sydney | |
10.2 |
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October 31, 1954 | Yokohama | |
10.2 |
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May 19, 1956 | Houston | |
10.2 |
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June 1, 1956 | Compton | |
10.2 |
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June 22, 1956 | Bakersfield | |
10.2 |
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June 29, 1956 | los Angeles | |
10.2 |
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June 29, 1956 | los Angeles | |
10.2 |
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June 29, 1956 | los Angeles | |
10.1 |
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3rd August 1956 | Berlin | |
10.1 |
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4th August 1956 | Berlin | |
10.1 |
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5th August 1956 | Berlin | |
10.1 |
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October 20, 1956 | Ontario | |
10.1 |
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October 27, 1956 | Santa Ana | |
10.1 |
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April 18, 1959 | San Jose | |
10.1 |
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June 10, 1960 | Houston | |
10.0 (10.25) |
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June 21, 1960 | Zurich | |
10.0 |
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July 15, 1960 | Saskatoon | |
10.0 |
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15th August 1964 | Caracas | |
10.0 (10.06) |
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October 15, 1964 | Tokyo | |
10.0 |
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October 24, 1965 | Chongqing | |
10.0 |
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May 27, 1967 | Modesto | |
10.0 |
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May 27, 1967 | Modesto | |
10.0 |
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June 17, 1967 | Budapest | |
10.0 |
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April 2nd, 1968 | Krugersdorp | |
10.0 |
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April 6, 1968 | Standerton | |
10.0 |
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May 31, 1968 | Albuquerque | |
10.0 |
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June 20, 1968 | Sacramento | |
10.0 |
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June 20, 1968 | Sacramento | |
9.9 (10.03) |
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June 20, 1968 | Sacramento | |
9.9 (10.14) |
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June 20, 1968 | Sacramento | |
9.9 (10.10) |
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June 20, 1968 | Sacramento | |
9.9 (9.95) |
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October 14, 1968 | Mexico city | |
9.9 |
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June 21, 1972 | los Angeles | |
9.9 |
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July 1, 1972 | Eugene | |
9.9 |
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July 1, 1972 | Eugene | |
9.9 |
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5th June 1975 | Ostrava | |
9.8 (10.19) |
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June 20, 1975 | Eugene | |
9.9 |
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July 16, 1975 | Siena | |
9.9 |
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07/26/1975 | Boston | |
9.9 |
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22nd August 1975 | Berlin | |
9.9 |
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March 27, 1976 | Gainesville | |
9.9 |
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April 3, 1976 | Columbia (SC) | |
9.9 |
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May 1, 1976 | Baton Rouge | |
9.9 |
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May 22, 1976 | Modesto | |
Electronically timed times | ||||
10.64 |
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July 16, 1932 | Stanford | |
10.53 |
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July 31, 1932 | los Angeles | |
10.38 |
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August 1, 1932 | los Angeles | |
10.38 |
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August 1, 1932 | los Angeles | |
10.34 |
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July 9, 1948 | Evanston | |
10.32 |
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August 10, 1958 | Thonon-les-Bains | |
10.32 |
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August 10, 1958 | Thonon-les-Bains | |
10.29 |
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September 13, 1958 | Colombes | |
10.25 |
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June 21, 1960 | Zurich | |
10.06 |
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October 15, 1964 | Tokyo | |
10.03 |
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June 20, 1968 | Sacramento | |
10.02 |
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October 13, 1968 | Mexico city | |
9.95 |
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October 14, 1968 | Mexico city | |
9.93 |
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3rd July 1983 | Colorado Springs | |
9.93 |
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August 30, 1987 | Rome | |
9.93 |
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17th August 1988 | Zurich | |
9.92 |
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September 24, 1988 | Seoul | |
9.90 |
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June 14, 1991 | New York City | |
9.86 |
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August 25, 1991 | Tokyo | |
9.85 |
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July 6, 1994 | Lausanne | |
9.84 |
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July 27, 1996 | Atlanta | |
9.79 |
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June 16, 1999 | Athens | |
9.77 |
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June 14, 2005 | Athens | |
9.77 |
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June 11, 2006 | Gateshead | |
9.77 |
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August 18, 2006 | Zurich | |
9.74 |
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September 9, 2007 | Rieti | |
9.72 |
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May 31, 2008 | New York City | |
9.69 |
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August 16, 2008 | Beijing | |
9.58 |
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August 16, 2009 | Berlin |
Women
Time (s) | Surname | date | place |
---|---|---|---|
Hand-timed times | |||
11.7 |
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August 15, 1934 | Warsaw |
11.6 |
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August 1, 1937 | Berlin |
11.5 |
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June 13, 1948 | Amsterdam |
11.5 |
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July 22, 1952 | Helsinki |
11.4 |
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4th October 1952 | Gifu |
11.3 |
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4th August 1955 | Warsaw |
11.3 |
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September 13, 1958 | Kiev |
11.3 |
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2nd September 1960 | Rome |
11.2 |
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July 19, 1961 | Stuttgart |
11.2 |
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October 15, 1964 | Tokyo |
11.1 |
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July 9, 1965 | Prague |
11.1 |
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July 31, 1965 | Kiev |
11.1 |
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2nd July 1967 | Santa Barbara |
11.1 |
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15th August 1968 | Leninakan |
11.1 |
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October 14, 1968 | Mexico city |
11.0 (11.08) |
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15th October 1968 | Mexico city |
11.0 |
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18th July 1970 | Vienna |
11.0 |
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2nd August 1970 | Berlin |
11.0 |
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July 31, 1971 | Berlin |
11.0 |
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3rd June 1972 | Potsdam |
11.0 |
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June 15, 1972 | Potsdam |
11.0 |
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July 1, 1972 | Budapest |
10.9 |
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June 7th 1973 | Ostrava |
10.8 |
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20th July 1973 | Dresden |
Electronically timed times | |||
11.08 |
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15th October 1968 | Mexico city |
11.07 |
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2nd September 1972 | Munich |
11.04 |
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June 13, 1976 | Fuerth |
11.01 |
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July 25, 1976 | Montreal |
10.88 |
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July 1, 1977 | Dresden |
10.88 |
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July 9, 1982 | Karl Marx City |
10.81 |
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June 8, 1983 | Berlin |
10.79 |
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3rd July 1983 | Colorado Springs |
10.76 |
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22nd August 1984 | Zurich |
10.49 |
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July 16, 1988 | Indianapolis |
World best list
Men
All runners with a best time of 9.92 seconds or faster, in brackets: wind in m / s; A = run under altitude conditions. A total of 145 runners achieved a time under 10.00 seconds.
Last change: July 21, 2020
- 9.58 s (0.9) Usain Bolt , Berlin , August 16, 2009
- 9.69s (2.0) Tyson Gay , Shanghai , September 20, 2009
- 9.69 s (−0.1) Yohan Blake , Lausanne , August 23, 2012
- 9.72 s (0.2) Asafa Powell , Lausanne , September 2, 2008
- 9.74s (0.9) Justin Gatlin , Doha , May 15, 2015
- 9.76 s (0.6) Christian Coleman , Doha , September 28, 2019
- 9.78 s (0.9) Nesta Carter , Rieti , August 29, 2010
- 9.79 s (0.1) Maurice Greene , Athens , June 16, 1999
- 9.80 s (1.3) Steve Mullings , Eugene , June 4, 2011
- 9.82s (1.7) Richard Thompson , Port of Spain , June 21, 2014
- 9.84 s (0.7) Donovan Bailey , Atlanta , July 27, 1996
- 9.84 s (0.2) Bruny Surin , Seville , August 22, 1999
- 9.84s (1.3) tray by Bromell , Eugene , June 25, 2015
- 9.85 s (1,2) Leroy Burrell , Lausanne , July 6, 1994
- 9.85 s (1.7) Olusoji Fasuba , Doha , May 12, 2006
- 9.85s (1.3) Mike Rodgers , Eugene , June 4, 2011
- 9.86 s (1,2) Carl Lewis , Tokyo , August 25, 1991
- 9.86 s (−0.4) Frank Fredericks , Lausanne , July 3, 1996
- 9.86 s (1.8) Ato Boldon , Walnut , April 19, 1998
- 9.86 s (0.6) Francis Obikwelu , Athens , August 22, 2004 (European record)
- 9.86s (1.4) Keston Bledman , Port of Spain , June 23, 2012
- 9.86 s (1.3) Jimmy Vicaut , Saint Denis , July 4, 2015 (equalized European record)
- 9.86s (0.9) Noah Lyles , Shanghai , May 18, 2019
- 9.86s (0.8) Divine Oduduru , Austin , June 7, 2019
- 9.86s (1.6) Michael Norman , Fort Worth , July 20, 2020
- 9.87 s (0.3) Linford Christie , Stuttgart , August 15, 1993
- 9.87 s A (−0.2) Obadele Thompson , Johannesburg , September 11, 1998
- 9.88s (1.8) Shawn Crawford , Eugene , June 19, 2004
- 9.88 s (1.0) Walter Dix , Nottwil , August 8, 2010
- 9.88s (0.9) Ryan Bailey , Rieti , August 29, 2010
- 9.88 s (1.0) Michael Frater , Lausanne , June 30, 2011
- 9.88s A (0.2) Sydney Siame , Lusaka , April 8, 2017
- 9.88s A (0.8) Ronnie Baker , Paris , June 30, 2018
- 9.89s (1.6) Travis Padgett , Eugene , June 28, 2008
- 9.89s (1.6) Darvis Patton , Eugene , June 28, 2008
- 9.89 s (1.3) Ngonidzashe Makusha , Des Moines , June 10, 2011
- 9.89 s A (1.3) Akani Simbine , Székesfehérvár , July 18, 2016
- 9.90 s (0.4) Nickel Ashmeade , Moscow , August 11, 2013
- 9.90 s (0.6) Andre De Grasse , Doha , September 28, 2019
- 9.91s (1,2) Dennis Mitchell , Tokyo , August 25, 1991
- 9.91 s (0.9) Leonard Scott , Stuttgart , September 9, 2006
- 9.91 s (−0.5) Derrick Atkins , Osaka , August 26, 2007
- 9.91 s (−0.2) Daniel Bailey , Saint Denis , July 17, 2009
- 9.91s (0.7) Churandy Martina , London , 5th August 2012
- 9.91s (1.1) James Dasaolu , Birmingham , July 13, 2013
- 9.91s (1.8) Femi Ogunode , Wuhan , June 4, 2015
- 9.91 s (1.0) Julian Forte , Berlin , August 27, 2017
- 9.91s (0.4) Zharnel Hughes , Kingston , June 9, 2018
- 9.91s (0.2) Su Bingtian , Madrid , June 22, 2018
- 9.92 s (0.3) Andre Cason , Stuttgart , August 15, 1993
- 9.92 s (0.8) Jon Drummond , Indianapolis , June 12, 1997
- 9.92 s (0.2) Tim Montgomery , Indianapolis , June 13, 1997
- 9.92 s A (−0.2) Seun Ogunkoya , Johannesburg , September 11, 1998
- 9.92 s (1.0) Tim Harden , Lucerne , July 5, 1999
- 9.92 s (2.0) Christophe Lemaitre , Albi , July 29, 2011
- 9.92 s (−0.8) Kemar Bailey-Cole , London , July 24, 2015
- 9.92 s (0.9) Jak Ali Harvey , Erzurum , June 12, 2016
- 9.92 s (0.7) Isiah Young , Montverde , June 9, 2018
- German record: Julian Reus - 10.01 s on July 29, 2016 in Mannheim
- GDR record: Frank Emmelmann - 10.06 s on September 22, 1985 in Berlin
- Swiss record: Alex Wilson - 10.08 s on June 30, 2019 in La Chaux-de-Fonds
- Austrian record: Andreas Berger - 10.15 s on August 15, 1988 in Linz
Women
All runners with a best time of 10.89 seconds or faster; in brackets wind speed in m / s; A = run under altitude conditions.
Last change: September 29, 2019
- 10.49 s (0.0) Florence Griffith-Joyner , Indianapolis , July 16, 1988
- 10.64s (1,2) Carmelita Jeter , Shanghai , September 20, 2009
- 10.65 s A (1.1) Marion Jones , Johannesburg , September 12, 1998
- 10.70 s (0.6) Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce , Kingston , June 29, 2012
- 10.70 s (0.3) Elaine Thompson , Kingston , July 1, 2016
- 10.73 s (2.0) Christine Arron , Budapest , August 19, 1998 (European record)
- 10.74 s (1.3) Merlene Ottey , Milan , September 7, 1996
- 10.74 s (1.0) English Gardner , Eugene , July 3, 2016
- 10.75 s (0.4) Kerron Stewart , Rome , July 10, 2009
- 10.75s (1.6) Sha'Carri Richardson , Austin , June 8, 2019
- 10.76 s (1.7) Evelyn Ashford , Zurich , August 22, 1984
- 10.76 s (1.1) Veronica Campbell-Brown , Ostrava , May 31, 2011
- 10.77 s (0.9) Irina Priwalowa , Lausanne , July 6, 1994
- 10.77 s (0.7) Ivet Lalova , Plovdiv , June 19, 2004
- 10.78s A (1.0) Dawn Sowell , Provo , June 3, 1989
- 10.78s (1.5) Torri Edwards , Eugene , June 28, 2008
- 10.78s (1.6) Murielle Ahouré , Montverde , June 11, 2016
- 10.78s (1.0) Tianna Bartoletta , Eugene , July 3, 2016
- 10.78s (1.0) Tori Bowie , Eugene , July 3, 2016
- 10.79 s (0.0) Li Xuemei (athlete) , Shanghai , October 18, 1997
- 10.79 s (−0.1) Inger Miller , Seville , August 22, 1999
- 10.79s (1.1) Blessing Okagbare , London , July 27, 2013
- 10.81 s (1.7) Marlies Göhr , Berlin , June 8, 1983
- 10.81 s (−0.3) Dafne Schippers , Beijing , August 24, 2015
- 10.82 s (−1.0) Gail Devers , Barcelona , August 1, 1992
- 10.82 s (0.4) Gwen Torrence , Paris , September 3, 1994
- 10.82 s (−0.3) Schanna Block , Edmonton , August 6, 2001
- 10.82 s (−0.7) Sherone Simpson , Kingston , June 24, 2006
- 10.82s (0.9) Michelle-Lee Ahye , Port of Spain , June 24, 2017
- 10.83 s (1.7) Marita Koch , Berlin , June 8, 1983
- 10.83 s (0.0) Sheila Echols , Indianapolis , July 16, 1988
- 10.83 s (−1.0) Juliet Cuthbert , Barcelona , August 1, 1992
- 10.83 s (0.1) Ekaterini Thanou , Seville , August 22, 1999
- 10.83 s (0.1) Dina Asher-Smith , Doha , September 29, 2019
- 10.84 s (1.9) Chandra Sturrup , Lausanne , July 5, 2005
- 10.84s (1.8) Kelly-Ann Baptiste , Clermont , June 5, 2010
- 10.85 s (2.0) Anelija Nunewa , Sofia , September 2, 1988
- 10.85s (1.0) Muna Lee , Eugene , June 28, 2008
- 10.85s (2.0) Barbara Pierre , Des Moines , June 21, 2013
- 10.85s (2.0) Aleia Hobbs , Baton Rouge , April 29, 2017
- 10.85 s (1.5) Marie-Josée Ta Lou , Doha , May 4, 2018
- 10.86 s (0.6) Silke Gladisch-Möller , Potsdam , August 20, 1987
- 10.86 s (0.0) Diane Williams , Indianapolis , July 16, 1988
- 10.86 s (1,2) Chryste Gaines , Monaco , September 14, 2003
- 10.86 s (2.0) Marshevet Myers , Eugene , June 4, 2011
- 10.87s (1.8) Octavious Freeman , Des Moines , June 21, 2013
- 10.88 s (0.4) Lauryn Williams , Zurich , August 19, 2005
- 10.89 s (1.8) Katrin Krabbe , Berlin , July 20, 1988
- 10.89 s (0.0) Liu Xiaomei , Shanghai , October 18, 1997
- 10.89s (1.5) Allyson Felix , London , 4th August 2012
- GDR record: Marlies Göhr - 10.81 s on June 8, 1983 in Berlin
- Record of the Federal Republic of Germany: Katrin Krabbe - 10.91 s on August 26, 1991 in Tokyo
- Austrian record: Karin Mayr-Krifka - 11.15 s on August 9, 2003 in Salzburg
- Swiss record: Mujinga Kambundji - 10.95 s on July 13, 2018 in Zofingen
swell
- Eternal world best list of the IAAF, 100 m men (English)
- Eternal world best list of the IAAF, 100 m women (English)
- Athletics annual world best list up to 20th place (English)
- Progression of World best performances and official IAAF World Records, 2003 Edition, Monaco, 2003, pp. 20 ff. And P. 240 ff. (English)
- Spiegel article about doping in the 100-meter run
See also
- List of national records in the women's 100-meter run
- List of Olympic team abbreviations
- Cinder track
Individual evidence
- ↑ “The men's 100 meters: How fast could they go?” Reuters, July 31, 2012
- ↑ Ultimate 100-Meter Time: 9.27 Seconds? ( Memento of July 14, 2014 in the Internet Archive ) on runnersworld.com, accessed on July 2, 2014 (English)
- ↑ Josef Kluckert: Has the cinder track had its day? Plastic slopes in the German arenas , at Zeit-online
- ↑ Arnd Krüger : Symmetry as a talent criterion? Competitive Sport 45 (2015) 1, p. 29; Arnd Krüger: Sprinting ability and information processing capacity of humans, in: The teaching of athletics 30 (1979), No. 44/45.
- ↑ False Start Rule Scrutinized After Bolt's Early Exit , New York Times, August 29, 2011
- ↑ zeit online, May 16, 2015 ( Memento from January 18, 2017 in the Internet Archive ) Fastest 100 m runners: Eight out of ten with a doping history
- ↑ faz, January 18, 2017 Sprint doping cases
- ↑ Der Tagesspiegel, September 23, 1998 Fast as Death
- ↑ sportbild.de, August 26, 2015 Prof. Sörgel, 100 meters is the dirtiest race
- ↑ Doctors newspaper online, August 2, 2012 Who will win the 100 meters - and why?
- ↑ n-tv, July 21, 2013 Development in the sprint "simply not plausible"
- ↑ sportwissenschaft.de, University of Augsburg, dvs-Informations 17 (2002) 4 Prof. Dr. Martin Lames, Can doping be identified as a performance-enhancing effect? (PDF)
- ↑ a b Eternal best list of men. In: iaaf.org. Retrieved July 21, 2020 .
- ↑ Eternal best list of women. In: iaaf.org. Retrieved June 10, 2019 .