The concept of world records in athletics means obtaining and achieving the highest results, which can be shown either by one individual athlete or by an entire team of several athletes, while the conditions must be comparable and repeatable. All world records are ratified based on the IAAF score. New records can also be set directly during IAAF world competitions in full accordance with the list of disciplines available for this sport.
The concept of the highest world achievement is also quite widespread. This achievement belongs to the category of those achievements that do not belong to the list of athletics disciplines that are on the list of athletics disciplines that are approved by the IAAF. Track and field sports that do not belong to the IAAF list include disciplines such as 50-meter running and throwing of various weights.
In all disciplines that are approved by the IAAF, records are measured in accordance with the metric system, which includes meters and seconds. The only exception to this rule is the mile run.
The first highest world achievements historically date back to the middle of the 19th century. Then an institute of professional athletes appeared in England and for the first time they began to measure the best time in a 1-mile run. Beginning in 1914 and the emergence of the IAAF, a centralized procedure for recording records was established, and a list of disciplines in which world records were registered was determined.
The 1968 Mexico City Olympics saw the first use of a fully automated timing system accurate to hundredths of a second (Jim Hines, 9.95 seconds in the 100m dash). Since 1976, the IAAF has made the use of automatic sprint timing mandatory.
The oldest world record in the athletics disciplines included in the Olympic Games program is the women's 800-meter outdoor record (1:53.28), set on July 26, 1983 by Jaromila Kratokhvilova (Czechoslovakia).
The oldest world record recorded in the disciplines included in the World Championships program is the winter record in women's shot put (22.50 m), set on February 19, 1977 by Helena Fibingerova (Czechoslovakia).
The IAAF practices the payment of bonuses for setting a world record. So, in 2007, the prize money was 50,000 USD. Organizers of commercial races can set additional prizes for breaking the world record, which attracts spectators and sponsors.
Athletics fans often debate records in vertical jumps, especially in the pole vault. In this discipline, athletes have the opportunity to add centimeters to the previous result, which is impossible in other sports. The record holder for the number of records is pole vaulter Sergei Bubka (USSR, Ukraine), who set 35 world records between 1984 and 1994.
Elena Isinbaeva, the owner of 27 world records, was the first in the world to conquer a height of 5 meters in 2005.
American Dick Fosbury won in 1968 in Mexico City, jumping in an unprecedented way (flying over the bar with his back, not his stomach); the world record in this event was broken only in 1973 by the efforts of Dwight Stones, who cleared 2 meters 30 centimeters. Then the world record was broken by the old flip-flop method only by one person - the phenomenally talented Vladimir Yashchenko. Undoubtedly, the technique of pole vaulters and throwers of all four types - hammer, shot, javelin and discus - has improved. But the technique of long and triple jumpers has improved to a lesser extent over the past 20-40 years, and that of runners - even less. For example, Michael Johnson held the 200m world record for 12 years (Usain Bolt broke his 200m world record in Beijing in 2008), and in the 400m his unbeaten achievement is now 10 years old.
On the one hand: more and more countries and athletes are becoming involved in athletics at a high level. In pre-war times, more than 80 percent of the world records in sprinting, jumping and throwing belonged to Americans. It was only in endurance running that they were surpassed by the Europeans. Moreover, the Americans themselves, some 40 years ago, believed that short-distance running was for dark-skinned people, and middle- and long-distance running was for white people. In those years, the world record for 800 meters was held by the blond New Zealander Peter Snell, and for 1500, the phenomenal record of the Australian Herb Elliott lasted 7 years until it was broken by the white American Jim Ryan.
At 5,000 and 10,000 meters, world records first passed from the British to the Russians Vladimir Kuts and Pyotr Bolotnikov, and then to the Australian Ron Clark. But now the records have been taken over by natives of Africa, where physical education and modern training methods are gradually penetrating. What is surprising: not all countries of the Black Continent produce record holders, but only a few. Moreover, in that multi-ethnic Kenya with a population of 30 million, all the famous runners, including numerous record holders and Olympic winners, represent only one Kalenjin people. There are less than 10% of the population in the country, although 70% of Kenyans live in the middle and highlands. What’s even more interesting is that most of the Kenyan record holders were born in the highland town of Eldoret with a population of 80 thousand people, or in the villages closest to it. And many of them are related to each other. As Beijing Olympic champion in the 800m sprint Wilfred Bungei told our correspondent, his cousins are world record holder Wilson Kipketer and multiple world record holder Henry Rono, distant relatives of Kepchogo Keino, Pamela Jelimo. Moroccan record holders and ex-world record holders Khalid Skah, Said Aouita and El Gerouj also come from the same small mountainous province.
The world elite of endurance running still includes young natives of Sudan. Well, our Yuri Borzakovsky, contrary to all logic, has been defeating talented natives of Africa (more precisely, some of its regions) for 10 years, who also accept citizenship of the USA, Denmark, Turkey, the Emirates, France, Sweden.
The situation is similar for sprinters. In the 100m race, the last white world record holder was German Armin Hari half a century ago. After him (plus another 30 years before him), only black Americans invariably improved the record for the fastest distance. Recently, they have been increasingly competing with dark-skinned residents of the islands near the American continent - mainly Jamaica. Usain Bolt is proof of this. He covered 100m in 9.58 seconds. This is a phenomenal result. Athletes who have won the most gold medals in Olympic history: Carl Lewis (USA) and Paavo Nurmi (Finland) - 9 gold medals.
The athletes who show the best results during the entire Olympic Games become an Olympic record holder. True, for this he needs to engage in one of the following sports: athletics or weightlifting, shooting, including archery, swimming, speed skating (including short track) and cycling. In total, 128 highest achievements of the Games are recorded in the table of Olympic records.
Unfortunately, the International Olympic Committee does not recognize records in other sports. But those who became interested in the sport in childhood and achieved outstanding success in their homeland have every chance to write their name into the history of the Olympic Games not just by being present at them. Due to the large number of disciplines, this is easiest for athletes to do, and therefore there are always more of them in the corresponding lists.
01
Usain Bolt. Jamaica
In the 100 m race at the London Games in 2012, the athlete set an Olympic record, covering the distance in 9.63 seconds. The previous record, set in 2008 in Beijing, also belonged to him - 9.69 s. At the same time, he ran 200 m in 19.30 s. It is noteworthy that the world records at these distances also belong to him - 9.58 and 19.19 s. Throughout his career, the athlete set a total of 8 world records, became an Olympic champion 6 times and a world champion 11 times.
02
Sven Kramer. Norway
At the Sochi Olympics in 2014, the speed skater spent only 6 minutes 10.76 seconds on the 5000 m distance. He is one of the most decorated athletes in the history of this sport, three-time Olympic champion, eight-time world champion in classical all-around, 17-time world champion in individual distances.
03
Elena Isinbaeva, Russia
In Beijing in 2008, she cleared a height of 5.05 m in the pole vault. Throughout her career, she has set about 30 records in this discipline, including the current one - 5.06 m (2009). She became an Olympic champion twice, won the World Championships three times and the World Indoor Championships four times.
04
Kenenisa Bekele. Ethiopia
At the Olympic Games in Beijing in 2008, he set two records at once: 5000 m and 10,000 m, running the first distance in 12 minutes 57.82 s, the second in 27 minutes 1.17 s. A three-time Olympic champion, he won the world championships 22 times (6 times in classic running and 16 times in cross-country running).
05
Michael Phelps. USA
At the Beijing Games, he covered the 400 m medley distance in 4 minutes 3.84 seconds. Known as the "Baltimore Bullet" and "Flying Fish", he set 39 world records during his career. At the Olympics in Rio de Janeiro, he won five gold medals and is now a 23-time Olympic champion (he surpassed Larisa Latynina in the total number of Olympic awards back in 2012, now he has 27 medals) and a 26-time world champion .
06
Andreas Torkildsen. Norway
At the Beijing Games in 2008 he threw the javelin 90.57 m. He is the first javelin thrower in history to win gold medals at the Olympic Games, World Championships and European Championships. The world junior record (83.87 m), set by him back in 2001, has still not been broken.
07
Jason Kenny. Great Britain
During the home Games in London, while still qualifying, the cyclist set a record in the sprint race (200 m from a standing start), covering the distance in 9.713 s and reaching an average speed of 74.127 km/h. After that, he easily won the gold medal.
08
Lim Dong Hyun. South Korea
At the London Olympics in archery (12 series of 6 arrows from a distance of 70 m), he scored 699 points out of 720 possible, setting a new record. Interestingly, the athlete suffers from severe myopia, but does not wear contact lenses or glasses. The Korean is guided only by the bright colors of the target.
09
Katerzyna Emmons, Czech Republic
At the 2008 Olympics, she scored 503.5 points in the 10m air rifle. At the same time, in qualifying she repeated the world record, scoring 400 points out of 400 possible. Only 11 athletes in the world can boast of this.
10
Tatiana Lysenko. Russia
At the 2012 Olympic Games in London, she set an Olympic record in the hammer throw, throwing the projectile at 77.56 m in her first attempt. In the fifth attempt, she improved the result to 78.18 m and became an Olympic champion. A year later, she updated the world record - 78.80 m.
THERE IS A THEME
On July 26, the oldest world record in athletics, Jarmila Kratokhvilova’s achievement in the 800 m, will be 30 years old. But Bob Beamon’s long jump record of 8.90, which at one time was called “eternal,” lasted less than 23 years. Currently, the table of world records includes 12 results that will be 25 or more years old this year. Will they be surpassed, and if so, when? Famous athletes and coaches are answering this question today.
MEN
Disk
74,08
Jürgen SCHULT GDR
Neubrandenburg
06.06.1986
The result of Schult, Olympic champion in Seoul 88 and silver medalist in Barcelona 92, is the oldest men's world record in history. Schult, who set his world record at the age of 26 and dominated the men's discus for a long time, competed until he was 40 (that's how old he was in Sydney 2000), received an education in the field of sports and, after finishing his career as an athlete, became a coach.
Yuri DUMCHEV, ex-world record holder:
I think this record will be broken, the only question is when? In the next five, perhaps ten years. Previously, it’s unlikely. Although Pyotr Malakhovsky recently shot at 71.84. In principle, there are good guys who can achieve a world record. But, I repeat, it may well stand for another ten years.
How did I feel about this record? Schult installed it in his hometown, and at the next start he showed almost ten meters less. This alarmed me a little. After that, if I'm not mistaken, he threw 69 many times, but only a few times over 70. It happens: at some point you shoot. Besides, the wind still helps with our species. There are places in the world that seem specially created for discus throwing, where the wind blows very strongly. I know a case where a guy with a personal record of 55 m came to one of these and threw 65.
Schult's result is, of course, fantastic. At that time it was something! Afterwards I thought that Virgilius Alekna or Gerd Kanter would take him down. The latter, in principle, still has a chance. It seems to me that he is the only one who could do this in the near future. I don’t like Robert Harting from a technical point of view; he has such a typical power throw. But at 75 m it is very difficult to throw like that.
Valentin MASLAKOV , head coach of the Russian national team:
I think this is one of those records that will stand for a long, long time. I don’t see anyone yet who could take a swing at him. Now even throws of just over 70 m are considered a very high result.
HAMMER
86,74
Yuri SEDYKH USSR
Stuttgart
30.08.1988
Yuri Sedykh set his world record at the age of 31 at the European Championships. Before that, his outstanding career included victories at the Games in Montreal '76 and Moscow '80, and later - silver in Seoul '88 and gold in the '91 World Cup. After the collapse of the USSR, Sedykh and his wife, world record holder in shot put Natalya Lisovskaya, lived in France.
Valentin MASLAKOV :
Sedykh had an excellent coach, Anatoly Pavlovich Bondarchuk, who himself threw at a very high level, and then became an excellent mentor. In his group there were several strong athletes who took turns and were leaders. Sedykh, let's say, worked according to his own schedule, which would not suit everyone now: the year showed brilliant results, and the year - rather mediocre. This strategy made it possible to allocate sufficient time for preparation, to perform all the necessary volumes and then show very long throws.
Now in the hammer there are attempts over 83 m. But 86 m is, of course, a very high result. However, I think the record can still be broken. There are athletes who are gradually approaching this mark. Now we see a high density of results. And this is not one or two people, but a whole group that consistently throws in the 82 m area.
WOMEN
100 m
10,49
Florence GRIFFITH-JOYNER USA
Indianapolis
16.07.1988
200 m
21,34
Florence GRIFFITH-JOYNER USA
Seoul
29.09.1988
Griffith-Joyner continues to impress today. Not only for her phenomenal running and incredible career rise, which happened to her quite late by athletics standards - at 29 years old. But also an appearance that can decorate any girl’s pop group, extravagant tights on one leg and much more. Her tragic death at age 38 under mysterious circumstances (the official cause of death was a heart attack, but many continue to doubt this to this day) only cemented Griffith-Joyner’s status as a mysterious legend.
Many tried to challenge Florence’s results. There is an opinion that the 100-meter race in Indianapolis was run with a strong tailwind, which for some reason was not recorded by the equipment. However, Griffith-Joyner's second result (10.61), shown with acceptable wind conditions, would still be a world record.
Lyudmila KONDRATIEVA , Olympic champion of Moscow-80 in the 100-meter dash, bronze medalist of Seoul-88 in the 4x100 m relay:
Griffith-Joyner is, of course, a legendary figure. Now there is no one to compare her with. She didn’t run - she flew like a bird, sprucing up and touching the path.
We didn't know each other personally. But I remember that at the Olympics in Seoul, during the races, there was no one to pin her number on her back. And she asked me - the closest one standing nearby. Even my little hands began to tremble - pinning a number on such a star. I was very pleased.
Of course she stood out. So stylish, always very well-groomed. These long nails, unusual overalls, extravagant outfits... She loved to experiment and was not shy about wearing some revealing things. Even in everyday life, I always dressed unusually. We were still young then and looked with all our eyes: wow, she’s so talented and at the same time so extravagant. I would call her a trendsetter.
The results shown by Florence are truly outstanding, what more can I say. Maybe someone will surpass them. But it seems to me that this will not happen soon. I would like, of course, to be wrong, but... The runners are now closer to her, especially at 200 m, but just a little. And at 100 m - even less. Maybe one day such a Bolt will appear in a female form in America or Jamaica - a championship has just been held there, and the results in the sprint are very high for both women and men.
Valentin MASLAKOV :
These are fantastic records. Although the American women are running well now, Jamaica is “waking up”. I think it will be especially difficult to break the 200m record. Still, 21.34 is a very high result for women. But in the 100-meter dash, I think one of the girls can surpass him.
400 m
47,60
Marita KOCH GDR
Canberra
06.10.1985
Marita Koch is best spoken for by her impressive statistics. Olympic champion, three-time world champion, who holds a total of 15 world records. She set the world record for 400 m at the age of 28. At one time, there were certain questions about Koch, like all representatives of the GDR, but Marita categorically denied all suspicions.
“I was relatively diligent, but not super-ambitious,” Koch said about herself in an interview with SE. “If necessary, I worked 120 percent and could be quite tough on myself. And height, weight - it was all about.” kay. My technique was also good - my running style was formed from childhood. I was quite strong, powerful - it’s important that my bones can withstand. Of course, I was happy when I set a record. At the same time, I understood that they would break it too. There are no eternal records.
Running 400 meters quickly takes a lot of work. You won’t set a record here easily or by accident. An athlete must run consistently over 48-something for a couple of years, and only then, perhaps, will she be able to make a breakthrough. Before I broke 48 seconds, I ran the 400-meter dash for 11 years, improving my results almost every year. Could I have run faster than 47.60? Probably not. Everything worked out optimally that day."
Valentin MASLAKOV :
Koch is a brilliant athlete in every way. Very talented. In addition, she had excellent preparation methods and pharmacological support. And all this, as they say, suited her very well. At one time, I conducted a lot of joint training with the Germans and I can say that it really worked in a new way, not the way everyone else trained at that time. I think her record will stand for a long, long time. Nowadays, female athletes can “run out” of 49 seconds, but 47 is, in our times, almost a man’s result.
800 m
1.53,28
Jarmila KRATOCHVILOVA Czechoslovakia
Munich
26.07.1983
The record of the then 32-year-old Kratokhvilova, set at competitions in Munich, is the longest-lived world achievement among women. She also once held the world record in the 400-meter dash (47.99), which was then taken by Marita Koch. At one time, the South African Caster Semenya was called the heiress of the Czechoslovakian athlete. After her impressive victory at the 2009 World Cup in Berlin, talk of a possible fall in Kratokhvilova's record was more popular than ever. However, the almost year-long investigation into Semenya's gender identity appears to have put an end to this story.
Valentin MASLAKOV :
I think that a new world record is not expected in this discipline in the near future. Although Caster Semenya could install it. Moreover, I know that she was aiming for this, she wanted to do it. Is she capable of this now, after returning to the track? I have the impression that now she is “burying” herself a little so as not to stand out too much.
Relay race 4x400 m
3.15,17
USSR
Tatiana LEDOVSKAYA
Olga NAZAROVA
Maria PINIGINA
Olga BRYZGINA
Seoul
01.10.1988
In recent years, this type of program has become a real super battle between the Russian and American teams. This is only to our advantage: in such conditions there is every chance of a new world record. We hope, of course, that victory here, as in the Olympic Seoul, will remain ours.
Valentin MASLAKOV :
This result, in principle, cannot be called some kind of fantastic. It’s just that at that time we had a very good quartet - all the girls ran around 49 seconds. If we put together a company like this now, we could have a new global one. And one day such a quartet will definitely get together. Not only we, but also the American women are showing strong results. For a long time they did not pay enough attention to relay races, considering personal events more prestigious. But now the psychology is changing, and not only for them. For example, Englishwomen are very interested in relay races.
100 m s/b
12,21
Jordanka DONKOVA Bulgaria
Stara Zagora
20.08.1988
Donkova’s highest world achievement, set in the year of her 27th birthday, recently almost left the list of long-lived records. On June 22, at the US Championships, 21-year-old American Brianna Rollins showed a result of 12.26, making several obvious mistakes. In view of this (Rollins knocked down one barrier and hit five more), as well as the athlete’s youth and lack of experience, everyone immediately started talking about the fact that Donkova’s record, apparently, is now first in line for “withdrawal.”
Valentin MASLAKOV :
Americans generally don’t hold their championships in bad conditions when something gets in the way. This is done just to show good results. And Rollins almost broke Donkova’s record. For this, of course, ideal conditions are needed. But I think if everything works out for her at a certain point, she is able to do this in the foreseeable future. So here we have every reason to be hopeful.
Height
2,09
Stefka KOSTADINOVA Bulgaria
Rome
30.08.1987
Kostadinova made her legendary jump at the age of 22 - and it was miraculously good, just like the blonde athlete herself. This world record, one of the oldest in women's athletics, has understandably attracted special attention in Russia since Anna Chicherova's winning streak began. Chicherova’s outstanding mentor Evgeniy Zagorulko has repeatedly hinted that the legendary Bulgarian’s achievement is achievable. And Chicherova herself said this about this last fall: “Some time ago I couldn’t even think about any world record. But last year in Brussels I jumped 2.10. And you know what? This record was very close. Yes, it really can be broken! And then, 25 years is too long for a world record."
Valentin MASLAKOV :
If it was just one jump, one could say that everything just came together for Kostadinova that day. But she had a lot of such jumps! So there is no question of any accident here. And yet I believe that an athlete may appear who will jump higher. Including among our girls. The same Anna Chicherova can easily do this. There is also young Maria Kuchina, who has very good potential.
Length
7,52
Galina CHISTYAKOVA USSR
Leningrad
11.06.1988
Another domestic record was set at the Znamensky Memorial and has since inspired a considerable number of athletes to take up long jumping. “I thought that if I moved the takeoff 10 cm closer, it would be enough to jump 7.50,” says Chistyakova herself, who was 25 years old at the time, in June 1988, about her legendary jump. “And so it happened.” “That is, this jump was absolutely under control. Not at full strength, but under control.”
Like other Soviet world record holders - Sedykh and Lisovskaya, Chistyakova ended up abroad after the collapse of the USSR. Now she has been living with her family in Slovakia for many years. Gives master classes for children.
Tatiana LEBEDEVA , Olympic champion:
In those days, when Heike Drechsler, Chistyakova, Jackie Joyner-Kersee competed among themselves, it seemed that girls would be able to jump 8 m. But since then the sport has changed a lot. Doping control has become stricter, the environment has become worse: look what we eat, what we breathe. There has also become more commerce - athletes can no longer afford to throw all their energy into one competition.
I once talked with my husband and coach Chistyakova, and he said that if they had started developing the triple jump a little earlier, Galina would have jumped 16 m. After all, even when her results had already begun to decline, when she began to suffer from injuries and was not developed training method, she jumped 14.70. Perhaps in the triple, Chistyakova could realize herself even more.
Even to me, an Olympic champion, the long jump of 7.50 seems fantastic. Now even if you jump over 7 m, this is already considered a grandmaster result.
Is it realistic to break Chistyakova’s record in the future? London Olympic champion Brittney Rees has a 7.25 this season, but I don't think she's capable of breaking the world record. After all, Reese is already a fairly experienced athlete. Her physical characteristics are excellent, even phenomenal, but psychologically she has not matured during this time. Reese is unstable. At one start he can jump 7.25, and at another - 5.90. And although after jumping 7.25, Reese promised to break the world record, for now it sounds a little funny. 7.25 and 7.50 - for the long jump this is heaven and earth.
Of the current athletes, I would only bet on Blessing Okagbare from Nigeria. At the age of 19, she completely unexpectedly became third in Beijing. Young, no load - she ran and jumped 6.93, setting a personal record. Then she focused on the sprint, became more powerful and now has very good results. But sometimes he continues to indulge in long jumps. Of course, it has a whole bunch of technical flaws - it takes its toll due to its phenomenal speed. But if Blessing focuses on length, tweaks her technique, and gets a little dryer, she could break the world record.
Core
22,63
Natalia LISOVSKAYA USSR
Moscow
07.06.1987
Another “home” world achievement: the then 24-year-old Lisovskaya established her final world achievement (there were two more before it, several years earlier) at the Moscow Druzhba stadium.
Valentin MASLAKOV :
Lisovskaya confidently pushed the shot at 20-21 m, so this was not the limit for her. Moreover, at that time her results were much higher, they were simply not included in official statistics. Let's say the results shown at home were not very welcome.
Can anyone get closer to Lisovskaya's record? There is a New Zealander, Valerie Adams, who consistently pushes beyond 20 m. But she is from the singles category, and in general the results are much lower. Theoretically, the New Zealander is probably capable of setting a world record. But now, when athletes are subject to increasingly strict control, it is difficult. I think that for Adams it is much easier to calmly push for 20 m and emerge victorious than to chase some records and then, God forbid, put your name and reputation at risk.
Disk
76,80
Gabriela RAINCH GDR
Neubrandenburg
09.07.1988
The then 24-year-old Reinsch set her world record, which turns 25 this year, on July 9, 1988 during an athletics match between Italy and the GDR. That season she improved her personal best by almost 10 meters. It’s paradoxical, but in addition to the world record, the athlete’s highest achievements in her career were 2nd place at the Junior European Championships in the shot put, 2nd place at the Universiade-87 (discus) and 4th at the European Championships-90 (discus). At the Olympics in Seoul, Reinsch remained only seventh with a score of 67.26.
Gabriela almost lost the main sporting achievement of her life. In September of the same 1988, Martina Hellmann showed even more distant throws in discus throwing. But due to the unofficial status of those starts, the world record remained with Reinsch.
Yuri DUMCHEV:
I know that German women threw many times in the area of 72-74 m. I myself have seen such throws many times. The female disc is an unpredictable species. It hit well - that's all!
Of course, 76.80 is a crazy result. For this to happen, absolutely everything must work out. For example, I had training results when I threw 77 m, many times, and even 78 m. But this was during training!
Valentin MASLAKOV :
This result is another legacy of the GDR, when everything and even more was done for achievements in sports. There was a whole system working for this. I don’t believe that Reinsch’s record will be broken. Now even throws beyond 67 m are considered a super result.
Heptathlon
7291 points
Jackie JOYNER-KERSEY USA
Seoul
24.09.1988
The breakdown of the record for Joyner-Kersee (26 years old), a representative of the legendary family of American athletics, is as follows: 12.69 (100
m s/b), 1.86 m (height), 15.80 m (core), 22.56 (200 m), 7.27 m (length), 45.66 m (spear), 2.08.51 (800 m). Joyner-Kersee managed to become not only a legendary heptathlete, but also wrote her name in the history of the long jump. The outstanding athlete, who managed to become an Olympic champion in two types of programs within the framework of one Games, holds the second result in the history of this event - 7.49 m.Tatiana LEBEDEVA :
Jackie was very well built, athletic, and had excellent speed. And these strengths were developed through training. If an all-around athlete has speed, she is good at jumping, hurdles, and other events.
In general, Joyner-Kersee is ideal for me in terms of technique in the long jump. At one time we tried to copy it. She had a three and a half step way - not every man can do that. To successfully perform this, a person must fly at least 7 m. I know from myself: when I’m ready at 7 m, I can do it, but when only at 6.60, I already get an incomprehensible flickering. The flight phase is only a fraction of a second shorter, but you no longer have time to gather your legs in order to finally throw them correctly for landing.
Valentin MASLAKOV :
7291 points is, of course, a very high result. But not so much that he couldn't be beaten. Our Tatyana Chernova or Englishwoman Jessica Ennis can easily do this. For example, Chernova puts the shot at 13 m, but if she put the shot at 16, like some of her competitors, the result would be completely different. I think one day there will definitely be an athlete who can surpass Joyner-Kersee’s achievement.
The leadership of the English Athletics Federation put forward the idea of resetting world records due to the large number and scale of doping scandals in 2015. The initiative found understanding with President Sebastian Coe.
He proposed canceling "suspicious" superior results that could be achieved using illegal drugs. Such records still seem unattainable today.
Story
The first professional athletes appeared in the middle of the 19th century in England. At the same time, the registration of the best results in various types of athletics competitions began for the first time. The first world records in athletics were recorded in the 1-mile run. With the organization of international governing bodies, the IAAF, in 1914, rules were developed for the registration of highest achievements and a list of disciplines in which they were recorded.
Gradually, methods for measuring results and the conditions for holding competitions were regulated so that the value of records was not questioned. In 1968 in Mexico City, at the Olympic Games, a highly automated time measurement system was used for the first time in running disciplines. The result was recorded with an accuracy of hundredths of a second. World records in athletics in throwing and jumping began to be recorded using the most modern measuring instruments and electronic systems.
Basic rules for ratifying world records
To put athletes on a level playing field, strict rules set by the IAAF must be followed for a record to be valid. So, finishing equipment, markings - everything must comply with approved standards. World records - the best results in athletics - are not recorded in competitions where athletes of different genders participate, or if athletes with different nationalities run in a relay team. When conducting sprint races up to 200 m and horizontal jumps, the tailwind should not exceed 2 m/s. For all-around competitions, wind gusts of up to 4 m/s are allowed.
The most important condition for the successful registration of world records in athletics with international sports bodies is the implementation of strict anti-doping control measures. Any violations of the rules for taking samples and conducting their research make the highest achievements illegitimate. It is around these questions that doubts about the regularity of particularly extraordinary world achievements revolve.
Varieties of world achievements
The most prestigious records in the athletics world are those set by men and women in Olympic athletics, in competitions held outdoors. After the Olympics, the second most important athletics competition is the summer world championship. World Athletics Championship records are an honorable achievement for any runner, thrower or all-around athlete. Winter championships, held in indoor sports arenas, have their own specifics and their own table of highest achievements.
Any significant athletic competition has its own history, and therefore its own table of achievements. Records of the Olympic Games, continental championships, and the largest stages of the track and field Grand Prix are a significant incentive for any athlete. The largest sports facilities also keep their records of the best results, which can be constantly updated.
Records at different ages
In the history of sports there are many stars who showed record results at different stages of their sports career. In the table where the world records in athletics among juniors are listed, there are the names of those who later achieved the highest results as adults. The fastest sprinter on the planet, Usain Bolt, holds the world record in the 200 m race for juniors - 19.93 s and seniors - 19.19 s.
After finishing his career in big sports, a real athlete does not stop active training. Holding competitions between veterans contributes to the popularity of sports, and world records in athletics among veterans are an excellent incentive not to reduce competitive activity in adulthood. Athletes compete in their age groups and strive to break the records set by their peers.
Leap into the next millennium
Experts are often asked how often they will be updated and to what level the highest results in different athletics disciplines can be achieved. History contains records that seemed unshakable, but were surpassed by athletes of future generations. One of the most striking examples is the achievement of long jumper Bob Beamon.
In the final of the Olympics in Mexico City, he managed to jump 8.90 m. The previous world record was exceeded by a fantastic 55 cm. On the day of the final, it was drizzling, the wind was within normal limits. They said that he, like all athletes, was helped by the high altitude. For a long time the judges could not correctly measure Beamon’s “flight”, and when record numbers appeared, no one could believe their correctness for a long time. This record was considered eternal, but 23 years have passed, and the American jumper exceeded it at the 1991 World Championships in Tokyo by 5 cm. Beamon's achievement remains an Olympic record.
Oldest record
If a decision is made to reset the table of world records, achievements that may well be half a century old will also fall. The oldest world records in athletics were set at a time when the use of stimulants was not subject to such severe bans as today. Therefore, many people express the inappropriateness of their presence in the list of the highest achievements, although they are shown not as “caliphs for an hour,” but as athletes who have gone through a long and difficult path to the top.
On July 26, 1983, Czechoslovakian runner Jarmila Kratokhvilova ran 2 laps around the stadium - 800 m - in 1 minute 53.28 seconds. She was already an experienced athlete and had been a sprinter before middle-distance running. Her result seems unrealistic for today's runners.
The oldest world record related to the disciplines included in the athletics program is the indoor shot put record, also shown by the Czechoslovakian athlete Helena Fibingerova. On February 19, 1977, she sent a projectile to 20 m 50 cm. The best result for the open arena is also an old-timer, he is only 9 years younger and 13 cm longer. It belongs to the Soviet athlete Natalya Lisovskaya.
High performance sport
A world record is not only a benchmark for everyone who plays sports at a high level. In the modern world, where sport is a developed branch of mass entertainment, material incentives are also important. Bonuses and payments that are intended for world record-breaking athletes are expressed in significant numbers. It is no coincidence that the pole vault, a form in which the final height is determined by the athlete and coach, has the largest number of successful attempts to set a new world record. The legendary Sergei Bubka is the author of 35 world records, and Elena Isimbaeva raised the bar to a record 28 times.
The Winter Olympic Games have been held since 1924. Since then, over the 90 years of their holding, with a break for the Second World War, 22 such forums have already been organized. During this time, many records have accumulated that are associated with the Zoo.
There are record holders of the Winter Olympic Games in a variety of categories.
These are the countries that have won the largest number of medals, and the athletes who have set various records. For example, at the recently concluded Winter Olympics in the Russian city of Sochi, several records were set at once.
Thus, luger Albert Demchenko took part in his seventh Winter Olympics. This became an absolute record for the number of participations. It must be said that Demchenko not only participated, but was able to win two silver medals in his forties. Another age record holder was Norwegian biathlete Ole Einar Bjoerndalen.
He won two medals at the games. Now he has 13 of them, which is one more than his compatriot, skier Bjorn Daly. It is interesting that both veterans who set records in Sochi have not yet announced their retirement. However, if we talk about the age of Olympic medalists, we should note such a record holder as Swedish curler Karl-August Kronlund, who won his medal in 1924 at the age of 59 years and 155 days.
And the youngest medalist was South Korean short speed skater Kim Yun Mi at the Lillihammer Games in 1994. He was then 13 years and 83 days old. Soviet biathlete Alexander Tikhonov also set a very interesting record - he won 4 times in a row in one discipline - the relay race (1968-80).
There are also countries that hold the Winter Olympic Games record for medals. There are certain difficulties with calculations here. The fact is that the eventful history of the last century divided and united some countries. This especially applies to Germany and the USSR.
Russia became the legal successor of the Soviet Union. And if you add up all the medals won by Russia and the USSR at the OWG, then our country will be the world leader.
And if you divide them, then Norway takes first place by a wide margin, and the United States comes in second.
We can also mention such interesting records as the largest number of medals won by one country at the Winter Olympics. This record was set on home soil by US athletes. They won 37 medals of various denominations at the forum in Salt Lake City. But at the same 2010 Olympics, the Canadian team won 14 gold medals, which is also a record. Just one gold was not enough for the Russian squad to repeat this record in Sochi.