400 metres hurdles

 
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Women's 400 m Hurdles
Women's 400 m Hurdles

The 400 m Hurdles are an Olympic athletics (track and field) discipline. On a standard outdoor track 400 meters is the length of the inside lane once around the stadium. Runners stay in their lane the entire way after starting out of the blocks and must clear ten hurdles that are evenly, for each lane, spaced around the track. The hurdles are positioned so that they fall forward if bumped into to prevent injury to the runners. Although fallen hurdles don't count against them, runners like to clear them clean, as touching them during the race slows runners down.

The best male athletes can run the 400 m Hurdles in a time of around 47 seconds (WR: 46.78 seconds), which is the equivalent of 8.51 meters per second or 30.63 kilometers per hour. The best female athletes achieve a time of around 53 seconds (WR: 52.34 seconds), or 7.54 meters per second and 27.16 kilometers per hour. Compared to the 400 Meters the hurdles race takes the men about 3 seconds longer and the women 4 seconds longer.

The 400 m Hurdles have been an Olympic discipline since 1900 and 1984 for men and women, respectively.

Contents

History

The first awards in a 400 m Hurdles race were given in 1860 when a race was held in Oxford, England, over a course of 440 yards (402.336 m). While running the course, participants had to clear 12 massive (more than 100 cm tall) wooden hurdles that had been spaced in even intervals.

To reduce the risk of injury, somewhat more lightweight constructions were introduced in 1895 that runners could push over. But until 1935 runners were disqualified if they pushed over more than 3 hurdles in a race and records were only officially accepted if the runner in question had cleared all hurdles clean and left them all standing.

At the 1900 Summer Olympics in Paris, France, the 400 m Hurdles became an Olympic event. At the same time, the race was standardized so that virtually identical races could be held and the finish times compared to each other. As a result, the official distance was fixed to 400 meters, or once around the stadium, and the number of hurdles was reduced to 10. The official height of the hurdles was set to 91.4 cm (3 ft) for men and 76.20 cm (2 feet 6 inches) for women. The hurdles were now placed on the course with a run-up to the first hurdle of 45 meters, a distance between the hurdles of 35 meters each, and a home stretch from the last hurdle to the finish line of 40 meters.

Many athletic commentators and officials have often brought up the idea of lifting the height of the women's 400 m hurdles to incorporate a greater requirement of hurdling skill. This is a view held by German Athletic coach Norbert Stein "All this means that the women's hurdles for specialists, who are the target group to be dealt with in this discussion, is considerably depreciated in skill demands when compared to the men's hurdles. It should not be possible in the women's hurdles that the winner is an athlete whose performance in the flat sprint is demonstrably excellent but whose technique of hurdling is only moderate and whose anthropometric characteristics are not optimal. This was the case at the World Championships in Seville and the same problem can often be seen at international and national meetings."

The first documented 400 m Hurdles race for women took place in 1971. The International Association of Athletics Federations (IAAF) introduced the event officially as a discipline in 1974, although it was not run at the World Championships and the first female World Champion was not determined until the 1983 World Championships.

Milestones

Most successful athletes

Mr. 400 m Hurdles:  Edwin Moses
Mr. 400 m Hurdles: Edwin Moses

Most surprising rookie: Glenn Davis (USA) ran his first race in April 1956 in 54.4 seconds. Two months later, he ran a new world record with 49.5 seconds and later that year he won the 400 m Hurdles at the Olympics, and was also the first to repeat that feat in 1960.

The athlete who wrote the book on 400 m Hurdles: The American Edwin Moses won 122 races in a row between 1977 and 1987 plus two gold medals at the 1976 Summer Olympics in Montréal, and the 1984 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles. He was undefeated for exactly nine years nine months and nine days until he finished third in the 1988 Olympic final. A relative unknown, John Vander Kamp from Calvin College, nearly beat him during his lengthy undefeated streak, but came up a few hundreths short. The U.S. boycott of the 1980 Summer Olympics in Moscow prevented him from winning a hat-trick of gold medals, but his career is nonetheless widely regarded as simply astonishing. He held the world record for sixteen years from when he first broke it at the Olympics on July 25, 1976 (twice in one day) until it was finally broken at the 1992 Summer Olympics.

Medalists

Olympic Games

Men

Games Gold Silver Bronze
1900 Paris United States John Tewksbury (USA) France Henri Tauzin (FRA) Canada George Orton (CAN)
1904 St. Louis United States Harry Hillman (USA) United States Frank Waller (USA) United States George Poage (USA)
1906 Athens not included in the Olympic program
1908 London United States Charles Bacon (USA) United States Harry Hillman (USA) Great Britain Jimmy Tremeer (GBR)
1912 Stockholm not included in the Olympic program
1920 Antwerp United States Frank Loomis (USA) United States John Norton (USA) United States August Desch (USA)
1924 Paris United States Morgan Taylor (USA) Finland Erik Wilén (FIN) United States Ivan Riley (USA)
1928 Amsterdam Great Britain David Burghley (GBR) United States Frank Cuhel (USA) United States Morgan Taylor (USA)
1932 Los Angeles Ireland Bob Tisdall (IRL) United States Glenn Hardin (USA) United States Morgan Taylor (USA)
1936 Berlin United States Glenn Hardin (USA) Canada John Loaring (CAN) Philippines Miguel White (PHI)
1948 London United States Roy Cochran (USA) Ceylon Duncan White (CEY) Sweden Rune Larsson (SWE)
1952 Helsinki United States Charles Moore (USA) Soviet Union Yuri Lituyev (URS) New Zealand John Holland (NZL)
1956 Melbourne United States Glenn Davis (USA) United States Eddie Southern (USA) United States Josh Culbreath (USA)
1960 Rome United States Glenn Davis (USA) United States Clifton Cushman (USA) United States Richard Howard (USA)
1964 Tokyo United States Rex Cawley (USA) Great Britain John Cooper (GBR) Italy Salvatore Morale (ITA)
1968 Mexico City Great Britain David Hemery (GBR) West Germany Gerhard Hennige (FRG) Great Britain John Sherwood (GBR)
1972 Munich Uganda John Akii-Bua (UGA) United States Ralph Mann (USA) Great Britain David Hemery (GBR)
1976 Montreal United States Edwin Moses (USA) United States Michael Shine (USA) Soviet Union Yevgeny Gavrilenko (URS)
1980 Moscow East Germany Volker Beck (GDR) Soviet Union Vasili Arkhipenko (URS) Great Britain Gary Oakes (GBR)
1984 Los Angeles United States Edwin Moses (USA) United States Danny Harris (USA) West Germany Harald Schmid (FRG)
1988 Seoul United States André Phillips (USA) Senegal Amadou Dia Ba (SEN) United States Edwin Moses (USA)
1992 Barcelona United States Kevin Young (USA) Jamaica Winthrop Graham (JAM) Great Britain Kriss Akabusi (GBR)
1996 Atlanta United States Derrick Adkins (USA) Zambia Samuel Matete (ZAM) United States Calvin Davis (USA)
2000 Sydney United States Angelo Taylor (USA) Saudi Arabia Hadi Al Somayli (KSA) South Africa Llewellyn Herbert (RSA)
2004 Athens Dominican Republic Felix Sanchez (DOM) Jamaica Danny McFarlane (JAM) France Naman Keïta (FRA)
2008 Beijing United States Angelo Taylor (USA) United States Kerron Clement (USA) United States Bershawn Jackson (USA)

Women

Games Gold Silver Bronze
1984 Los Angeles Morocco Nawal El Moutawakel (MAR) United States Judi Brown (USA) Romania Cristeana Cojocaru (ROU)
1988 Seoul Australia Debbie Flintoff-King (AUS) Soviet Union Tatyana Ledovskaya (URS) East Germany Ellen Fiedler (GDR)
1992 Barcelona Great Britain Sally Gunnell (GBR) United States Sandra Farmer-Patrick (USA) United States Janeene Vickers (USA)
1996 Atlanta Jamaica Deon Hemmings (JAM) United States Kim Batten (USA) United States Tonja Buford-Bailey (USA)
2000 Sydney Russia Irina Privalova (RUS) Jamaica Deon Hemmings (JAM) Morocco Nezha Bidouane (MAR)
2004 Athens Greece Faní Halkiá (GRE) Romania Ionela Târlea-Manolache (ROU) Ukraine Tetiana Tereshchuk-Antipova (UKR)
2008 Beijing Jamaica Melaine Walker (JAM) United States Sheena Tosta (USA) Great Britain Tasha Danvers (GBR)

World Championships

Men

Year Gold Silver Bronze
1983 Flag of the United States Edwin Moses (USA) Flag of West Germany Harald Schmid (FRG) Flag of the Soviet Union Aleksandr Karlov (URS)
1987 Flag of the United States Edwin Moses (USA) Flag of the United States Danny Harris (USA) Flag of West Germany Harald Schmid (FRG)
1991 Flag of Zambia Samuel Matete (ZAM) Flag of Jamaica Winthrop Graham (JAM) Flag of the United Kingdom Kriss Akabusi (GBR)
1993 Flag of the United States Kevin Young (USA) Flag of Zambia Samuel Matete (ZAM) Flag of Jamaica Winthrop Graham (JAM)
1995 Flag of the United States Derrick Adkins (USA) Flag of Zambia Samuel Matete (ZAM) Flag of France Stéphane Diagana (FRA)
1997 Flag of France Stéphane Diagana (FRA) Flag of South Africa Llewellyn Herbert (RSA) Flag of the United States Bryan Bronson (USA)
1999 Flag of Italy Fabrizio Mori (ITA) Flag of France Stéphane Diagana (FRA) Flag of Switzerland Marcel Schelbert (SUI)
2001 Flag of the Dominican Republic Felix Sanchez (DOM) Flag of Italy Fabrizio Mori (ITA) Flag of Japan Dai Tamesue (JPN)
2003 Flag of the Dominican Republic Felix Sanchez (DOM) Flag of the United States Joey Woody (USA) Flag of Greece Periklis Iakovakis (GRE)
2005 Flag of the United States Bershawn Jackson (USA) Flag of the United States James Carter (USA) Flag of Japan Dai Tamesue (JPN)
2007 Flag of the United States Kerron Clement (USA) Flag of the Dominican Republic Felix Sanchez (DOM) Flag of Poland Marek Plawgo (POL)

Women

Year Gold Silver Bronze
1980 Flag of the German Democratic Republic Bärbel Broschat (GDR) Flag of the German Democratic Republic Ellen Neumann (GDR) Flag of the German Democratic Republic Petra Pfaff (GDR)
1983 Flag of the Soviet Union Yekaterina Fesenko (URS) Flag of the Soviet Union Anna Ambraziené (URS) Flag of the German Democratic Republic Ellen Fiedler (GDR)
1987 Flag of the German Democratic Republic Sabine Busch (GDR) Flag of Australia Debbie Flintoff-King (AUS) Flag of the German Democratic Republic Cornelia Ullrich (GDR)
1991 Flag of the Soviet Union Tatyana Ledovskaya (URS) Flag of the United Kingdom Sally Gunnell (GBR) Flag of the United States Janeene Vickers (USA)
1993 Flag of the United Kingdom Sally Gunnell (GBR) Flag of the United States Sandra Farmer-Patrick (USA) Flag of Russia Margarita Ponomaryova (RUS)
1995 Flag of the United States Kim Batten (USA) Flag of the United States Tonya Buford-Bailey (USA) Flag of Jamaica Deon Hemmings (JAM)
1997 Flag of Morocco Nezha Bidouane (MAR) Flag of Jamaica Deon Hemmings (JAM) Flag of the United States Kim Batten (USA)
1999 Flag of Cuba Daimi Pernia (CUB) Flag of Morocco Nezha Bidouane (MAR) Flag of Jamaica Deon Hemmings (JAM)
2001 Flag of Morocco Nezha Bidouane (MAR) Flag of Russia Yuliya Nosova (RUS) Flag of Cuba Daimí Pernía (CUB)
2003 Flag of Australia Jana Pittman (AUS) Flag of the United States Sandra Glover (USA) Flag of Russia Yuliya Pechonkina (RUS)
2005 Flag of Russia Yuliya Pechonkina (RUS) Flag of the United States Lashinda Demus (USA) Flag of the United States Sandra Glover (USA)
2007 Flag of Australia Jana Rawlinson (AUS) Flag of Russia Yuliya Pechonkina (RUS) Flag of Poland Anna Jesien (POL)

History of world records

Men

Electronic timing

Time Athlete Date Where
46.78 s Flag of the United States Kevin Young (USA) August 6, 1992 Barcelona
47.02 s Flag of the United States Edwin Moses (USA) August 31, 1983 Koblenz
47.13 s Flag of the United States Edwin Moses (USA) July 3, 1980 Milano
47.45 s Flag of the United States Edwin Moses (USA) June 11, 1977 Westwood
47.64 s Flag of the United States Edwin Moses (USA) July 25, 1976 Montreal
47.82 s Flag of Uganda John Akii-Bua (UGA) September 2, 1972 München
48.12 s Flag of the United Kingdom David Hemery (GBR) October 15, 1968 Ciudad de México

Hand timing

Time Athlete Date Where
48.8 s Flag of the United States Geoffrey Vanderstock (USA) September 11, 1968 Echo Summit
49.1 s Flag of the United States Rex Cawley (USA) September 13, 1964 Los Angeles
49.2 s Flag of Italy Salvatore Morale (ITA) September 14, 1962 Belgrad
49.2 s Flag of the United States Glenn Davis (USA) August 6, 1958 Budapest
49.5 s Flag of the United States Glenn Davis (USA) June 29, 1956 Los Angeles
50.4 s Flag of the Soviet Union Yuriy Lituyev (USSR) September 20, 1953 Budapest
50.6 s Flag of the United States Glenn Hardin (USA) July 26, 1934