Men's 400 metres hurdles world record progression explained

The first world record in the men's 400 metres hurdles was recognised by the International Association of Athletics Federations in 1912. That inaugural record was the performance by Charles Bacon at the 1908 Olympics.[1]

Three athletes, all from the United States, have had long-standing records. Glenn Hardin broke the world record three times and was the record holder for over 21 years, between 1932 and 1953. Edwin Moses set his first record in 1976 and improved his own world record three times. He held the record from 1976 until 1992, when it was beaten by Kevin Young with a time of 46.78 seconds at the 1992 Barcelona Olympics.

Young’s record stood for nearly 29 years, until Karsten Warholm broke it during the Diamond League event at his homefield of Bislett during Bislett games in 2021. The new world record was at 46.70. On August 3, 2021, Warholm broke his record again in the Tokyo Olympics 400 meter hurdle final. The world record is now 45.94.

As of June 21, 2009, 21 world records have been ratified by the IAAF in the event.[1]

Progression 1912–76

TimeAutoAthleteDateLocation
55.0 July 22, 1908 London
54.0 August 16, 1920 Antwerp
53.8 October 4, 1925 Paris
52.6y July 2, 1927 Lincoln
52.0 July 4, 1928 Philadelphia
52.0 51.85 August 1, 1932 Los Angeles
51.8 June 30, 1934 Milwaukee
50.6 July 26, 1934 Stockholm
50.4 September 20, 1953 Budapest
49.5 June 29, 1956 Los Angeles
49.2 August 6, 1958 Budapest
49.2 September 14, 1962 Belgrade
49.1 September 13, 1964 Los Angeles
48.8 48.94 September 11, 1968 Echo Summit
48.1 48.12 October 15, 1968 Mexico City
47.8 47.82 September 2, 1972 Munich

"y" denotes time for 440 yards (402.34 m) which was ratified as a world record in this event.

The "Time" column indicates the ratified mark; the "Auto" column indicates a fully automatic time that was also recorded in the event when hand-timed marks were used for official records, or which was the basis for the official mark, rounded to the 10th of a second, depending on the rules then in place.

Progression post-1976

Ratified
Not ratified
Ratified but later rescinded
Pending ratification

From 1975, the IAAF accepted separate automatically electronically timed records for events up to 400 metres. Starting January 1, 1977, the IAAF required fully automatic timing to the hundredth of a second for these events.[1]

John Akii-Bua's 1972 Olympic gold medal run was the fastest recorded fully electronic 400 metre race to that time, at 47.82.[1]

TimeAthleteDateLocation
47.82 September 2, 1972 Munich
47.64 July 25, 1976 Montreal
47.45 June 11, 1977 Westwood, Los Angeles
47.13 July 3, 1980 Milan
47.02 August 31, 1983 Koblenz
46.78 August 6, 1992 Barcelona
46.70 July 1, 2021[2] Oslo
45.94 Aug 3, 2021 Tokyo

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 12th IAAF World Championships In Athletics: IAAF Statistics Handbook. Berlin 2009. . IAAF Media & Public Relations Department . Monte Carlo . Pages 546, 554 . pdf . 2009 . August 4, 2009 . https://web.archive.org/web/20110629134819/http://www.iaaf.org/mm/document/competitions/competition/05/15/63/20090706014834_httppostedfile_p345-688_11303.pdf . June 29, 2011 .
  2. Web site: Ratified: World records for Gidey, Hassan, Hodgkinson, Holloway and Warholm PRESS-RELEASES World Athletics. 2021-08-04. www.worldathletics.org.