Men's high jump world record progression
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from World record progression high jump men)
The first world record in the men's high jump was recognised by the International Association of Athletics Federations in 1912.
As of June, 2009, the IAAF has ratified 40 world records in the event.[1]
[edit] Record Progression
| ratified |
| not ratified |
| Height | Athlete | Date | Venue |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2.00 m | 28 May 1912[1] | Palo Alto | |
| 2.01 m | 2 May 1914[1] | Berkeley, U.S | |
| 2.02 m | 1 June 1917 | Provo, U.S | |
| 2.03 m | 27 May 1924[1] | Urbana, U.S | |
| 2.04 m | 13 May 1933[1] | Fresno, U.S | |
| 2.06 m | 28 April 1934[1] | Palo Alto, U.S | |
| 2.07 m | 12 July 1936[1] | New York, U.S | |
| 2.07 m | 12 July 1936[1] | New York, U.S | |
| 2.08 m | 6 August 1937 | Stockholm, Sweden | |
| 2.09 m | 12 August 1937[1] | Malmö, Sweden | |
| 2.09 m | 26 April 1941 | Provo, U.S | |
| 2.10 m | 26 April 1941 | Seattle, U.S | |
| 2.105 m | 24 May 1941 | Los Angeles, U.S | |
| 2.11 m | 17 June 1941[1] | Los Angeles, U.S | |
| 2.12 m | 27 June 1953[1] | Dayton, U.S | |
| 2.15 m | 29 June 1956[1] | Los Angeles, U.S | |
| 2.16 m | 13 July 1957[1] | Leningrad, Soviet Union | |
| 2.17 m | 30 April 1960[1] | Philadelphia, U.S | |
| 2.17 m | 21 May 1960[1] | Cambridge, MA, U.S | |
| 2.18 m | 24 June 1960[1] | Bakersfield, U.S | |
| 2.195 m | 1 July 1960 | Palo Alto, U.S | |
| 2.22 m | 1 July 1960[1] | Palo Alto, U.S | |
| 2.23 m | 18 June 1961[1] | Moscow, Soviet Union | |
| 2.24 m | 16 July 1961[1] | Moscow, Soviet Union | |
| 2.25 m | 31 August 1961[1] | Sofia, Bulgaria | |
| 2.26 m | 22 July 1962[1] | Palo Alto, U.S | |
| 2.27 m | 29 September 1962[1] | Moscow, Soviet Union | |
| 2.28 m | 21 July 1963[1] | Moscow, Soviet Union | |
| 2.29 m | 8 November 1970 | Changsha, PR China | |
| 2.29 m | 3 July 1971[1] | Berkeley, U.S | |
| 2.30 m | 11 July 1973[1] | Munich, West Germany | |
| 2.31 m | 5 June 1976[1] | Philadelphia, U.S | |
| 2.32 m | 4 August 1976[1] | Philadelphia, U.S | |
| 2.33 m | 2 June 1977[1] | Richmond, U.S | |
| 2.34 m | 16 June 1978[1] | Tbilisi, Soviet Union | |
| 2.35 m | 25 May 1980[1] | Eberstadt, West Germany | |
| 2.35 m | 26 May 1980[1] | Rehlingen, West Germany | |
| 2.36 m | 1 August 1980[1] | Moscow, Soviet Union | |
| 2.37 m | 11 June 1983[1] | Beijing, PR China | |
| 2.38 m | 22 September 1983[1] | Shanghai, PR China | |
| 2.39 m | 10 June 1984[1] | Eberstadt, West Germany | |
| 2.40 m | 11 August 1985[1] | Donetsk, Soviet Union | |
| 2.41 m | 4 September 1985[1] | Kobe, Japan | |
| 2.42 m | 30 June 1987[1] | Stockholm, Sweden | |
| 2.43 m | 8 September 1988[1] | Salamanca, Spain | |
| 2.44 m | 29 July 1989[1] | San Juan, Puerto Rico, U.S | |
| 2.45 m | 27 July 1993[1] | Salamanca, Spain |
[edit] See also
- World Record progression in athletics high jump women
- List of Olympic medalists in athletics (men)
- Athletics at the 2004 Summer Olympics - Men's High Jump
[edit] References
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao "12th IAAF World Championships In Athletics: IAAF Statistics Handbook. Berlin 2009." (pdf). Monte Carlo: IAAF Media & Public Relations Department. 2009. pp. Pages 554, 555. http://www.iaaf.org/mm/document/competitions/competition/05/15/63/20090706014834_httppostedfile_p345-688_11303.pdf. Retrieved July 30, 2009.
- High jump world record progression International Olympic Committee
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||