How did humans break the 100-meter limit step by step

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The 100-meter limit of human beings so far is the world record of the 100-meter limit

. The 100-meter record was set by the famous Jamaican sprinter Bolt on August 17, 2009 in Berlin, Germany, at 9 seconds 58. The legend of

100 meters came like this.

According to records, in 776 BC, there was a sprint event at the first ancient Olympic Games held in the Olympic Village in Greece. The distance at that time was 176~192.27 meters, also known as a " "Station" (the unit of length in ancient Greece, the length is 600 feet long), the 14th Ancient Olympic Games increased to two "Stadi" runs.

In the history of modern sports, the 100-meter race first appeared in the first modern Olympic Games in 1896 at the Athens Olympics in Greece. It grew up with the modern Olympics.

11 seconds 8 seconds

11 era record of the evolution of

Thomas Burke (USA)

How did humans break the 100-meter limit step by step - Lujuba


How did humans break the 100-meter limit step by step - Lujuba

at the first modern Olympic Games in 1896, "crouching" has not been universal, 100 meters final, five athletes actually using five different starting In this way, Thomas Burke of the United States won the first 100-meter championship in Olympic history by using the "squatting start" method, and set the first men's 100-meter Olympic record in the preliminaries with 11.8 seconds.

10 seconds time

10 seconds 6

Donald Lippincott (United States)

How did humans break the 100-meter limit step by step - Lujuba


1912. The United States won all the sprints in the Stockholm Olympic Dash on the 6th and the United States won all the sprints in Stockholm. With a time of 10.6 seconds, the result of was approved by the IAAF as the first official world record for 100 meters!

10 seconds 4

Charles Paddock (United States)

On April 23, 1921, Charles Paddock of the United States set a new world record of 10 seconds 4.

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Perth Williams (Canada)

On August 9, 1930, Perth Williams of Canada set a new world record of 10.3 seconds.

10 seconds 2

Jesse Owens (United States)

How did humans break the 100-meter limit step by step - Lujuba


How did humans break the 100-meter limit step by step - Lujuba


How did humans break the 100-meter limit step by step - Lujuba


African-American athlete Jesse Owens, who on June 20, 1936 ran a world record of 10 seconds 2. He won 4 gold medals in the 100m, 200m, long jump and 4×100m relay in this Berlin Olympics and became a news figure. Jesse Owens was the most outstanding 100m athlete of that era. It was from this time that the 100-meter and even sprint events officially entered the era of black athletes.

10 seconds 1

Willie Williams (United States)

19On August 3, 1956, Willie Williams of the United States ran a new world record of 10.1 seconds.

9 second era

Armin Harry (Federal Germany)

On June 21, 1960, in a race in Zurich, Armin Harry of Federal Germany (West Germany) increased the 100m score to 10 seconds for the first time. This time the 100-meter world record has been maintained for 8 years. Later, although 10 people ran the same results, they all failed to break the 10-second mark. Among them, Chinese Sichuanese player Chen Jiaquan also tied this record in the 2nd Sichuan National Games Reporting Exhibition on October 24, 1965. At the 1964 Tokyo Olympics, Bob Hayes of the United States became the first athlete to run 100 meters in less than 10 seconds. His score was 9 seconds 9. However, due to excessive wind speed, his score Not admitted. In the final, he tied the world record with 10 seconds.

9 seconds 9

Jim Hines (United States)

In June 1968, Jim Hines of the United States set a new world record of 9 seconds 9 in the semi-finals of the United States Championship in Sacramento. 1968 can be said to be the spring of American sprinting and an extremely important year in the history of world track and field sprinting. Because this year, human history finally entered the 10-second era. This year, Cha Green and Ron Smith also ran 9 seconds 9 and crossed the 10-second thunder pool. 9 seconds 9 is the last 100-meter world record for hand-timed time. After electronic timekeeping was used in track events, this result became a permanent record in track and field history. The human world record of 100 meters has also restarted from 10 seconds.

9 seconds 95

Jim Hines (USA)

Four months later, on October 14, 1968, at the Mexico Olympics, it was also Jim Hines who set a new world record of 9 seconds and 95 seconds. This is a milestone record and also the first 100-meter world record after electronic timekeeping.

9 seconds 93

Calvin Smith (United States)

On July 3, 1983, Calvin Smith of the United States broke the 100-meter world record held by Jim Hines for 15 years with 9 seconds 93 in Colorado. After

9 seconds 92

Carl Lewis (USA)

How did humans break the 100-meter limit step by step - Lujuba


How did humans break the 100-meter limit step by step - Lujuba


in the creation of nine new 100 meters world record of 93 seconds, 100 meters in this area there have been two stars: America's Carl Lewis and Ben Johnson of Canada, the two Since the first clash at the Los Angeles Olympics in 1984, this event has been monopolized. In the 1987 World Championships in Rome, on August 30, Johnson created a new world record of 9.83 seconds, and the increase was the largest in the past 20 years. The 100-meter race in the Seoul Olympics on September 24, 1988 was even more hailed as the "War of the Century". In the end, Johnson crossed the finish line with a time of 9.79 seconds. Lewis ran his personal best of 9.92 seconds. , But only ranked second. But a few days later, Johnson was found to have used doping. Not only was the gold medal recovered, the world record set in this and 1987 World Championships was cancelled, and Lewis's 9.92 seconds became a new world record. Since 1982, Lewis has set a total of 13 indoor and outdoor world records and won 9 Olympic gold medals.

9 seconds 92

{Su Bingtian (China)

Beijing time on August 26, the 2018 Jakarta Asian Games track and field competition continued at the Grola Puncano Stadium. In the men's 100m finals that ended tonight, Chinese flying man Su Bingtian broke the Asian Games record with 9.92 seconds and beat all Asian players to win the championship. He was also the second to win the Asian Games men's 100m gold medal after Laoyi in 2010. Chinese male flying man. }


How did humans break the 100-meter limit step by step - Lujuba


How did humans break the 100-meter limit step by step - Lujuba


How did humans break the 100-meter limit step by step - Lujuba


How did humans break the 100-meter limit step by step - Lujuba


How did humans break the 100-meter limit step by step - Lujuba


How did humans break the 100-meter limit step by step - Lujuba


How did humans break the 100-meter limit step by step - Lujuba

9 seconds 90

Leroy Burrell (USA)

1991年是世界田径史上极其重要的一年, more sprinting history to write a brilliant one. On June 14, American sprint star Leroy Burrell set a new world record with 9.90 seconds in the Mobile Track and Field Championships in the United States.

9 seconds 86

Carl Lewis (United States)

is the very important in the history of track and field in the 3rd Tokyo World Championships on August 25, 1991, Karl Lewis and Leroy Burrell both broke twice. The world record set just a month ago was 9.86 and 9.88 respectively.

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Leroy Burrell (United States)

On July 6, 1994, Leroy Burrell increased the record to 9 seconds 85.

9 seconds 84

Donovan Bailey (Canada)

On July 27, 1996, Canadian "Black Panther" Donovan Bailey ran a new world record of 9.84 seconds.

9 seconds 79

Maurice Green (United States)

On June 17, 1999, Maurice Green of the United States set a new world record at the Athens International Athletics Grand Prix with an amazing time of 9.79 seconds. Since then began his rule in this field.

9 seconds 77

Asafa Powell (Jamaica)

How did humans break the 100-meter limit step by step - Lujuba

Three years later, in the IAAF Super Grand Prix in Athens on June 14, 2005, a 22-year-old Asafa Powell, a 22-year-old Jamaican player A new world record of 100 meters was created in 9 seconds 77. In the race of the day, Powell had a clear advantage from the start. The leading position was never challenged. When crossing the finish line, he even led the second runner by a few meters. Powell became the second player to break the American monopoly on the world record after Donovan Bailey of Canada. At the same time, also announced the end of the era of American dominance in sprinting!

9 seconds 74

Asafa Powell (Jamaica)

How did humans break the 100-meter limit step by step - Lujuba

September 9th, 2007, the IAAF Grand Prix Italy race in the Italian city LeiIn the second group of the 100-meter preliminaries, Powell showed an amazing state from the beginning, perfect start, powerful mid-way run, early to leave his opponent behind and take the lead, with a tailwind at 1.7 meters/ Under the wind speed of seconds, Powell ran faster and faster. In the last 40 meters, he was completely different from the World Championships. He sprinted with all his strength in 9 seconds 74! A new world record was born.

9 seconds 72

Usain Bolt (Jamaica)

How did humans break the 100-meter limit step by step - Lujuba

Bolt

On May 31, 2008, in the Yosemite Athletics Awards in New York, in the battle of the 100m Flyers called the Yosemair, a man named Boerte Boerte. Born. He broke the world record and won the championship with a time of 9.72 seconds. He is 1.96 meters tall, which greatly exceeds the original selection criteria for 100-meter athletes. He ran on the 100-meter track at a height of almost 2 meters! The appearance of

Bolt has brought people all over the world infinite reverie about the 100-meter limit!

9 seconds 69

Usain Bolt (Jamaica)

On August 16, 2008, Bolt once again wrote a legend in the Beijing Olympics. In the Olympic men's 100-meter trapeze that night, Bolt scored 9:69. After winning the championship, he once again set a new world record. Before the start of the game, the eight finalists all gathered in the warm-up venue and gathered together to cheer for each other. This scene was touching and very rare. What is even more sighing is that after the game started, Bolt actually slowed down in the last ten meters at

How did humans break the 100-meter limit step by step - Lujuba

! He actually celebrated his victory in advance with a gesture of looking back at the moon, patting his chest! "I'm here to win the gold medal. This is my only goal," Bolt said excitedly in an interview with the BBC. "At first I didn't know that I broke the world record until I ran a lap on the track. After celebrating, I know." Some experts once predicted that the men’s 100 meters limit is 9 seconds 70. Since 2006, Powell of Jamaica has stepped closer to this so-called "limit". However, Bolt used his amazing 9 seconds 69 When I ran, I announced to people: Humans can run faster!

In this Olympics, Jamaicans achieved a monopoly on the 100-meter, 200-meter, and 4×100-meter relay gold medals in the sprint event, declaring that the sprint event has entered the Jamaican era.

9 seconds 58

Usain Bolt (Jamaica)

How did humans break the 100-meter limit step by step - Lujuba

Is this the human limit? Who will break it? ? ?

On August 16, 2009, in the 100m final of the Berlin World Championships in Athletics, Bolt won the championship in 9.58 seconds, and once again set the 100m world record significantly. American star Guy Gay also won the runner-up with a staggering 9.71 seconds, and Powell finished third in 9.84. After passing the finish line, Bolt stretched out his arms to make a flying motion. Today, he is definitely the most impressive sports player on this planet. And his achievement, besides himself, it is hard to imagine that there are other players who can break for a long time! Bolt is the first person to break the world record three times after the 100 meters entered the 10-second era. At the same time, this record is also the first time to break by more than 0.1 seconds after entering the electronic timekeeping, I am afraid it is the last time!

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