Women's shot put world record progression
Appearance
(Redirected from World record progression shot put women)
The first world record in the women's shot put was recognised by the Fédération Sportive Féminine Internationale (FSFI) in 1924. The FSFI was absorbed by the International Association of Athletics Federations in 1936. These women's distances were achieved with a 4 kilograms (8.8 lb) shot put.
As of June 21, 2009, the IAAF (and the FSFI before it) have ratified 50 world records in the event.[1]
World record progression
[edit]Ratified | |
Not ratified | |
Ratified but later rescinded |
Mark | Athlete | Date | Location |
---|---|---|---|
10.15 m | Violette Gouraud-Morris (FRA) | 14 July 1924 | Paris, France[1] |
11.57 m | Lilli Henoch (GER) | 16 August 1925 | Leipzig, Germany |
10.84 m | Ruth Lange (GER) | 28 May 1927 | Prague, Czechoslovakia[1] |
11.32 m | 6 August 1927 | Breslau, Germany[1] | |
11.52 m | 3 June 1928 | Berlin, Germany[1] | |
11.96 m | Grete Heublein (GER) | 15 July 1928 | |
12.85 m | 21 July 1929 | Frankfurt am Main, Germany[1] | |
12.88 m | 28 June 1931 | Paris, France[1] | |
13.70 m | 16 August 1931 | Bielefeld, Germany[1] | |
14.38 m | Gisela Mauermayer (GER) | 15 July 1934 | Warsaw, Poland[1] |
14.59 m | Tatyana Sevryukova (URS) | 4 August 1948 | Moscow, Soviet Union[1] |
14.86 m | Klavdia Tochonova (URS) | 30 October 1949 | Tbilisi, Soviet Union[1] |
15.02 m | Anna Andreyeva (URS) | 9 November 1950 | Ploiești, Romania[1] |
15.28 m | Galina Zybina (URS) | 26 July 1952 | Helsinki, Finland[1] |
15.37 m | 20 September 1952 | Frunze, Soviet Union[1] | |
15.42 m | 1 October 1952 | ||
16.20 m | 9 October 1953 | Malmö, Sweden[1] | |
16.28 m | 14 September 1954 | Kiev, Soviet Union[1] | |
16.28 m | 5 September 1955 | Leningrad, Soviet Union[1] | |
16.67 m | 15 November 1955 | Tbilisi, Soviet Union[1] | |
16.76 m | 13 October 1956 | Tashkent, Soviet Union[1] | |
17.25 m | Tamara Press (URS) | 26 April 1959 | Nalchik, Soviet Union[1] |
17.42 m | 16 July 1960 | Moscow, Soviet Union[1] | |
17.78 m | 13 August 1960 | ||
18.55 m | 10 June 1962 | Leipzig, East Germany[1] | |
18.55 m | 12 September 1962 | Beograd, Yugoslavia[1] | |
18.59 m | 19 September 1965 | Kassel, West Germany[1] | |
18.67 m | Nadezhda Chizhova (URS) | 28 April 1968 | Sochi, Soviet Union[1] |
18.87 m | Margitta Gummel (GDR) | 22 September 1968 | Frankfurt (Oder), East Germany[1] |
19.07 m | 20 October 1968 | Mexico City, Mexico[1] | |
19.61 m | |||
19.72 m | Nadezhda Chizhova (URS) | 30 May 1969 | Moscow, Soviet Union[1] |
20.09 m | 13 July 1969 | Chorzów, Poland[1] | |
20.10 m | Margitta Gummel (GDR) | 11 September 1969 | East Berlin, East Germany[1] |
20.10 m | Nadezhda Chizhova (URS) | 16 September 1969 | Athens, Greece[1] |
20.43 m | |||
20.43 m | 29 August 1971 | Moscow, Soviet Union[1] | |
20.63 m | 19 May 1972 | Sochi, Soviet Union[1] | |
21.03 m | 7 September 1972 | Munich, West Germany[1] | |
21.20 m | 28 August 1973 | Lvov, Soviet Union[1] | |
21.60 m | Marianne Adam (GDR) | 6 August 1975 | East Berlin, East Germany[1] |
21.67 m | 30 May 1976 | Karl-Marx-Stadt, East Germany[1] | |
21.87 m | Ivanka Khristova (BUL) | 3 July 1976 | Belmeken, Bulgaria[1] |
21.89 m | 4 July 1976 | ||
21.99 m | Helena Fibingerová (TCH) | 26 September 1976 | Opava, Czechoslovakia[1] |
22.32 m | 20 August 1977 | Nitra, Czechoslovakia[1] | |
22.36 m | Ilona Slupianek (GDR) | 2 May 1980 | Celje, Yugoslavia[1] |
22.45 m | 11 May 1980 | Potsdam, East Germany[1] | |
22.53 m | Natalya Lisovskaya (URS) | 27 May 1984 | Sochi, Soviet Union[1] |
22.60 m | 7 June 1987 | Moscow, Soviet Union[1] | |
22.63 m |
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ 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 ap aq ar "12th IAAF World Championships In Athletics: IAAF Statistics Handbook. Berlin 2009" (PDF). Monte Carlo: IAAF Media & Public Relations Department. 2009. pp. Pages 546, 646–7. Archived from the original (pdf) on June 29, 2011. Retrieved August 5, 2009.