Men's 200 Metres World Record Progression

The following table shows the world record progression in the men's 200 metres, as ratified by the IAAF.

The current record of 19.19 seconds was set by Usain Bolt at the 2009 World Championships in Athletics.

Men's 200 Metres World Record Progression
World record progression for the men's 200 m.

The IAAF maintained separate records for 200 m over a straight track and over a curved track until 1976, when records for the former were discarded. The IAAF ratified the first record for 200 m on a curved track in 1951. "y" denotes times for 220 yards (201.17 m) which were also ratified for the event.

As of 2018, the IAAF has ratified 24 world records in the event.

Records 1951–1976

Time Wind Auto Athlete Nationality Location of race Date
20.6y Andy Stanfield Men's 200 Metres World Record Progression  United States Philadelphia, United States May 26, 1951
20.6 Andy Stanfield Men's 200 Metres World Record Progression  United States Los Angeles, United States June 28, 1952
20.6 0.0 Thane Baker Men's 200 Metres World Record Progression  United States Bakersfield, United States June 23, 1956
20.6 20.75 Bobby Morrow Men's 200 Metres World Record Progression  United States Melbourne, Australia November 27, 1956
20.6 Manfred Germar Men's 200 Metres World Record Progression  West Germany Wuppertal, Germany October 1, 1958
20.6y −1.6 Ray Norton Men's 200 Metres World Record Progression  United States Berkeley, United States March 19, 1960
20.6 Ray Norton Men's 200 Metres World Record Progression  United States Philadelphia, United States April 30, 1960
20.5y Peter Radford Men's 200 Metres World Record Progression  United Kingdom Wolverhampton, United Kingdom May 28, 1960
20.5 0.0 20.75 Stone Johnson Men's 200 Metres World Record Progression  United States Stanford, United States July 2, 1960
20.5 0.0 Ray Norton Men's 200 Metres World Record Progression  United States Stanford, United States July 2, 1960
20.5 20.65 Livio Berruti Men's 200 Metres World Record Progression  Italy Rome, Italy September 3, 1960
20.5 0.0 20.62 Livio Berruti Men's 200 Metres World Record Progression  Italy Rome, Italy September 3, 1960
20.5y −1.1 20.67 Paul Drayton Men's 200 Metres World Record Progression  United States Walnut, United States June 23, 1962
20.3y −0.1 Henry Carr Men's 200 Metres World Record Progression  United States Tempe, United States March 23, 1963
20.2y 0.5 Henry Carr Men's 200 Metres World Record Progression  United States Tempe, United States April 4, 1964
20.0y 0.0 Tommie Smith Men's 200 Metres World Record Progression  United States Sacramento, United States June 11, 1966
19.8 A 0.9 19.83 A Tommie Smith Men's 200 Metres World Record Progression  United States Mexico City, Mexico October 16, 1968
19.8 A 0.9 19.86 A Don Quarrie Men's 200 Metres World Record Progression  Jamaica Cali, Colombia August 3, 1971
19.8y 1.3 Don Quarrie Men's 200 Metres World Record Progression  Jamaica Eugene, United States June 7, 1975

The "Time" column indicates the ratified mark; the "Wind" column indicates the wind assistance in metres per second, 2.0 m/s the current maximum allowable, a negative indicates the mark was set running into a wind; 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 or 100th of a second, depending on the rules then in place.

John Carlos ran 19.7A seconds (19.92A auto) (1.9 ms wind), at altitude, at the 1968 US Olympic Trials in Echo Summit. The run was not ratified as a world record because Carlos was wearing shoes with 'brush' spikes which did not have sanction as official footwear.

Henry Carr's winning time at the 1964 Olympics (17 October) was a hand timed 20.3 seconds. The electronic time was 20.36 seconds, which was the fastest auto time to that date. Tommie Smith ran 20.26 for 220 yards at Provo in 1967. By deducting .12 seconds for the 200 metre equivalent, he is estimated to have run 20.14 for that distance.: 45 

Records post-1977

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

Tommie Smith's 1968 Olympic gold medal victory was the fastest recorded fully electronic 200 metre sprint up to that time.

Time Wind Auto Athlete Nationality Location of race Date
19.83 A 0.9 Tommie Smith Men's 200 Metres World Record Progression  United States Mexico City, Mexico October 16, 1968
19.72 A 1.8 Pietro Mennea Men's 200 Metres World Record Progression  Italy Mexico City, Mexico September 12, 1979
19.66 1.7 Michael Johnson Men's 200 Metres World Record Progression  United States Atlanta, United States June 23, 1996
19.32 0.4 19.313 Michael Johnson Men's 200 Metres World Record Progression  United States Atlanta, United States August 1, 1996
19.30 −0.9 19.296 Usain Bolt Men's 200 Metres World Record Progression  Jamaica Beijing, China August 20, 2008
19.19 −0.3 19.190 Usain Bolt Men's 200 Metres World Record Progression  Jamaica Berlin, Germany August 20, 2009

The record progressions for automatic times at low altitude (after Carr's 20.36 in 1964) were 20.30 seconds by Valeriy Borzov at Helsinki in 1971, then Larry Black 20.28, 1972 at Munich, 20.00 (Borzov, 1972 also at Munich), 19.96 (Mennea, 1980), 19.75 (Carl Lewis, 1983), 19.75 (Joe DeLoach, 1988) and 19.73 (Michael Marsh, 1992), before Michael Johnson ran 19.66 in 1996.: 46–47 

See also

Notes

Tags:

Men's 200 Metres World Record Progression Records 1951–1976Men's 200 Metres World Record Progression Records post-1977Men's 200 Metres World Record Progression

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