World Athletics organizes many major athletics competitions worldwide.
World Athletics Series is the foremost athletics competition held by the governing body. :† Formerly IAAF World Championships in Athletics :‡ Known as the World Athletics Half Marathon Championships before 2023, except for in 2006 and 2007 when it was known as the IAAF World Road Running Championships, with a 20 km race in 2006 :†† Formerly IAAF World Junior Championships :††† Formerly IAAF World Race Walking Cup :†††† Formerly IAAF World Cup
One-day events World Athletics became involved in annual one-day meetings as the sport began to professionalise in the late 1970s. Between 1978 and 1982, World Athletics staged twelve
Golden Events, all for men and principally in track running, which saw World Athletics offer prizes to encourage competition. Three years later in 1985, an annual
track and field circuit was created in the form of the
IAAF Grand Prix, which linked existing top-level one-day meetings with a season-ending
IAAF Grand Prix Final for a selection of men's and women's events. The
IAAF World Cross Challenge followed in 1990 and began an annual series for
cross country running. The track and field circuit was expanded in 1993 with the creation of the
IAAF Grand Prix II level, and the
IAAF Golden League in 1998. World Athletics began recognising annual indoor track meets via the
IAAF Indoor Permit Meetings series in 1997, and in 1998 decathletes and heptathletes found seasonal support with the creation of the
IAAF Combined Events Challenge. The
IAAF Race Walking Challenge was initiated in 2003 to provide a seasonal calendar for racewalking. World Athletics reformed its track and field circuit in 2003, with the
IAAF World Outdoor Meetings series grouping five tiers of annual track and field competitions: the Golden League,
IAAF Super Grand Prix, Grand Prix, Grand Prix II, and the
IAAF World Athletics Final. The new final format was introduced with a new global performance ranking system for qualification and featured an increased programme of track and field events, mirroring the
World Championships in Athletics programme bar the road events, combined events, relays, and the
10,000 metres. The final achieved gender parity in events in 2005, with the inclusion of a women's
3000 metres steeplechase. The track and field circuit was rebranded as the
IAAF World Athletics Tour in 2006, which removed the global rankings and the IAAF Grand Prix II (replaced with a level of meetings given permit status by continental governing bodies). With World Athletics having recognised the sport of
mountain running in 2002, the annual
WMRA World Cup meetings received official sanctioning in 2006, organised under
World Mountain Running Association. The
IAAF Race Walking Challenge Final was created in 2007 to serve as a seasonal final for the Race Walking Challenge. World Athletics designed a sanctioning process for the
road running competitions in 2008, with races having to meet organisational requirements to achieve Gold or Silver status under the
IAAF Road Race Label Events brand. This incorporated the
World Marathon Majors (a privately run series for major marathons initiated in 2006) within the Gold Label category. Road running was the last sport governed by World Athletics to receive seasonal sanctioning. The 2010 season saw several changes to World Athletics' one-day governance. The World Athletics Tour was made defunct and replaced with three separate series: the 14-meet
Diamond League as the top level of track meetings, the
IAAF World Challenge as a second tier of track meetings, and the
IAAF Hammer Throw Challenge as the top level of hammer throwing contests (as hammer was not included in the Diamond League). The Road Race Label grouping was also expanded that year with the creation of a Bronze label status. The Race Walking Challenge Final was removed from the racewalking schedule after 2012, as the series focused on international championship performances. In 2016, the
IAAF World Indoor Tour was introduced as a replacement of the Indoor Permit Meetings series. The track and field circuit is due for further changes in 2020, including an increase in the number of Diamond League meetings, the reduction of Diamond League events from 32 to 24, reduction of the Diamond League television running time to 90 minutes, the creation of a one-day Diamond League final, and the relaunch of the World Challenge series as the
World Athletics Continental Tour. == Awards ==