Common contemporary distances ====
60 metres ==== • Normally run indoors, on a straight section of an indoor athletic track. • Some of the fastest humans reach their maximum speed around the 60-metre mark. • 60-metres is often used as an outdoor distance by younger athletes when starting sprint racing. Note: Indoor distances are less standardized, as many facilities run shorter or occasionally longer distances depending on available space. 60 m is the championship distance. ====
100 metres ==== Source: • Takes place on the straight of a standard outdoor 400 m track. • Often, the world-record holder in this race is considered "the world's fastest man or woman." • Primarily an outdoor race. ====
200 metres ==== Source: • Runners are staggered in their starting positions to ensure that everyone runs the same distance. • Runners use exchange zones (and, previously, separate acceleration zones which have now been eliminated) to pass a baton ====
4 × 400 metres relay ==== Source:
50 m The
50 metres is an uncommon event and alternative to the
60 metres.
Donovan Bailey holds the men's world record with a time of 5.56 seconds and
Irina Privalova holds the women's world record with a time of 5.96 seconds.
60 yards (54.864 m) • A rarely run sprinting event that was once more commonplace. The world record time of 5.99 seconds is held by
Lee McRae and was set in 1987. The time is often used for
American football speed training.
55 m The
55 metres is an uncommon event that resulted from the metrication of the
60 yards and is an alternative to the
60 metres.
70 yards (64.008 m) An extremely rare sprinting event, that was occasionally run in the 1960s. The world record of 6.90 seconds is held by
Bob Hayes.
100 yards (91.44 m) • The outdoor standard in the English (imperial measured) speaking world. It was part of the
Commonwealth Games up until
1966 and was the premier event in American high school sprinting until the
NFHS changed to metric in 1980, now only a secondary distance to the 100 metres. • The unofficial World Record Holder is Jamaican
Asafa Powell with a time of 9.07 seconds.
150 m • The informal distance of
150 metres (164.042 yards) can be used to work on a 100 m runner's stamina, or a 200 m runner's speed, and has been used as an exhibition distance. The distance was used in a race between the 1996 Olympic champions, the 100 m gold medalist
Donovan Bailey (Canada) and the 200 m gold medalist
Michael Johnson (USA). It was to decide which of the two was really the 'fastest man on earth' (see
Bailey–Johnson 150-metre race). • The informal distance was used for an exhibition race during the Manchester Great CityGames as part of the 2009
Great Manchester Run (UK). Stars included Triple Olympic Champion
Usain Bolt (Jamaica) alongside
Ivory Williams (USA),
Simeon Williamson (UK), and other international track stars. The female race included 400 m Olympic Champion,
Christine Ohuruogu of Great Britain alongside
Debbie Ferguson-McKenzie (
Bahamas). Bolt ran the distance in a record time of 14.35 seconds.
Stadion The
stadion, also known as the stade, was the standard short distance sprint in ancient Greece and ran the length of a stadium. However, stadiums could vary in size and there was apparently no definite standard length for them, e.g., the stadium at Delphi measures 177 m and the one at Pergamon 210 m.
300 m • The
300 metres is another informal distance, which could be used to aid a 200 m runner's stamina, or a 400 m runner's speed. Currently, the world's best for this event is 30.69 seconds, set by
Letsile Tebogo at altitude in
Pretoria,
South Africa in 2024. The women's record is 34.41 seconds, set by
Shaunae Miller-Uibo in
Ostrava,
Czech Republic in 2019. Junior girls in several countries run this distance instead of the 400 metres.
Diaulos The
diaulos was an event contested in the Ancient Greek Olympia that was double the length of a
stadion. As well as standard foot races, in Ancient Greece there was also a sprint race called the
hoplitodromos ('armed
diaulos'). This required the sprinters to additionally carry a large shield, wear greaves and a helmet. The wearing of greaves was discontinued around 450 BC. Similarly to the diaulos, they ran two stades in length i.e. one stade ending with a 180 degree turn around a post, which led onto the second stade in length back down the track. However, for some hoplitodromos races all of the sprinters ran around a single central post. ====
4 × 200 metres relay ==== Source: • Runners are staggered in their starting positions to ensure that everyone runs the same distance. • Runners use acceleration zones and exchange zones to pass a baton == Equipment ==