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1500 metres world record progression

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The 1500-metre run became a standard racing distance in Europe in the late 19th century, perhaps as a metric version of the mile, a popular running distance since at least the 1850s in English-speaking countries.{{cite book

A distance of 1500m sometimes is called the "metric mile". The French had the first important races over the distance, holding their initial championship in 1888.

When the Olympic Games were revived in 1896, metric distances were run, including the 1500; however, most of the best milers in the world were absent, and the winning time of 4:33 1/5 by Australian Edwin Flack was 17 4/5 seconds slower than the amateur mile record, despite the fact one mile is 109.344 metres longer than 1500 metres.

The 1900 Olympics and 1904 Olympics showed improvements in times run, but it was not until the 1908 Olympics that a meeting of the top milers over the distance took place, and not until the 1912 Olympics that a true world-class race over the distance was run.{{cite book

The distance has now almost completely replaced the mile in major track meets.

Men (outdoors)

Pre-[[IAAF]]

TimeAthleteDatePlace
****J. Borel1892
4:21Fernand Meiers1893-05-28Paris, France
****Felix Bourdier1894-07-22Paris, France
****Albin Lermusiaux1895-05-12Paris, France
****Michel Soalhat1895-05-26Paris, France
****Thomas Conneff1895-08-26New York City, United States
****Albin Lermusiaux1896-06-26Paris, France
4:09John Bray1900-05-30Bayonne, France
****Charles Bennett1900-07-15Paris, France
****James Lightbody1904-09-03St. Louis, United States
****Harold Wilson1908-05-30London, Great Britain
****Abel Kiviat1912-05-26New York City, United States
****Abel Kiviat1912-06-01New York City, United States

IAAF era

The first world record in the 1500m for men (athletics) was recognized by the International Amateur Athletics Federation, now known as World Athletics, in 1912. To July 17, 2015, the IAAF has ratified 38 world records in the event.{{cite web |access-date = August 4, 2009 |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20110629134819/http://www.iaaf.org/mm/document/competitions/competition/05/15/63/20090706014834_httppostedfile_p345-688_11303.pdf |archive-date=June 29, 2011

Pending ratification
TimeAutoAthleteDatePlace
3:55.8Abel Kiviat1912-06-08Cambridge, United States
3:54.7John Zander1917-08-05Stockholm, Sweden
3:52.6Paavo Nurmi1924-06-19Helsinki, Finland
3:51.0Otto Peltzer1926-09-11Berlin, Germany
3:49.2Jules Ladoumegue1930-10-05Paris, France
3:49.2Luigi Beccali1933-09-09Turin, Italy
3:49.0Luigi Beccali1933-09-17Milan, Italy
3:48.8Bill Bonthron1934-06-30Milwaukee, United States
3:47.8Jack Lovelock1936-08-06Berlin, Germany
3:47.6Gunder Hägg1941-08-10Stockholm, Sweden
3:45.8Gunder Hägg1942-07-17Stockholm, Sweden
3:45.0Arne Andersson1943-08-17Gothenburg, Sweden
3:43.0Gunder Hägg1944-07-07Gothenburg, Sweden
3:43.0Lennart Strand1947-07-15Malmö, Sweden
3:43.0Werner Lueg1952-06-29Berlin, Germany
3:42.8+Wes Santee1954-06-04Compton, United States
3:41.8+John Landy1954-06-21Turku, Finland
3:40.8Sándor Iharos1955-07-28Helsinki, Finland
3:40.8László Tábori1955-09-06Oslo, Norway
3:40.8Gunnar Nielsen1955-09-06Oslo, Norway
3:40.6István Rózsavölgyi1956-08-03Tata, Hungary
3:40.2Olavi Salsola1957-07-11Turku, Finland
3:40.2Olavi Salonen1957-07-11Turku, Finland
3:38.1Stanislav Jungwirth1957-07-12Stará Boleslav, Czechoslovakia
3:36.0Herb Elliott1958-08-28Gothenburg, Sweden
3:35.6Herb Elliott1960-09-06Rome, Italy
3:33.1Jim Ryun1967-07-08Los Angeles, United States
3:32.23:32.16Filbert Bayi1974-02-02Christchurch, New Zealand
3:32.13:32.03Sebastian Coe1979-08-15Zürich, Switzerland
3:32.13:32.09Steve Ovett1980-07-15Oslo, Norway
3:31.43:31.36Steve Ovett1980-08-27Koblenz, West Germany
3:31.24Sydney Maree1983-08-28Cologne, West Germany
3:30.77Steve Ovett1983-09-04Rieti, Italy
3:29.67Steve Cram1985-07-16Nice, France
3:29.46Saïd Aouita1985-08-23Berlin, Germany
3:28.86Noureddine Morceli1992-09-06Rieti, Italy
3:27.37Noureddine Morceli1995-07-12Nice, France
3:26.00Hicham El Guerrouj1998-07-14Rome, Italy

The "Time" column indicates the ratified mark; 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 of a second, depending on the rules then in place.

Auto times to the hundredth of a second were accepted by the IAAF for events up to and including 10,000m from 1981. Hence, Steve Ovett's record at 3:31.4 was rendered as 3:31.36 from that year.

Women (outdoors)

Pre-IAAF

TimeAthleteDatePlace
5:18.2Anna Mushkina1927-08-19Moscow, Soviet Union
5:07.0Anna Mushkina1934-09-16Alma-Ata, Soviet Union
5:02.0Lydia Freiberg1936-07-13Moscow, Soviet Union
4:47.2Yevdokiya Vasilyeva1936-07-30Moscow, Soviet Union
4:45.2Yevdokiya Vasilyeva1937-09-13Moscow, Soviet Union
4:41.8Anna Zaytseva-Bosenko1940-06-10Moscow, Soviet Union
4:38.0Yevdokiya Vasilyeva1944-08-17Moscow, Soviet Union
4:37.8Olga Ovsyannikova1946-09-15Dnepropetrovsk, Soviet Union
4:37.0Nina Pletnyova1952-08-30Leningrad, Soviet Union
4:35.4Phyllis Perkins1956-05-17Hornchurch, Great Britain
4:30.0Diane Leather1957-05-16Hornchurch, Great Britain
4:29.7+Diane Leather1957-07-19London, Great Britain
4:19.0+Marise Chamberlain1962-12-08Perth, Australia

IAAF era

The first world record in the 1500 m for women (athletics) was recognized by the International Amateur Athletics Federation, now known as World Athletics, in 1967. |access-date=August 4, 2009 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110629134819/http://www.iaaf.org/mm/document/competitions/competition/05/15/63/20090706014834_httppostedfile_p345-688_11303.pdf |archive-date=June 29, 2011

TimeAutoAthleteDatePlaceRef
4:17.3+Anne Smith1967-06-03Chiswick, Great Britain
4:15.6Maria Gommers1967-10-24Sittard, Netherlands
4:12.4Paola Pigni1969-07-02Milan, Italy
4:10.74:10.77Jaroslava Jehličková1969-09-20Athens, Greece
4:09.64:09.62Karin Burneleit1971-08-15Helsinki, Finland
4:06.9Ludmila Bragina1972-07-18Moscow, Soviet Union
4:06.54:06.47Ludmila Bragina1972-09-04Munich, Germany
4:05.14:05.07Ludmila Bragina1972-09-07Munich, Germany
4:01.44:01.38Ludmila Bragina1972-09-09Munich, Germany
3:56.0Tatyana Kazankina1976-06-28Podolsk, Soviet Union
3:55.0Tatyana Kazankina1980-07-06Moscow, Soviet Union
3:52.47Tatyana Kazankina1980-08-03Zürich, Switzerland
3:50.46Qu Yunxia1993-09-11Beijing, China
3:50.07Genzebe Dibaba2015-07-17Fontvieille, Monaco
3:49.11Faith Kipyegon2023-06-02Florence, Italy
3:49.04Faith Kipyegon2024-07-07Paris, France
3:48.68Faith Kipyegon2025-07-05Eugene, United States
    • En route time during mile race.

The "Time" column indicates the ratified mark; 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 of a second, depending on the rules then in place.

The IAAF accepted records to the hundredth of a second starting in 1981.

Men (indoors)

Indoor records are run over 7 laps of a shorter 200 m track. An asterisk indicates a record was repeated. All records since Gonzalez's 3:36.04 in 1986 were ratified by the IAAF.

TimeAthleteDatePlace
3.57.01920-05-30New York
3.56.21925-01-06New York
3.55.81925-02-21Washington
3.53.41932-02-27New York
3.52.2*1934-02-24New York
3.52.21934-02-24New York
3.50.51935-02-23New York
3.49.91936-02-22New York
3.48.41938-02-26New York
3.48.31955-02-05New York
3.44.61960-02-28Berlin Est
3.43.21962-02-10Los Angeles
3.42.21965-02-14Berlin East
3.42.01965-02-21Berlin East
3.41.91966-02-20Berlin East
3.41.71966-02-27Berlin East
3.40.71966-02-27Lyon
3.37.81971-02-13Berlin West
3.37.41979-01-06Long Beach
3.36.041986-03-01Oviedo
3.35.61989-02-10East Rutherford
3.34.201990-02-27Seville
3.34.161991-02-28Seville
3.31.181997-02-02Stuttgart
3.31.042019-02-16Birmingham
3.30.602022-02-17Liévin
3.29.632025-02-13Liévin

Women (indoors)

All records since Decker-Slaney's 4:00.8 in 1980 were ratified by the IAAF.

TimeAthleteDatePlace
4.53.21966-02-05Cosford
4.40.81966-02-12Cosford
4.33.31966-02-19Vancouver
4.21.21967-02-18Vancouver
4.21.11970-02-07Seattle
4.20.51971-01-30Cosford
4.19.71971-02-13Berlin East
4.17.91971-02-13Berlin West
4.17.41971-02-20Berlin West
4.17.21971-03-14Sofia
4.14.621972-03-12Grenoble
4.12.21974-02-15Toronto
4.10.971974-03-10Göteborg
4.10.41975-02-14Toronto
4.09.91975-02-15San Diego
4.09.81975-03-03Richmond
4.08.11977-02-19Dortmund
4.05.01978-02-21Budapest
4.03.01979-02-10Budapest
4.00.81980-02-08New York
4.00.271990-02-09East Rutherford
3.59.982003-02-01Boston
3.58.282006-02-18Moscow
3.58.052008-02-10Moscow
3.57.712008-03-09Valencia
3.55.172014-02-01Karlsruhe
3.53.092021-02-09Liévin

References

;General

;Specific

References

  1. (17 July 2015). "IAAF Diamond League Monaco - 1500m Results".
  2. (2 June 2023). "1500m Result". sportresult.com.
  3. (7 July 2024). "1500m Result".
  4. (2025-07-05). "Prefontaine Classic: Faith Kipyegon, Beatrice Chebet break world records".
  5. "Main > Records Progression - World Indoor Records Men, 1500 m".
  6. "Main > Records Progression - World Indoor Records Women, 1500 m".
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